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Philips Blu ray Disc Player BDP7200 37

January 8th, 2009

Philips Blu ray Disc Player BDP7200 37




There’s steaming heat as high-definition puts its brand on DVD and the winner appears to be Blu-Ray for deliver up to 1080p images (at 24 frames per second) with up to 7.1 channel home-theater sound capabilities. It’s the only way to really get the full impact of disc play on your widescreen HDTV. Philips BDP7200 is a second-generation player ready to deliver top video and audio performance to your home-theater system.
Philips BDP7200 touts stunning Full HD 1080p images – the pinnacle of today’s high-def visuals. Rich surround sound is heightened with multi-channel audio decoding and digital audio optical outputs. Older DVD libraries will look better than ever as the BD player upscales them to 1080p – a major attraction to consumers who, as they migrate to HDTV sets, find that standard DVDs do not offer the HD content they expect. The BDP7200 supports technology known as BD-Java, which makes even more sophisticated interactive features possible. It boasts Picture in Picture (PiP), graphical enhancements and multi-languages for on-screen display. Multi-layered displays enable users to interact with on-disc content – such as pop-up menus, graphics, director’s commentary and bonus material – even as the main movie is playing. It is Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD compliant for up to 7.1-channel audio surround playback.
Further enhancing the player’s simplicity, Philips EasyLink allows easy control of connected devices via HDMI-CEC Consumer Electronics Control (CEC1) function with one remote. One button does it all – the TV and A/V components communicate via the same HDMI cables that deliver audio and high-def video.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars best bang for the buck
picked it up for $179 delivered from different site. plays most formats including divx. only drawback so far is not being able to unlock all regions. blu ray playback is gorgeous, upconversion isn’t that bad either. very happy with it.

1 Star Slow and Painful
This is my first Blu Ray player, and I second “Wewa’s” comments. I’ve got a 50″ 1080p tv and the picture is fine, when it works. The Philips BDP7200 takes around two minutes to load the movie, and often will stop playing in the middle of the movie.

There is nothing worse than settling in for a great movie, and then having the scene freeze 20 – 30 minutes in. Eventually, you can get it going again by reloading (2 or 3 times) but it really throws you out of the movie.

Avoid it.

3 Stars I would recommend the 5992 instead for most folks at this time
Have owned/installed dozens of DVD players.

Comparing this one with Sony 301, BX1, Toshiba A2, E500, Philips 5992 and Oppo 970HD.

Blu-Ray – ok. If you must have a BD player, this may be a nice choice. Especially if you need Divx compatiblity. No Ethernet tho.

SD DVD – Upconversion is typically poor, as is most BD players. Not as good as HD DVD, E500, or Oppo. Even $39 5992 is superior.

Divx – poor resolution, compared to 5992. Subtitles are not well formatted, compared to LG/Zenith Divx compatible players.

Pros:

Cheaper than sony BD players up til now.

Cons:

No ethernet, poor divx quality/compatibility. typical BD sluggish remote command response. Remote is long, heavy, button layout is horrible.

5992 has much better remote.

Summary:

I returned this unit. Too many drawbacks. Especially at this price. Will wait for a player that make me happy in all respects. If I had to buy something now for a HDTV HDMI setup, it would probably be the $39 Philips 5992. Great value and performance.

Reviewed using a 50″ PDP 1080i using HDMI connection.

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Sony BDUX10S SATA Blu ray Disc ROM Drive Internal

January 8th, 2009

Sony BDUX10S SATA Blu ray Disc ROM Drive Internal




Marketing description is not available.

User Ratings and Reviews

3 Stars Great hardware, broken software – can’t play new web-enabled Bluray discs
The Bluray player installs great and works right away. Plays OLD Bluray discs just fine – beautiful HD and sound!

The critical problem is the software which is required to play discs – it simply will not play many NEW Bluray discs! Out of 3 Bluray discs, it could only play 1 of them! This is a notorious problem that makes your player practically useless without a manual workaround:

[..]

[...]

Ironically, this software problem even exists for the HD DVD version of this software too. The issue is with any disc that contains web-enhanced content (common among NEW Bluray discs).

