 | Retailers Report 'Fifth Element' Blu-ray Remaster Coming in July (High-Def Digest, 5/17/2007 10:56pm) |
| Sony has yet to issue a formal announcement, but retailers are reporting that the studio plans to issue a remastered version of the much-maligned Blu-ray edition of 'The Fifth Element' on July 17. Rumor... ... (Read Full Article) |
 | The LG HR400 - Blu-ray, Freeview HDD and YouTube all-in-one (Tech Digest, 7/08/2009 1:38pm) |
| LG has announced that the HR400 will be available at the end of this month. The HR400 is a Blu-ray DVD player, a Freeview receiver with recording onto a built-in HDD and it also streams YouTube videos without the need for a PC. The Blu-ray is 1080p full HD and will also upscale your old DVDs. The Freeview element includes a 160GB HDD. This really does do the job of two separate boxes and the YouT ... (Read Full Article) |
 | Very High Speed DSL Standard to Accelerate Universal Access to Multiple Broadband Services (Market Wire via Yahoo! Finance, 6/01/2005 8:13pm) |
| Welcoming the latest standardised DSL specification from ITU-T for very-high-bit-rate digital subscriber line 2, announced on 27 May 2005, chairman of the DSL Forum, Michael Brusca says: "With vendors' implementation of this new ITU-T Recommendation, service providers can offer even more high quality, advanced services using DSL technology. It represents another essential element in the delivery ... (Read Full Article) |
 | Don't let retailer's lights distract you from buying the right HDTV (Engadget, 8/10/2009 10:01pm) |
In case you hadn't already learned your lesson and started checking behind the displays while HDTV shopping, the HD Guru points out another element of the in-store experience that throws off buyers (and likely contributes to the LCD vs. plasma choices we find so infuriating): lighting. In case you don't recall from your last trek to a big box superstore, the lighting is quite often stuck on blinding making it nearly impossible to discern any difference in picture quality between televisions, specifically in terms of contrast and black levels (the pictures above are of the same value priced display, at left, under normal home lighting, at right, how it looks under some store lighting setups.) Tested with an illuminance meter, all the stores (except Best Buy's Magnolia showrooms) averaged well above home ambient lighting levels, with Wal-Mart and Costco measuring the highest at 411.66 and 742.77 lux. Still, there's tips on how to get a good idea of a TV's black levels even under those circumstances, plus some choice words left over for the incredible (and useless) dynamic contrast ratio numbers every manufacturer trots out these days, so go ahead and get educated.Filed under: HDTV, Home EntertainmentDon't let retailer's lights distract you from buying the right HDTV originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments (Read Full Article) |