gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

July 3, 2006

HP Pavilion md5880n 1080p DLP TV reviewed

Filed under: 1080p,58-inch,HD,HDTV,dlp,high-definition,hp,md5880n,pavillion,rptv — Stan Horaczek @ 1:40 pm

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Those good sports over at PC World subjected themselves to the tough job of spending time with that 58-inch DLP HDTV from HP we first heard about at CES, and the verdict is overwhelmingly positive. The 118-pound wobulator takes up its fair share of living room space, but with a wide array of features, like built-in 2.1 sound, 1080p resolution, a menu system that’s “just about perfect,” and an extensive array of picture tweaking options, the trade-off is easily justified. The inputs, which are conveniently located in the front of the TV, include two HDMIs, two component-videos, a VGA, CableCard and two RF inputs, as well as a USB port for firmware upgrades. At $3,500, it’s a lot cheaper than most other, flatter alternatives, so you might even have enough money left over to keep your PS3 fund alive.

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June 7, 2006

SavitMicro’s Dueple: HD media player with DVD

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We've seen Korean manufacturer SavitMicro a few times before, once with a hub for multi-cam recording and another time with a media-playing drive enclosure, and now they've popped up once again at Computex with yet another device that promises to simplify your digital life. Like their drive enclosure, the new "Dueple," as it's known, also accepts swappable 2.5-inch or 3.5-inch drives for multimedia playback, but throws in a DVD player as well for spinning any of those old-fashioned discs you may have laying around. The Dueple features DVI, component, S-video, coax, and digital audio outputs for hooking up to your home theater gear, Ethernet and USB ports for data transfer, and lets you watch/listen to MPEG-1/2/4, MP3, DivX, WMV, WMA, and OGG files, including high-definition content. There are probably better ways of getting your digital swag onto a TV than this particular solution, but if it sports a reasonable pricetag when it comes out within the month -- from e-tailer GeekStuff4U -- we imagine that it will draw some interest.
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June 6, 2006

Acer Aspire 9510 and 9110 HD-DVD-sporting laptops

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Along with the 15.4-inch 5670 and 20.1-inch 9800 notebooks that we'd already known about, Acer formally unveiled at Computex two other HD-DVD- and Centrino Duo-toting models from the Aspire line that we hadn't seen before: the 17-inch 9510 and 15.4-inch 9110 (pictured). All four models are being billed as all-in-one multimedia centers, and with all but the 5670 sporting 1,920 x 1,080 resolutions, S/PDIF and HDCP-capable HDMI outputs, optional analog and DVB-T tuners, and of course those high-def, backwards-compatible optical drives (still waiting on those Blu-ray models, though), it sure sounds like Acer knows what it's talking about. Both of the new-new notebooks also offer up to 4GB of DDR2 RAM and nVidia graphics cards, but the 9510 rocks the GeForce Go 7900 GS with 512MB of RAM and up to 240GB of hard drive space, while the 9110 has to settle for the GeForce Go 7600 with 256MB of RAM and a HDD that maxes out at 120GB. Unfortunately, Acer was so busy selling us on the benefits of all these new machines that they forgot a few important details, so both pricing and release dates for each and every one remain a big fat mystery for now.

[Via Notebook Review]
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June 4, 2006

AircordAV promises wireless, lossless HD streaming

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Certainly not the the first solution for streaming HD programming around your house, a new product called the AircordAV promises to dumb down the whole process into what would appear to be a 5-minute-install, and supports that sweet 1,080p resolution to boot. Instead of asking your existing router to do all the hard work, AircordAV comes with a base unit that hooks up to any of your home theater gear using HDMI, DVI, component, S-video, composite, or SCART connections, and creates its own 802.11g network with up to eight clients feeding any or all of your video displays. Aircord claims the product is capable of lossless streaming, and uses a proprietary technology to encode and decode your video signals, although the company's lack of a website or actual product shots makes us a bit wary of the whole thing. We'll find out in December if this clever idea can be turned into a working device -- that's when the AircordAV will supposedly be released -- and if it can, expect to cough up at least $500 to start cutting those cords.
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April 4, 2006

Hitachi’s DV-DH-1000D 1TB HDD/DVD recorder

Filed under: DVD,HDD,HDTV,hdmi,hi-def,hi-vision,high-definition,hitachi — Thomas Ricker @ 4:22 am

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href="http://translate.google.com/translate?prev=/language_tools&u=http://www.hitachi.co.jp/New/cnews/month/2006/04/0404c.html"> vspace="4" hspace="4" border="1" alt="" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/hita4_02.jpg" />

Yeah we
know, those wimpy href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/03/14/pioneers-dvr-dt100-800gb-dvr-with-analog-and-digital-tuners/">800GB video
recorders are for chumps. The cool kids are all hangin’ with Hitachi’s new 1TB, DV-DH1000D HDD/DVD video
recorder. Yeah, that’s 1,000GB of freakin’ storage to fix that high-def recording jones. The rest of the details are
sketchy. The best we can make out from the machine translation is that the device sports HDMI and includes both
terrestrial analog and digital Hi-Vision (HDTV) tuners for simultaneous recording and/or playback. But hey, it’s only
available in Japan so other than reigning  as the "world’s largest" video recorder, what more do you
really need to know?

[Via href="http://www.akihabaranews.com/news-11493-Hitachi%5C's%20new%201TB%20Media%20Recorder.html">Akihabara News]

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