Home Theater
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Mitsubishi Adds 75” 3D TV, Starter Pack |
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Mitsubishi’s L75-A91 3D TV ($5,999) will feature Cinema Color mode streaming content from VUDU, Pandora, Flickr, and more.
Mitsubishi has been making 3D TVs for years now (true story!). However, that doesn’t mean the company’s 3D line couldn’t use some sprucing up.
Mitsubishi announced a new LaserVue model, the 75-inch L75-A91 ($5,999), as well as a 3D Starter Pack (3DC-1000).
The Mitsubishi 3D Starter Pack is a little something for existing (and future) owners of Mitsubishi 3D DLP Home Cinema TVs and LaserVue TVs. For $399, you’ll get two pairs of active-shutter 3D glasses, a 3D emitter, a 3D adapter with remote, an HDMI cable and a 3D Blu-ray disc.
The disc isn’t an actual movie, like a few other manufacturers (Samsung, Panasonic) are offering. Instead, it’s sort of a “greatest hits” with 3D trailers for A Christmas Carol, Alice In Wonderland and Toy Story 3. There is a nifty little exclusive, though: An educational short about 3D, which is presented by Lion King cartoon cuties Timon and Pumba.
Just an FYI: That 3D adapter is the one that Mitsubishi was showing off at CES in January 2010. This $99 piece is what enables the company’s TVs to convert side-by-side, top-bottom, and frame-packing 3D signal formats as prescribed by HDMI 1.4a. It will work will every 3D-ready DLP TV that Mitsubishi has shipped since 2007, as well as the 2010 638 Series and new LaserVue 3D TVs. Signal upgrades for the 738 and 838 series are coming this summer.
If you don’t already have a Mitsubishi LaserVue TV, the company also just announced the 75-inch L75-A91. New features on this model include a Cinema Color mode and StreamTV access, which includes content from VUDU, Pandora, Flickr, and other content providers. Other perks include True120Hz, a USB port, Plush 1080p 5G 12-bit Digital Video Processing, and four HDMI inputs.
 Mitsubishi 3D Starter Pack by
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The thinner, brighter, lighter 85-inch Panasonic Pro Plasma goes anywhere |
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Now there's a large-screen Professional Plasma that's not only light enough to go anywhere — it has a spectacular contrast ratio of 40,000:1 and a moving picture resolution of 1,080 lines for stunning full high definition images.
The 85-inch Pro Plasma with NeoPDP™ technology integrates the latest Plasma innovations to deliver brighter, more vivid, images with deep, rich blacks in a thin, lightweight display, that is more energy-efficient, and large enough to show images life-sized.
What's more, as with all Panasonic Professional Displays, it is fully expandable for a wide variety of professional uses with our triple multi-function slots that accept a variety of customizable plug-in boards.
Find out more about the installation, leasing and financing of the Panasonic 85-inch Professional Plasma. Visit us at www.linkyourhouse.com/contact-us panasonic.com /ProPlasma85.
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S1Digital Blu-ray Changer Integrates with Media Center |
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Hate the lag time it takes to load a Blu-ray disc and get the movie fired up in your system? Or just the time it takes to thumb through your collection and actually find the movie you’re looking for? 
If you use an S1Digital Entertainment Server or other form of Media Center, S1Digital wants to help by centralizing your optical disc collection. It’s introducing a Blu-ray Disc Changer that can store up to 100 discs and interfaces with Media Center for simpler navigation and selection. When you pop a Blu-ray disc or DVD into the changer, the playback software will scan metadata and cover art to automatically download to the connected S1 server or other third-party Microsoft Windows 7 or Vista PC that has Media Center. All that good information will let you then navigate your collection through the familiar media center interface, and access more information about the movie from your system. The setup also gives virtually instant access when you go to select that movie, rather than fumbling around or waiting for slow-loading players to boot up. If the content is non-copy-protected (like Blu-ray home movies from your camcorder), the connected Blu-ray Disc Changer will also automatically archive the disc to the Entertainment Server/Media Center hard drive, catalog it, and find and download the metadata and cover art. S1Digital’s product is now shipping for an MSRP of $1,499, so check with your custom installer. Link Your House is a dealer for all S1 Digital's products. |
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HDMI Licensing, LLC, the licensing entity behind the High-Definition Multimedia Interface networking technology that is commonly used to provide a secure digital connection between digital TV sets, set-top boxes and Blu-ray players, is working to ensure that television programmers will be able to deliver upcoming 3D broadcasts to new 3D-capable HDTV sets. The organization, which licenses its technology to over 900 consumer electronics (CE) manufacturers, announced late Wednesday that it is making the 3D portion of its latest HDMI specification, version 1.4, available for free public download on its Website so that television networks and transmission vendors can get the necessary information to deliver compatible 3D pictures to new 3D sets. Such companies haven't traditionally been licensees of HDMI technology, and thus didn't have access to the confidential specification