Cyberlink, which makes the PowerDVD software, programmed it so poorly that it actually CRASHES when most certain Bluray discs are inserted. Heroes, Dawn of the Dead, Spiderman, and countless others ran into this problem back in early 2007 because they included new web-enhanced content. When PowerDVD tries to retrieve this content, it simply crashes. You cannot watch any of the movie other than navigate the title menu.

PowerDVD also has an automatic update feature for patches. This also fails. Cyberlink simply pretends this problem doesn’t exist, so you have to email their support to get a patch – they actually make you promise not to share it!

Update: After a lot of pressure, they’ve finally made the patch public.

[...]

You’ll need Internet Explorer to access this.

In summary, the hardware player is excellent. However, it requires you to use PowerDVD to decode Bluray, and that software simply fails. I’ve been able to play 1 out of 3 Bluray discs so far before complaining to Cyberlink. Sony needs to provide a different Bluray software, or stop locking Bluray discs so only Cyberlink can play them.

5 Stars Great player – but with a ton of software updates!
After a searching and weeding through a bunch of forums and product reviews, I settled on this player (drive) vs. the LG/LiteOn/Pioneer/etc. It was just bundled with decent software, cables, and has the Blu Ray originator, “Sony,” brand name. I just finished watching Narnia (Caspian) and the Sony drive worked FLAWLESSLY.

My base desktop media center is a Gateway GT5224. Here are the specs:

Windows XP SP2

Pentium D 2.8GHz (4MB cache) – not overclocked! Yes, it runs smoothly!

2GB DDR2 SDRAM memory – added 1GB aftermarket

XFX GeForce 8800 GT Alpha Dog Edition Extreme (256MB) video card -sweet!

300GB of free drive space – added 2nd 320GB internal hard drive

I am running 1080P (native resolution on my TV) through DVI->HDMI to my Samsung 56″ DLP.

OK, now for the install pains…

I connected the Sony BD drive using the supplied SATA cables. Setup drivers using provided installation CD. Installed Cyberlink using same CD. Immediately, software recognized that an XP software patch was needed to continue. I ran the software patch after downloading it from Cyberlink’s site. Reboot. XP recognized new hardware again. Finished self-installation. Reboot. Tried to run the BD and the top half of my screen was clear, but the bottom half looked like a “waterfall”. Found new the latest nvidia driver for my card, “178.24 WHQL”. Downloaded and ran it. Reboot. My screen size was now skewed wide. Oh, crap – check forums! Found it. Common problem with new driver & DVI-HDMI connection. Using nvidia settings, set screen resolution to 480P, resized screen, and then switched back to 1080P. BINGO! Screen back to normal. Ran Sony BD drive and played Narnia. Cue teary eyes. It was so beautiful!

My biggest fear was that my CPU (processor) wouldn’t be up to the task, since all I’ve been reading has lead me to believe the BD drives were CPU intensive not GPU intensive. My video card simply kicks serious butt! Either my case is an anomaly, or Intel is spreading rumors to force people to upgrade their CPUs. Conspiracy??? hehehe

Anyway, it looks great, no frame drops whatsoever, and I am one true believer in Blu Ray. I’ll never go back to DVDs again! Hope this helps! God bless & Merry Christmas!

5 Stars Great drive, but not worth it yet.
I built a new PC a few months ago, I have all the requisite hardware, and Blu-Ray is still too much of a headache. Don’t get me wrong. The drive works brilliantly. However, as some have noted this drive requires you to get software that I think is still under par for consistency and ease of use. Some Blu ray discs are trouble free; many Blu Ray discs require too much time on Google trying to figure out how to even get it to play.

Who’s to blame? Well ironically, I would put the blame on Sony. Their digital rights management (DRM) is one of the most consumer-unfriendly inventions in recent history. Even when you think you’ve got it figured out once and for all, they release updates that make you constantly have to find a post halfway down on some message board that explains how to get your software player to play nice with a given BR-DVD’s new DRM. I will continue to struggle through this because I’m stubborn. But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t regret buying into the Blu-Ray thing a bit prematurely. If you’re still on the fence, go to the message boards of any of the players/decoders capable of handling Blu-Ray content: Total Media Theatre, PowerDVD, AnyDVD… Then ask yourself if it’s a good thing that there is so much content related to troubleshooting Blu Ray on a HTPC.

