Sony’s Bravia ZX5 LED HDTVs Are Beautifully Slim

Yeah, they’ve got 240Hz “Flow Motion”, but the draw of the 46- and 52-inch ZX5s is their super-slim 15.8mm and 16.6mm frames. That’s partly due to their edge-mounted LED-backlighting, but also because they receive 1080p video via a wireless receiver.


June 24, 2009

JVC’s 32-Inch, LED-Backlit TV Is Just A Quarter-Inch Thick

At Cedia UK, JVC is showing off its 32-inch LT-32WX50, which appears to be a close relation to the 7mm-thick GD-32X1 we heard about earlier this month. It’s extremely thin, and carries it well.


December 17, 2008

Will Trade Shows Survive?

Seeing Apple pull out of Macworld and hearing talk of poor turnout at CES make us speculate on the future of trade shows—like automakers and newspapers, are they another institution on the endangered-species list?


September 6, 2008

Oppo BDP-S83 Blu-ray Player May Be First (Almost) Universal Disc Reader

Oppo, pimps of the upscaling DVD realm and makers of one of the best (and last) SACD/DVD-Audio capable machines out there, are moving into the Blu-ray business with the BDP-S83 player. There are no announced deets, but an AVS Forum member spotted this unit at CEDIA. And from what we can see in this image and the back shot below, the feature set is laid out clearly, and something’s unusual about it. Update: Oppo got back to us with extra info, including confirmation of Anchor Bay upscaling, soon-ish shipping date and a possible price (US$500-US$700).


Panasonic’s 65VX100U Premiere Kuro-Killing Plasma Reviewed (Verdict: Best Flat Panel to Date)

Just yesterday we got our first taste of Panasonic’s new TH-65VX100U plasma technology, which features specs that meet or exceed Pioneer’s Kuro. Our initial impressions were extremely positive, but Gary at HD Guru managed to get his hands on an early production sample for a closer look, and he too was impressed. In fact, he called it the “new king of flat panels.”


Gadgets

Twelve of CEDIA’s Most Beautifully Expensive Audiophile Speakers

Put simply, CEDIA is a trade show that trains its attendees to prep a home for MTV Cribs. Simple as that. So as a result, the audiophile gear on display is a sight (and an expenditure) to behold. Especially if your Cribs client prefers speakers that cost more than some small countries’ GDPs in their champagne room to better reproduce the low-end punch of his John Mayer SACDs.


September 5, 2008

Panasonic 65VX100U Premiere Plasma Is True Kuro Killer (Best TV Ever?)

Tonight in Denver, Panasonic revealed its newest plasma technology, the 65″ custom-install-only VX100 monitor, whose specs meet or beat Pioneer’s hallowed Kuro. That means 60,000:1 contrast ratio with 7,160 shades of gradation for visible detail in the darker shadows. At 65 inches, you will pay US$10,000 a panel, but not to worry: Panasonic will roll out a 50 incher soon, which is sure to be (a teeny tiny tad) cheaper. We sat in a dark room and got to compare the VX100 with its predecessor, the 65PF. Though the results in the room were startlingly vivid, you can get a sense of what’s going on here in our still shots: galleryPost('vx100comps', 5, ''); If you’re really crazy about TV technology, jump for a second gallery of slides from the presentation—but, as they say on MythBusters, there’s some “science content” ahead, so put the drink down and focus…


Software

iPhone: The Home Automation Remote Killer

There are already a few home automation iPhone apps in the store, but here at CEDIA it’s clear that all of the home automation heavies have definitely discovered the obvious: the iPhone makes for a great universal touchscreen remote for everything from your AC to your living room blinds to your music collection. And most of them won’t make you pay the price of a snazzy dedicated touchscreen controller to get it, either. Most of them.


Computing

Lifeware’s LMS-810 Is the Baddest Media Centre PC Money Can Buy

In a show full of ultra high-end home theatre installations, Lifeware’s LMS-810 Media Centre piece still manages to be a standout. Taking what they came with last year and doubling it, Lifeware has crammed eight CableCARD tuners (two on board and six more in the external Lifetuner box on top) into a dual Intel Quad Core, 12TB RAID 5 box that can stream out to ten Media Extenders (here, Xbox 360s driving Samsung LCDs). The box can record from all eight of its HD streams while streaming to all 10 Extenders at once, so if you’ve been wondering what to do with your home’s 8 spare digital cable feeds, now you know. No price yet for a pre-Christmas release, but last year’s model with half as many CableCARDs was US$15k. galleryPost("lifeware810", 3, "");


Sony’s Prototype 400-Disc Blu-ray Mega Changer Spied in Dark Corner

Last year at CEDIA, Sony made a splash with a refrigerator-sized Blu-ray home server with 200-disc changer. This year it’s nowhere to be seen, but in its place, Sony is showing a 400-disc changer of a more sensible size. The company isn’t saying much, except that it’s coming in 2009, it’s going to be BD-Live capable, and that it will have RS-232C controls for the home-theatre hardcores. Great! Now all you need are 400 Blu-ray discs worth owning. (It will hold DVDs and CDs, too, of course, but why waste it?)