Gadget news Infoniac
 




Projector (HDTV)



1
votes
LCoS explained
though LCoS sets have usually cost more than like-sized TVs with various technologynology, a common 50-inch LCoS HDTV at present day lists for about $3,500.Want to put something through the technologynology Decrypter? mail decisions to technologynologyblog@scifi
 read more

1
votes
A bit on MPEG-4
Thanks to DRM, the iTunes vids limit how a lot of times and onto that gadgets they can be copied.Most HDTV broadcasts are encoded in MPEG-2, but in recent time both DirecTV and Dish Network have turned to MPEG-4 for their fresher HDTV channels, since No.
 read more

1
votes
Magnetix I-Coaster is the kind of toy I want for Christmas
Sure, you might be hoping to get "toys" such as HDTVs, digital cameras, or cell phones for Christmas, but for kids, toys mean just that: toys. Toys are straight-up fun, and this Magnetix I-Coaster looks like it'd make any kid who found it under the tree happy
 read more

1
votes
Sensor soap dispenser to solve one of life's greatest problems
Simply put your sponge underneath it and voila! you have got soap on it. Now you can save your dearest energy for more significant assignments, like applying the remote control on your HDTV or remote car starter.
 read more

1
votes
Marantz's DAvED: Easiest multiroom audio ever
additional radios will run you $330 every. We love the amazingly humble approach but want Marantz had selected a more reasonably priced receiver to pair DAvED with (and one with HDMI jacks so it would be future-proof for HDTVs).
 read more

1
votes
Acer has an iDea: a sleek Media Center PC
item, so its double digital TV tuners will not work over here, but if you hook up a separate HDTV tuner or cable/satellite feed, it ought be prepared and willing to record in HD, with its HDMI and DVI connectors souped up for playback of 1080p signals  the topmost of high-def (of course, you will require to have a 1080p-capable set to see each pixel). perfectly, although, it would have an HD DVD or Blu-ray recorder for keeping archive of high-def demonstrates, but a DVD burner will have to do.
 read more

1
votes
AT&T brings you a new way to channel surf: IPTV
One matter still being decided is HDTV, that gobbles up giant chunks of band width. Instead of depending on high-priced fiber-optic cable strung right into peoples' homes, à la Verizon's FiOS service, AT&T's IPTV network trusts on compressing signals over existing phone lines, that may not be enough to provide trustworthy high-definition streams.
 read more

1
votes
Apple 'iTV' to connect computers and TVs
Hooking up to your fancy HDTV via HDMI or to your older model with component-video jacks, the iTV looks like a slimmer Mac Mini and is managed by the white remote that is bundled with a lot of Mac models at present day. It links to your computer via Wi-Fi, Ethernet cables, or USB and lets you to browse through all your music, photographs, and video content kept in iTunes.
 read more

1
votes
Oppo's DV-981HD upconverts your DVDs to 1080p
That does not imply they will look as pointed as HDTV, but the digital link ought guarantee your image stays free of dirty artifacts.It'll play a lot of other disc kinds, too, with DVD-Audio, SACD, DivX, XviD, WMA discs, and Kodak image CDs doing most of the headlining.
 read more

1
votes
Soundmatters SLIMstage gives wall-hanging TVs a voice
you have improved to a kick-ass flat-panel HDTV and even got it up on the wall  well done. Now you like nice sound, but the last thing you like to do is clutter up your room with massive speakers everywhere.
 read more

1
votes
Sony's DAV-IS10 home theater system is small but loud
atched with the single-disc DVD player/receiver, it scales video up to 720p or 1080i format when linked via HDMI to an HDTV. It as well requires benefit of the Bravia Theater Sync smart technology  a control interface for switching inputs that has a job through the HDMI cable but just if you have a Bravia HDTV.
 read more

1
votes
Bang & Olufsen brings HTiBs to a new level, price point
You, you're too earnest to skimp on an all-in-one decision like that, right?Well, the Bang & Olufsen BeoVision 7 is not your common HTiB. It comprizes a 40-inch HDTV, 7.
 read more

1
votes
Movie Cowboy Networked Media Server/Player Can Rustle Up Any Media
It hitches up to your HDTV via the newest HDMI connector, too, and outputs that appreciated highest-rez 1080p resolution. So let us add this up: If you install a $365 1TB solid disk into this Cowboy, you can have yourself a rootin' tootin' home server full of video for around $565.
 read more

1
votes
Cheaper TiVo Series 3 Lite coming soon?
The TiVo edition 3 is a quite hot piece of fittings, may be the nicest DVR out there and one that any HDTV-owning TV fan would love. The puzzle? it is trully freaking high-priced.
 read more

1
votes
Sony HDMS-S1D Digital Photo Album started out as something else
Its interior software allows you arrange those photographs into albums, and then plays back slideshows on an HDTV via its HDMI and element ports. But anticipate just a minute.
 read more

1
votes
Make your own JVC speakers and feel like a master builder
After all, it is quite hard to construct an HDTV or a receiver yourself. But now, thanks to the egg heads at JVC, you can put some elbow grease into producing your own speakers
 read more

1
votes
A table with speakers built right in
certain, you could set your fancy HDTV up on a plain old table, but does not that appear like a loose of space? I imply, you have got all sorts of massive fittings, and you're going to require up space with a table that does not plug in to anything? Consolidate, my pal. Consolidate
 read more

1
votes
Toshiba demos HD DVD, confirms down-rez issue
So memo to everyone with a old HDTV that has just element-video inputs: do not trouble. To be fair, the player is able of outputting full-HD video from the element links; it is the disc that will tell the player to do the down converting.
 read more

1
votes
Old HDTVs will show Sony Blu-ray movies in HD
Instead, you would get a image about the same as DVD-quality; to watch in HD, you would require to use the HDMI output — a connector that did not even exist when HDTVs first went on sale in 1998. But now beginning of HDTV adopters have been given a tiny reprieve… at least from one studio.
 read more

1
votes
First Blu-ray laptop: watch, edit, and burn HD video
Not just will the souped-up laptop play high-def video from Blu-ray Discs, but is comes fitted with an HDMI port so you can watch on your big-screen HDTV when you like (funny your set has an HDMI or DVI input, of course). You can even burn HD video to Blu-ray media  either write-once BD-R or rewritable BD-RE discs.
 read more

 
Archives
Friends

 
 
   
© InfoNIAC.com
2007 All Rights Reserved