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TV

Fun in the tub with Sony's bath-time BRAVIA TV

Sony XDV-W600

FM. AM. One-seg TV. It's all yours while you soak in the tub, with Sony's XDV-W600 water-resistant radio/TV (the bath-time BRAVIA). It has a 4" screen (16.7 million colors), runs on internal rechargeable power or 4 AA batteries, offers 1.8x better One-seg reception sensitivity compared to the earlier XDV-100, and will even record up to 10 hours of TV on its internal 2GB memory. From October 30 for about JPY40,000.
More info (Japanese):
http://www.sony.jp/products/Consumer/oneseg-radio/products/XDV-W600/

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New Sony BRAVIA line-up includes world's thinnest TV

Sony ZX1 TV

Name: Sony BRAVIA ZX1, W1, XR1, and X1 series
Category: digital TVs
Price: see below
Release date in Japan: October 10 and November 10, 2008

Sony recently announced its new BRAVIA flat-panel TV lineup: 8 new models in 4 categories, with some impressive bragging points.

The first models to hit shops will be the X1 and XR1 series, screens with Full-HD (1920x1080) resolution and a contrast ratio of 3,000:1. The two series' shared selling point is "BRAVIA ENGINE 2 PRO" technology, incorporating what Sony calls the most advanced realization of its "Digital Reality Creation" technology for rendering pictures. The XR1 series further tweaks its RGB LED backlighting to increase dynamic contrast to an impressive 1,000,000:1. It also offers an improved version of Sony's "Motionflow 120Hz" technology, which interpolates frames to boost 60 frame-per-second video to an effective 120 frames per second.

Next up: The W1 series further upgrades the Motionflow tech to "Motionflow 240Hz", what Sony calls the "world's first 4-speed display" offering unmatched crispness and smoothness of display for sports and other fast-moving scenes.

Finally, the ZX1 series' claim to fame is a record-setting 9.9-mm slim profile; the ultra-thin 40-inch TV is an amazing 12.2 kg light. Of course, that svelteness leaves less room for internal components. The ZX1 lacks the above series' video enhancements, and in its quest to downsize, outsources the usual gaggle of input/output connectors to a separate "Media Receiver" box that sends video to the screen  via "BRAVIA 1080 Wireless". There's nothing on the display unit itself but a power cord and single HDMI connector. With its barely-there thinness and lack of cables, Sony calls the ZX1 the ultimate big-screen TV for freedom of placement in any room layout.

The X1 and XR1 series go on sale October 10, and the W1 and Z1 series on November 10. Model names and prices are below. (It's easy to decode: after "KDL-" comes the screen size in inches, followed by the series name.)

KDL-40ZX1: JPY490,000
KDL-46W1: JPY400,000
KDL-40W1: JPY290,000
KDL-55XR1: JPY750,000
KDL-46XR1: JPY600,000
KDL-52X1: JPY530,000
KDL-46X1: JPY430,000
KDL-40X1: JPY320,000

More info (Japanese): http://www.sony.jp/CorporateCruise/Press/200808/08-0828/

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Panasonic Viera TH-PZR900 HDTV sports terabyte drive, YouTube

Panasonic VIERA plasma TVs

Name: Panasonic TH-50PZR900
Category: Hi-Def TV
Price: About JPY540,000
Release date in Japan: September 10, 2008

Panasonic Corporation's latest Viera Hi-Def TV further narrows the gap between TV sets and PCs: it boasts a 1-terabyte drive for recording shows and a LAN Ethernet port to access Internet content, particularly YouTube.

What will a terabyte of storage hold? Not quite as much as you might expect, given the heavy storage needs of digital broadcast: about 86 hours of BS digital TV, or 121 hours of terrestrial digital TV. (That same 1 TB drive could store several hundred hours of current analog broadcast TV; alas, that's what's being phased out in Japan by mid-2011, and the Viera won't even deign to record such old-timey signals.)

There's no dual-recording capability, so you can record only one channel at a time; there's also no external DVD player/recorder. So while the built-in hard drive is a nice feature, you'll probably end up getting a dedicated HDD/DVD recorder to go with the Viera. (Panasonic suggests its own line of DIGA BluRay DVD recorders.)

The flat-panel wide-screen plasma display with "Dynamic Black Layer" technology has an impressive contrast ratio of 30,000:1. Supporting that is a huge laundry list of color management technologies that Panasonic says provide the best picture you've seen in a plasma screen that size.  

On the network side, a custom built-in YouTube player (like that on the iPhone) brings funny cat videos and the like to your Viera starting September 30. (What does YouTube video, which is grainy even on an iPod screen, look like at 50 inches? One shudders to imagine.) The Internet connection also brings in expected features such as electronic program guide and viewing recommendations, though there's no general web browser, video/music store, etc.