3 Stars Solid brand-name Blu-Ray (BD-ROM) drive, painful setup
Installing the drive was a snap, SONY includes all needed cables and even an replacement faceplate which I had to use in order to get this player in my Gateway desktop case.

The bundled software is Cyberlink PowerDVD BR Edition. This was a bit disappointing. I was expecting SONY branded software to supply the Blu-Ray playback (their menu system found on the PS3 on their stand alone Blu-Ray disc players is very intuitive). The PowerDVD software cost me about 3 hours troubleshooting. On launch the software detected and downloaded the latest patch, but even after it was installed I would try to play a Blu-Ray movie and I would get an error message “Fail to enable HDPC” right after the FBI warning.

This problem turned out to be Blu-Ray copy protection preventing the disc from playing with my hardware. Blu-Ray copy protection is picky about the output source (i.e. video card) and if you have a dual display card or if you’re connecting your monitor over DVI (even DVI-I & DVI-D) instead of HDMI the drivers may trigger the Blu-Ray copy protection to block the playback. The solution is to download the latest video drivers for your card, firmware and make sure the PowerDVD application is updated. If you’re connecting to your monitor through DVI, make sure your DVI cable is DVI-D or DVI-I and not analog only DVI.

After updating to the latest ATI Catalysis drivers everything began working great. Make sure your video card and CPU meet/exceed the minimum requirements before buying.

2 Stars Mildly recommending to friends as a best bang for the buck
The whole purpose of buying these drives is to watch blu-ray movies. With players now as low as $200, and even $150 when on sale, I would recommend getting a player instead. Here’s why:

I got the player for a low $79 on black friday. Even with this deal, it’s not quite the steal it seems to be. At that price you get the drive and the bundled software. I popped in Transformers blu-ray. There was so much aliasing when running Cyberlink BD. The text and graphics were not as crisp as expected. The problem was the bundled software. You need to upgrade to Cyberlink ultra to get the full graphics as expected from blu-ray. That’s another $100.

So $79+$100=179. Get a player instead if your purpose is to just watch movies (not read data).

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Sharp Aquos BDHP21U 1080p Blu ray Disc Player

January 8th, 2009

Sharp Aquos BDHP21U 1080p Blu ray Disc Player




HDMI™ OutputSimple One Cable Connection A one cable connection carries complete digital audio and video connection between your HDTV and the BD-HP21U player for the best high definition video and the highest fidelity audio in home theater today. Blu-ray Disc™ technology brings the multiplex experience right to your home.Full HD ResolutionAn Amazing Home Theater Experience in the Comfort of Your Home The Blu-ray Disc™ format has full 1080p resolution capability â thatâs the maximum picture resolution available today. 1080p=1,080 lines of vertical resolution, progressively scanned.High Fidelity AudioReal Life-Like Sound Blu-ray technology lets you take advantage of the latest surround sound formats such as Dolby® TrueHD™. This means you will enjoy high quality lossless 7.1 Channel digital surround (48kHz Only) that is bit for bit the equivalent of a master recording.HDMI™ Up-scalingBackwards Compatible Even your existing standard definition DVD library c…

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Excellent Blu-Ray player
Quick start-up. Excellent picture and audio quality on my AQUOS 52-inch TV. Simple interface and controls.

1 Star Horrible.
This thing is is terrible.. I have even gone and updated the firmware from thier site, still won’t play movies..

It wouldn’t even read the new Hulk movie. Indiana jones got like 10 minutes of play before it froze and started doing the jerky motion. Iron Man had the same results.. Played for 10-15 mins then froze and went into jerky screen.. The only thing that will play are my old regular DVD’s.. Blue Ray is out..

