Telos Alliance will use NAB 2026 to unveil Omnia XII, its brand-new flagship FM/HD/DAB audio processor.
Built on a space-friendly 2RU hardware platform, Omnia XII features a colour display and local controls up front, while the rear panel boasts a comprehensive array of I/O and connectivity options.
Brand-new intelligent algorithms form the proven processing architecture of a Wideband AGC, five bands of multiband AGCs and compressors, and six bands of multiband limiting, plus dynamic EQ and powerful bass management tools, all feeding the new Clemenza FM clipper.
The browser-based HTML5 remote UI features Omnia’s intuitive QuickTweak system that simultaneously adjusts multiple, interrelated controls, making setup and tuning easy for operators of any skill level, while providing processing pros with direct access to the full suite of controls they expect in a top-tier processor.
“Many years ago, our processors grew from the thoughts and ideas that I had been crafting since the mid 1980s in the engineering shop at Z-100, WHTZ-FM in New York City. That signature sound on 100.3 FM was the genesis and foundation of what Omnia processors have become,” said Frank Foti, founder, Omnia Audio & executive chairman of the board. “Along the way, each of our products has been the refinement of what ruled NYC back in the day and still rules the airwaves in the world’s number one market today. Omnia XII carries that legacy forward, and we are very proud to share it with you now.”
Omnia XII was designed from the start to provide the flexibility and horsepower needed to keep up with new technology, ensuring the investment customers make today is protected for years to come.
“The idea of what modern audio processing should be has shifted in recent years, and we’ve been watching carefully,” said Geoff Steadman, product manager. “Omnia XII is the result, and it will put users way out in front with serious computing power, an extendable, feature-rich software architecture that allows continual performance boosts to accommodate new features and handle new workflows, and the abundant, diverse I/O that today’s infrastructure choices demand.”