Other specs: Full-HD (1920x1080) resolution, digital and analog TV tuners, 36W speakers, and connection ports for HDMI, i.Link (FireWire), composite video, S-video, analog audio, monitor, optical audio, analog RGB, and headphones.  

Panasonic introduced two smaller models at the same time: the 46-inch TH-46PZR900 and the 42-inch TH-42PZR900, with key tech specs the same as the 50-incher. The former is available from September 10 for JPY480,000; the latter, from September 20 for JPY420,000. (And if none of that impresses you, ask your Panasonic dealer about the new special-order TH-103PZ800: 103 inches (!) of plasma goodness for about JPY5.6 million, before considerable shipping and set-up fees.)

More info: http://panasonic.co.jp/corp/news/official.data/data.dir/jn080826-3/jn080... (Japanese)

(Incidentally, if you're still using the name Matsushita Electric Industrial Co, you've got just one month left. From October 1, it's officially Panasonic, with both the Matsushita company name and the National home appliances brand disappearing under the Panasonic nameplate.)

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I-O DATA GV-MACTV brings terrestrial digital TV to Macs

GV-MACTV

One feature you won't find on a Macintosh computer is a television tuner. The fairly recent Apple TV peripheral, for all its capabilities, still doesn't bring in actual television. Hence a variety of third-party peripherals for TV-loving Mac users, including the upcoming GV-MACTV from Kanazawa-based I-O DATA. An update of the earlier GV-MVP/H for Windows, the small, slim white box will connect to a Mac's USB port to pull in Hi-Vision-quality terrestrial digital TV for viewing and recording to hard drive or DVD. The unit will hold the B-CAS cards used in Japan to decode digital broadcasts, and will ship with TV management software that will work with an Apple Remote. Available by the end of the year; no price yet. (The Windows device is JPY15,700.)

Press release: http://www.iodata.jp/news/2008/08/08_pr014.htm (Japanese)
GV-MVP/H for Windows: http://www.tekronomicon.com/gadget/2008/07/io_data_tuner_s_record_multip... (English)

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IO-DATA tuner(s) record multiple terrestrial digital TV channels

image01.jpg

Ishikawa Prefecture-based I-O DATA has a new tuner to bring terrestrial digital TV to your laptop or other PC, the GV-MVP/HZ. (Name origin: Graphic Video Magic TV Products / model HZ.) Connected and powered by USB, the compact tuner and its bundled software can record Hi-Vision TV to your internal or external hard disk, or to DVD. It's compliant with the new "Dubbing 10" system allowing up to 10 copies of digital TV broadcasts, and has one more trick up its sleeve: if your PC's power is up to the task, you can plug in as many as eight GV-MVP/HZ tuners to record multiple channels simultaneously. JPY15,700.
http://www.iodata.jp/prod/multimedia/tv/2008/gv-mvphz/ (English)

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Kitty graces TL19TX1 TV

HELLO KITTY TL19TX1 TV

Introducing the HELLO KITTY Digital Broadcast Hi-Vision LCD TV, also known as the TL19TX1 over at Uniden. ("HELLO TL19TX1!" Naw, that's not working.) It's a 19-inch (1440x810) all-digital (no analog receiver) TV with HDMI interface, Electronic Program Guide, lots of image/sound-enhancing technologies with fancy names, and Kitty silhouettes gracing the front grille. In black/red or (of course) white/pink. Yours for JPY69,800 (and stop pretending you don't want it).
http://www.uniden-direct.jp/product/lcd_kitty.html

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Short items: Iiyama monitor, JVC TV plans, IO DATA HD trouble

Spotted elsewhere in the news:

1) From April 18, Iiyama will fix you up with a new 15-inch XGA (1024x768) LCD ProLite E383S-5/-5B monitor for only JPY24800. Contrast ratio 600:1, luminance 250cd/m2, built-in 1.5W stereo speakers, 3 kg. http://www.iiyama.co.jp/products/lcd/15/PLE383S-5/

2) JVC is mulling withdrawal from the Japanese television market, citing low market share and falling prices for flat-screen TVs. According to BCN (Business Computer News) retail sales data for March 2008, JVC's share of LCD and plasma TVs was a mere 2.0%, compared with 11.6% for Matsushita, 12.6% for Toshiba, 21.4% for Sony, and 41.2% for Sharp. JVC is expected to announce a decision on April 25.
http://www.computernews.com/DailyNews/2008/04/20080416144093B9897A2020.h...

3) METI reports several instances of IO DATA LANDISK HDL-160U external drives emitting smoke. If you have one, discontinue use and stay tuned for recall or other information from IO DATA.

Average: 2 (1 vote)
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