5 Stars Great Bluray, DVD Upconversion and Audio
I have had this for 1 month and have played 4 new BluRay releases and several DVD’s. This player excells at everything you want from a BluRay player. Picture quality of BluRay discs is excellent. Upconversion of standard dvd is so good, you might think you are watching BluRay. And the audio will blow you out of your seat. I have had no compatability issues with any disc, as many have reported with players from other manufacturers. It has a Quick Start feature which speeds up load time, and works in tandem with my Sharp Aquos tv. If you turn on the BluRay player the tv will turn on and automatically switch to the proper input. If you turn the tv on and turn the source to dvd, the player will turn on and begin to play the dvd. And each remote contols both the tv and the player.

One other thing to note, is that Sharp recommends installing a USB thumb drive in the rear of the unit for certain BluRay discs which have a lot of added features which require additional memory. This will allow you to take advantage of additional program features on the discs and may speed up the load time.

I would definitely buy again!

BTW, there is a firmware upgrade available from the Sharp website. It comes with instructions, and it is very easy to install. It is intended to facilitate the loading and playing of some specific new release BluRay discs (I beleive James Bond).

1 Star Christmas Morning Fail
This product arrived dead on delivery. Inserted 2 new Blu-ray discs and failed to read. Inserted 2 factory DVDs that have worked in other players and failed to read.

Amazon return was very quick with RMA and shipping label.

5 Stars Works perfect, great picture!
Despite some of the negative reviews here, I bought the Sharp Blu-Ray to sync with my Aquos TV. Works perfectly. I’ve had no problems at all.

I would highly recommend this player to anyone that needs a basic Blu-Ray player.

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LG BH200 Super Blu Blu Ray HD DVD Combo Player

January 8th, 2009

LG BH200 Super Blu Blu Ray HD DVD Combo Player




The Super Blu Player offers increased HDTV entertainment choices, because it can play 50 to 60 percent more high-def movie titles than either single-format player. With full networked interactivity available from selected HD DVDs, and the capability to handle networked “BD-Live” interactivity in forthcoming Blu-ray discs, it is the latest available technology that plays both disc formats.The LG Super Blu Player, which can output up to 1080p video resolution at 24-, 30- and 60-frames-per-second, supports various A/V formats, including MPEG-2, VC-1, H.264 video, MPEG1/2 audio, Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital+, DTS and DTS-HD audio. The unit also includes multiple inputs/outputs such as HDMI 1.3 out, component/composite video outputs, digital optical and analog audio outputs as well as a LAN Ethernet port for network interactivity.LG Super Blu Player customers will enjoy superior quality video output with HDMI 1.3 Deep Color output to improve color tones and achieve finer color gradations to deliver the smoothest and most brilliant video output available. The player also features QDEO advanced video processing for superior up-scaling accuracy up to 1080p, improved noise reduction and consistent color precision.The new Super Blu Player incorporates LG’s SimpLink connectivity solution, enabling easier control of other LG SimpLink compatible equipment. The units are connected with an HDMI cable and use the HDMI-CEC communication standard. This allows the user to control other components on-screen or directly from each component. The BH200 also is equipped with a USB Media Host for easy access to digital music and photo libraries.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars The perfect Player
worked perfectly, would buy it again in a heart beat. only con is its a bit slow in the loading area other then that its a good buy!

5 Stars DONT BUY HERE!
Great player but it is $250 cheaper if you buy direct from LG

I don’t know how Amazon get away with this!

5 Stars Good player.
One of the best in the blu-ray and Hd Dvd tech. Just bought on the 23 of dec and I’m happy with it. I like HD DVD over blu-ray any way, so I would just continue to collect my hd dvd titles so I could enjoy it while others wait for it to be release on bu-ray haha.

4 Stars Way to go if you have a HD DVD collection
You have already read the other accolades so I won’t go that route… I concur with them! Quite frankly, I always preferred the HD DVD format over Blu-Ray. a much better menu system and IMHO better quality. I also own a Toshiba A2 HD DVD player and about 25 HD DVDs. I Was disheartened when the HD DVD format fell by the wayside. The good news to HD DVD fans is that this LG Super Blu combo unit lets you have your Hi-Def cake and eat it to. Now I buy bargain HD DVDs for past titles and Blu-Ray for new releases. Shop around for deals and you can find this unit considerably less than here.

5 Stars Twice The Fun
Got on clearance at BB for $199.99. Upgraded the firmware and works great and even looks good. Better than my Samsung BD-P1200 and faster. Colors are deep and rich and sound is excellent. Looking forward to years of High Def viewing.