that identified 3D formats. But they need to know how the 3D parts of HDMI work to ensure that early 3D broadcasts are viewable, says HDMI Licensing president Steve Venuti, which is why the organization is making the information freely available. "I see it as a necessity because HDMI is leading the market in supporting 3D at home," says Venuti. "These companies don't want to pay to get the spec, but they need it to understand how 3D will work in the marketplace." The HDMI Consortium also plans to include multiple broadcast 3D formats in an upcoming specification, version 1.4a, to ensure that HD sets and set-tops can display networks' nascent 3D programming. HDMI Licensing, founded by a consortium of Hitachi, Panasonic Corporation, Philips, Sony, Thomson (RCA), Toshiba, and Silicon Image, had already addressed the growing momentum behind stereoscopic 3D technology by including 3D gaming and movie (Blu-ray) formats in HDMI version 1.4, which came out last June. But that specification didn't include broadcast 3D formats, explains Venuti, mainly because the organization didn't expect television networks like ESPN and pay-TV operators like DirecTV to move to launch 3D by mid-2010. "We've really seen a rush of 3D devices, but when we when launched 1.4 in June, it was very unclear what formats would drive content to the home," says Venuti. "So we mandated a game format and movie format, and said if you build a system with HDMI, you have to have them. But we left out a broadcast format, because we didn't know where the market was going with that. Since then, broadcasters have stepped up the game quite a bit, and there's been a lot of movement in the HDMI Consortium to match the 3D release of broadcasters." In fact, in December the HDMI Consortium announced that it would ease some of its licensing restrictions to allow existing late-model set-tops to deliver 3D broadcasts to new 3D HDTV sets, without having to support the mandatory movie or gaming formats in HDMI version 1.4. Specifically, it decreed that set-tops with HDMI version 1.3 could receive a firmware upgrade that would enable them to connect to a new 3D set with HDMI version 1.4 to display a number of 3D HD broadcast formats. That is how satellite operators DirecTV and BSkyB plan to deliver 3D to their existing high-end set-tops. Venuti said that Sony PS3 game consoles can support 3D in the same way. "That's going to enable the existing infrastructure of source devices to pump 3D content, and you're going to need a 3d-enabled TV to view it," says Venuti. The HDMI movie format that will be used by new 3D Blu-ray players specifies the delivery of two full 1080-line-progressive/24 hertz (1080p/24) pictures, one for each eye, which requires a significantly higher bit rate than normal 1080p/24 video. But the "frame-compatible" broadcast formats that HDMI Licensing is currently addressing are designed to work within the existing bandwidth for HD transmission by using spatial compression to reduce the horizontal or vertical resolution of the picture. That is a compromise that networks and pay-TV operators can currently live with, as adopting "full 3D" would require doubling the bandwidth used to deliver HD to the home. The 3D compression techniques described by HDMI Licensing as "informative formats" include Frame Packing; Field Alternative; Line Alternative; Side-by-Side (Half); Side-by-Side (Full); Left + Depth; and Left + Depth + Graphics + Graphics-depth. The organization also announced in December that it will add the "Top/Bottom" frame-compatible technique, which ESPN plans to use for its 720p 3D HD pictures, to the updated 1.4 specification. Venuti says the HDMI version 1.4a specification, which will make the support of such broadcast formats mandatory in new 3D-enabled CE devices, should come out soon. He notes that a pay-TV operator's set-top could support as little as a single broadcast format, such as 720p top/bottom, but that 3D sets will have to support all broadcast formats to ensure interoperability. "We hope that will provide leadership and guidance to the broadcast world," says Venuti. "We don't expect it to be the way to deliver 3D content forever. But at the least, it's a minimum way to support interoperability." By Glen Dickson -- Broadcasting & Cable |
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Apple releases Apple TV 3.0 software |
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On Thursday, the company released Apple TV 3.0 software. The updated software offers a new main menu interface that provides direct access to rented and purchased movies, TV shows, music, podcasts, photos, and YouTube videos. Your content (My Movies, for example) now sits at the top of lists instead of at the bottom. Once you drill down into secondary menus, however, the interface is the same as before. The new software also lets Apple TV users enjoy iTunes LP and iTunes Extras content for albums and movies, respectively. (Apple let the update, and the iTunes LP and Extras support specifically, slip earlier in the day by changing its iTunes Store terms of service.) The Apple TV now supports Genius Mixes as well, a new feature of iTunes 9 that also works on some iPod models. For photos, the latest software adds support for iPhoto ‘09’s Events and Faces (but not Places) features. Finally, Apple says you can now listen to thousands of Internet radio stations and tag stations for later listening. You could in fact listen to Internet radio on the Apple TV previously, you just had to put the stations in a playlist. The software is a free update for all Apple TV owners. |
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