- GT 062 - FutureMusic.com, April 2008
- GT 062 - Mix Magazine, April 2008
- GT 062 - Sweetwater SweetNotes, December 2007
- GT 051 - Sound On Sound, October 2007
- GT 062 - Audio Media, November 2007
- PortaGig - Pro Audio Review, June 2007
- GT 062 - Professional Audio Magazine, June 2007
- PortaGig - Mix Magazine, October 2006
- GT 050Q - barryrudolph.com, August 2006
- GT 060BR - Post Storage Solutions Supplement, April 2006
- GPM-216 - linuxdevices.com, April 2006
- GT 050Q Quad Interface - barefeats.com, April 2006
- GT 060BR - IndieFilmer.com, February 2006
- GT 103 - Recording Magazine, July 2005
- Glyph Personal Monitor - MIX Magazine, March 2005
- GT 103 - Pro Audio Review
FutureMusic.com, April 2008
FutureMusic recently reviewed the GT 062. "Glyph delivers an external hard drive with professional-grade components, a world-class warranty, & an innate understanding of their customers."
Here's the whole review.
Mix Magazine, April 2008
Barry Rudolph, contributor to Mix Magazine, reviewed our GT 062. "I chose RAID 1 mode to offer to my mixing clients the added safety that all of their audio files and mixes would be redundantly stored on the 062. I got the same speed, quiet operation and track count (as high as 120 with low edit densities) as my 250GB GT 050Q — with all the same performance in my Pro Tools HD3 Accel rig. The big difference was a sense of confidence that all my hard work was stored safely.
Here's the review from Mix Online.
Sweetwater SweetNotes, December 2007
Mitch Gallagher, Sweetwater's Editorial Director, tested the GT 062 and had this to say, "I used the GT 062 on three computers; it performed flawlessly on each, no matter what challenges I threw at it. I tried all four drive modes. The performance and security provided by the Glyph GT 062 makes it a no-brainer for the studio and for live recording applications, or just as a backup/archiving solution for all your data storage needs. Highly recommended."
Sound on Sound, October 2007
The GT 051 was mentioned in John O’Mahoney's informative article about data protection and backup strategies. A "must read" for any DAW user.
Here's the article
Audio Media, November 2007
Richard Wentk testing the GT 062 and had this to say, "The GT 062 is portable, it works out of the box, and offers data recovery for peace of mind. Given the relatively low cost, it punches above its weight, and has a lot to recommend it."
Check out the review.
PortaGig - Pro Audio Review, June 2007
Russ Long, Contributor for Pro Audio Review, said, "I picked up the 100 GB 7200RPM drive last spring and have been using it ever since. Originally I was just looking for a high-quality portable drive; I never dreamed I'd end up with something that provides this level of performance. I was mixing a high-resolution 96 kHz recording (with over 60 tracks on some songs) and I decided to see how the drive would perform. I copied the tune to the PortaGig, ran it off bus power and -- amazingly -- it worked perfectly. No lags, lockups or errors."
Read the entire story.
Professional Audio Magazine, June 2007
The German publication, Professional Audio Magazin, recently reviewed the GT 062.
German version available only.
PortaGig - Mixonline.com, October 2006
Kevin Becka, Technical Editor for Mix Magazine, recently tested two PortaGig 100GB drives and had this to say: "For our Mac Book Pro/Logic Pro stress test featured in the October 2006 issue of Mix, the Glyph PortaGig drives operated without a hitch. It was important that our storage and data stream was solid, enabling us to concentrate on the task at hand without any logjams."
Read the entire story.
GT 050Q - barryrudolph.com, August 2006
Barry Rudolph, a contributor to Mix Magazine reviewed the GT 050Q, and had this to say:
"The drive never even worked hard to play and record 96 tracks at once. Furthermore, there is no noise--it is quieter than the internal hard
drive in the system's MAC G5 Quadcore computer."
Check out Barry's review.
GT 060BR - Post Storage Solutions Supplement, April 2006
Post Magazine Included the GT 060BR in it's April 2006 Storage Supplement.
"It supports compressed and uncompressed video resolutions, including DV, HDV, DVCPRO and 8-bit and 10-bit uncompressed SD, as
well as multiple streams when using DV, HDV and DVCPRO formats."
Here's the entire Storage Supplement.
GPM-216 - linuxdevices.com, April 2006
linuxdevices.com wrote a piece outlining the technical aspects of the GPM-216.
"Glyph Technologies used Linux and key open source audio software packages to build a personal monitoring system aimed at letting musicians
create their own monitor mixes from local and networked audio sources. The GPM-216 runs a real-time Slackware implementation, and uses Jack,
Alsa, and LADSPA software."
Here's the whole story.
GT 050Q Quad Interface - barefeats.com, April 2006
Rob-ART, the mad scientist at barefeats.com,
ran speed tests on the GT 050Q and had good things to say: "The Glyph 050Q Quad
Interface enclosure's strong point is its versatility. Whatever interfaces you have on your Mac, it's bound to work
with at least one of them. We recommend using it with a FireWire 800 or SATA port for maximum performance.
The fan is quiet, the power supply is internal, and it can be adapted to rack mounting. It is constructed with
durable stainless steel and uses tri-laminate sound-damping metal, which absorbs drive vibration before it can get to the chassis."
Here's a link to the review.
GT 060BR - IndieFilmer.com, February 2006
The GT 060BR was recently reviewed by IndieFilmer.com, who said, "What this hard drive delivers (and plenty of) is silence." Here's a link to the review
GT 103 - Recording Magazine, July 2005
The GT 103 got a stellar review in Recording... Here's a PDF of the article (70KB).
Glyph Personal Monitor - MIX Magazine, March 2005
The new Glyph Personal Monitor was written up in MIX Magazine's "New Products — Tools of the Trade" section in the March 2005 issue. Here's what they said:
The GPM-216 Monitor from Glyph "is a peer-to-peer collaborative audio system that allows musicians to create their own individual monitor mixes using a network of single-rackspace units connected by standard ethernet cables. Mic and line inputs carry each musician's signals to other [units], where they can be mixed locally. Front panel controls include an LCD screen and connectors for headphones, while the back of the unit offers line outs and an insert for patching external processors across the mix or an input channel. Each [unit's] mixing controls include gain, pan, mute and polarity reverse. The unit is upgradeable via software download."
GT 103 - Pro Audio Review
The Glyph GT 103 was reviewed in the Oct 2004 Pro Audio Review... Here's a PDF of the article (500KB).