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Pioneer BDC 2202B 5x Blu ray DVD CD Combo Drive Black

January 7th, 2009

Pioneer BDC 2202B 5x Blu ray DVD CD Combo Drive Black




The Pioneer BDC-2202 enables computer users to watch high definition Blu-ray Disc movies on a properly configured PC while also having the ability to write to DVD and CD.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Blu-ray on PC requires $99 PowerDvd Ultra…
The product itself is a solid dvd / blu-ray player. No complaints. On Vista home premium however it didn’t play movies out of the box. Corel Windvd demo didn’t work… Cyberlink free demo didn’t include Bluray playback. I needed to first buy ($99) Cyberlink PowerDvd Ultra.

4 Stars Solid HTPC BD reader
First the negatives:

-No SATA cable included. This is a retail boxed product, not an OEM stripper special. It should include a SATA cable.

-It spins really fast by default to read CD’s. It will eventually slow down, but there’s no reason to spin at 48X to listen to a music CD.

-Rips DVD’s very slowly. 5X is the best I could get. I’ll have to experiment more with this.

The positives:

-Reads my Bluray discs just fine. No problems with my limited tests.

-Overall very quiet. DVD and BD playback is very quiet.

-Fits perfectly in my Antec Fusion case.

Caveat:

I didn’t try out any of the bundled software; already owned PowerDVD Ultra. Read the system requirements before buying. Most of the 1 star reviews here are from people who didn’t RTFM.

Overall:

A solid drive for HTPC use that will read Bluray discs and write DVD’s and CD’s. Even though Vista MediaCenter does not currently support Bluray discs, this drive is still a great buy. If you setup your autoplay options correctly, you can have PowerDVD launch and play BD titles automatically then switch back to VMC using the green start button on the remote.

2 Stars Danger, Will Robinson, Danger!
Blu-Ray playback on the PC is not yet mature. Before you burn your hard-earned cash on this product, make sure you meet ALL of the hardware requirements. And even if you do, like myself, it still may not work!! The software that comes with this product, WinDVD 8 LE is at best still-born. It will work on one of my older PCs, but incredibly not on my fastest machine. It will not even load on my Q6600 Asus P5Q Pro 3GB RAM setup. Go figure. Ultimately, you will need to buy WinDVD 9 Plus or some other application. I cannot understand why you even have to buy this kind of software. It is only just to play a movie.

2 Stars 50/50
Drive was easy enough to install, no drivers required. Vista Ultimate SP1 recognized it as a BD-Rom drive. You will need a SATA cable as there isn’t one included.

Bundled software (WinDVD 8) only lets me play a movie in half-screen size. I tried and tried to get it to go full screen to no avail. Had to purchase PowerDVD Ultra. Worked like a charm playing Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull blu-ray. No issues at all. My AMD X2 5400+ ran between 20-30% load.

Then I tried Dan in Real Life blu-ray. Both PowerDVD and WinDVD would not play it. Both would flash images of the movie on the screen but no sound and no motion, just still images. Updated to latest firmware (1.07) from Pioneer’s website and it still did not resolve the problem. Downloaded the update to WinDVD as well from Pioneer’s site and that didn’t fix it either. I returned the drive. One movie that doesn’t play is enough for me. I only had a 15 day return policy where I purchased it (not amazon) so it had to go back. The Dan in Real Life blu-ray was a Blockbuster-by-mail blu-ray. I’ve read that these blu-rays may have more copy-protection built in than purchased blu-rays. I don’t know if that’s true or not I just know that a blu-ray drive should play a blu-ray.

Too bad, I was hopeful that it would work out.

Vista Ultimate SP1

AMD X2 5400+

Ati Radeon HD 3850

47″ Toshiba LCD

3 Stars Mostly O.K.
I have had trouble with this player recognizing region 1 disks (2 so far). It is set up correctly but it just will not play a couple discs, claiming that they are the wrong region. The disks play fine in my PS3 Blu-ray player so it seems to be a problem with the Pioneer, or it’s drivers. Other than that, it works fine with all other formats (DVD, CD).

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