The News Review:
- Digital Life – home entertainment system reviews
- SanDisk Announces New Sansa View Video MP3 Player
- Philips DVDR5520H DVD/HDD Recorder
Digital Life – home entertainment system reviews
The Age – May 19, 2008
It won’t work with Vista Home Basicnor with XP Media Centre systems. Linksys has done its homework to make the set-up process aspainless as we’ve seen in a media centre add-on. nce things are upand running the box performs exceptionally well handling mostcommon music and video formats including the internet favouritesDivX and XviD. In all this is a great enhancement to yourhome-theatre system.
SanDisk Announces New Sansa View Video MP3 Player
Physrg.com – May 19, 2008
” SanDisk’s Sansa View video player innovates beyond the typical video loading procedure making it easy for consumers to transfer videos natively using widely available software. Most popular formats are supported via embedded player functionality (H. 264 WMV and MPEG4) or via a one-time software download of the Sansa Media Converter which quickly transcodes numerous video files including DivX. ) In addition the microSD card allows users to easily move their content to a cell phone or other mobile device. A MP3 player at its core the Sansa View device comes equipped with all the soup-to-nuts features typically found in the Sansa audio line.
Philips DVDR5520H DVD/HDD Recorder
TrustedReviews – May 19, 2008
But if its 250GB hard-disk capacity is too big for your budget then this 160GB version might be a more suitable option. That 160GB capacity allows you to record up to 180 hours’ worth of TV programmes as well as up to 150 DivX movies 4500 songs or 11000 photos as part of the recorder’s jukebox functionality. This effectively turns the unit into a multimedia hub enabling you to keep your content in one place and play it all through your home cinema system. The best feature you’ll find is the Time Shift Buffer which uses a portion of the hard disk to continually record what you’re watching (for up to 6 hours) allowing you to pause and rewind live TV or skip back and record a programme retrospectively.