Panasonic’s DMP-BD30 Blu-ray player already reviewed
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
The folks over at CNET aren’t wasting a moment getting to know Panasonic’s latest Blu-ray player, so why should you? Reviewers started off by praising Panny for getting a Profile 1.1-compliant player out before the actual deadline, and minor gripes about the DMP-BD10A (namely, the remote and the fold-down door) have been addressed satisfactorily. Additionally, it was noted that audiophiles would find lots to love courtesy of its ability to output DTS-HD Master Audio / Dolby TrueHD soundtracks in bitstream format, and sticklers for image quality are likely to be equally impressed. Put simply, this unit “performed excellently by properly deinterlacing 1080i signals to 1080p without artifacts or jaggies,” and it managed to measure up quite well with other highly-regarded BD players when playing back films. All in all, the BD30 was awarded a 7.4 out of 10 rating, and we’re pretty certain that adding an Ethernet jack and built-in decoders for high-resolution audio formats would’ve made this thing even more attractive. Read | Permalink | Email this | CommentsOffice Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Thank you for reading this post. You can now Leave A Comment (0) or Leave A Trackback.
Post Info
This entry was posted on Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 and is filed under Home Repair.You can follow any responses to this entry through the Comments Feed. You can Leave A Comment, or A Trackback.
Previous Post: Buffalo intros 19x DVD±R burner »
Next Post: Libya’s education ministry purchases 150,000 Classmate PCs »
- Sprint’s HTC Touch Pro now available for purchase online, as promised
- ASUS introduces VENTO TA-F foldable PC case
- T-Mobile offers Motorola’s MOTOZINE ZN5 for $99 on contract
- Panasonic agrees to controlling stake in Sanyo, seen issuing hearty backslaps to executives
- Samsung’s T*Omnia: all that and double the i900 Omnia’s resolution
- Sony Ericsson’s new ad shows off the C905’s camera and absolutely nothing else
- Microsoft pays South Koreans $60 million to use its software
- Roku’s Netflix Player handling HD content “by the end of the year”
- Peek’s email device tops voting for Time’s gadget of the year, not that it matters
- Victor Multi-Kill trap electrocutes mice, hates liberals
