This is a animation done for Sonys newest mp3 robot player! Dancing Choreography machine! A Full-HD version coming end of February, with new dance sequence and improved
When buying a Blu-ray disc Player you will see a new feature that may be unfamiliar to you. It is called the Blu-ray Profile. It is an important feature you need to know because it is one of the main differences between blu-ray players and DVD players.
With DVD players there was a single hardware requirement but this is not the case for Blu-ray players. It may be confusing at first but it is easy but once you know what each profile means. And even though Blu-ray technology is rather recent, you will find it is moving forward at a rapid pace so the format is constantly changing and evolving. If you’re not careful you may end up with an “older” Blu-rayplayer. Read more...
You’re thrilled to have that new HDTV and Hi-Definition DVD player. For many, the excitement of purchase dims when they arrive home and see the multitude of cords and multi-colored jacks, knowing that they must be correctly connected in order to make your Home Theater system function properly. No doubt hooking up your Home Theater system can be a challenge, especially if you don’t know which cables will give you the best quality.
Almost all of the new HDTVs found in today’s market have multiple connections on the back of each unit. These are some of the connections you might see on the back of your new HDTV.
Analog coaxial RF Connection: This is a “legacy” connection found on all older TVs. It is the poorest quality TV connection. This is a connection that transports both an audio and a video signal in a purely analog format. Read more...
www.invodo.com Panasonic has developed the world’s first portable Blue-Ray player equipped with an ethernet connection. You can even watch the entire youtube catalog through this device!
Very happy with it. Makes my 52″ Aquos LCD look awesome. VERY slow loading times though. Perhaps this will improve with time. Haven’t compared to any other units though. All in all a good unit other than slow boot up and play times.
Feature
Spiderman 3 Blu-Ray Movie Included in the box
Full HD 1080/60p & 24p True Cinema Video Output
DVD Upscaling to 1080p via HDMI
BRAVIA Theatre Sync (HDMI-CEC)
BD/DVD/CD playback and AVC-HD with x.v.Color output
Overview
See and hear a whole new world in high definition with Sony’s BDP-S300 Spiderman 3 Limited Edition. The crystalline clarity of 1080p Blu-ray Disc™ movies and DVD upscaling that can bring your DVDs to the highest possible quality, mean your favorite movies have never looked or sounded so good. Add to that Sony’s 24p True Cinema and Cinema Tuned picture presets, which allow you to see any movie just the way its director intended, and all you’ll need is a little popcorn to lose yourself in an HD world. Better yet, now Sony’s BRAVIA Theater Sync means that now you can control your compatible TV and AV systems all from one remote. Read more...
The HDTV revolution has changed the home electronics landscape for good already, but the real benefits of this advanced technology will soon be apparent in the next few years as it becomes more accepted and established. For the last half century television entertainment remained pretty much the same as far as the video and audio capabilities are concerned. There were some advances along the way including large screen TVs and VHS recorders/players, but essentially the viewing experience was unchanged.
Much of the staleness of TV entertainment was due to the limitations of the analog system of broadcasting a TV signal. Only so much information could be sent over the air by analog format so no real advances in TV electronics were needed. But when satellite and cable TV entered the picture and introduced digital broadcasting, things began to change, and soon the DVD format just completely took over as the preferred medium for viewing movies at home on TV. The success of these digital format technologies has spurred the changeover from analog to fully digital entertainment and HDTV is the realization of that dream. Read more...
If you have even thought about this question, then at the very least you know that there has been an ongoing controversy about the standard of the next generation of Digital Video Data. If you haven’t thought about yet, here’s the low down.
Toshiba and Sony both had digital video technologies in the works back in the early 1990s. Toshiba won that battle with the DVD that we all know and love. Sony started working on the future of DVD technology and came up with the BluRay Disc. Toshiba was also looking to the future with their answer to the future, HD DVD.
The technical differences between the two new standards are not all that great. BluRay discs can hold more data and are more expensive due to a special process needed to create the final layer. The surface layer of HD DVD is the same as current DVDs, 0.6mm. BluRay is only 0.1mm thick and has to have a special super strong coating applied to them to keep them from scratching too easily and becoming unusable. Read more...