Showing posts with label digital recorders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital recorders. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Zmodo DVR-DK1690-1TB 16-Channel annel H.264 Surveillance CCTV Security DVR Camera System

Zmodo DVR-DK1690-1TB 16-Channel annel H.264 Surveillance CCTV Security DVR Camera SystemI have to say that I am very pleased with this system. I bought it to protect my small business and it does just that! I would honestly say that the quality of these cameras is comparable (if not better) to the $1000+ system I purchased from an installer prior to this one. The night vision works great and the weatherproof cameras just feel like they are built to last. Its a good investment and I LOVE that I can use the remote viewing feature from my iPhone as this allows me to keep tabs on my building regardless of where I am at. The setup of this system is very simple (I did it by myself and am not a professional). Only thing I couldn't do myself is set up the remote viewing. I had to call tech support to have them help me out but they had this up and running within 20 minutes or so. They were very nice and very knowledgeable. They even gave me tips on how to use the pan/tilt/zoom functions of the cameras after describing to them my building and what areas I was trying to get a good view on. Thanks Zmodo for offering a quality product at a good price while still treating your customers with dignity and respect. I will most definitely keep you in mind for future security purchases!!!

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Saturday, August 23, 2014

Philips DVD740VR DVD-VCR Combo

Philips DVD740VR DVD-VCR Combo
  • Space-saving DVD/VCR combination with front-panel AV input for camcorder or game console
  • Plays DVD-Video, MP3 CD, CD-R, CD-RW, audio CD, and VHS tapes
  • 4-head stereo hi-fi VCR with SQPB (S-VHS playback at VHS resolution)
  • High-quality DVD component-video output, Digital Zoom during DVD playback
  • Coaxial digital-audio output passes Dolby Digital, DTS surround sound; 3D sound simulates surround through 2 channels

Attractive Black front panel. Easy to set up, worked first time right out of box ! Video and audio quality good for a mid priced unit. Quiet DVD and Tape. Labels for lights and buttons on front of unit difficult to read in dim/under shelf location. Remote is on the small side. Some remote button labels in blue difficult to read in low light, not back lit. Still pleased with the purchase and give 4 stars. Worth the price

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This is the way to go. Phillips has made a great little machine here. The controls aren't as straight forward as a stand alone machine, but 5 minutes with the manual will take care of that. Its quite simple to use once you get the hang of it. So far no problem. DVD and VHS playback are great. VHS recording is good quality. I'm not dissapointed at all. If you don't have either a dvd or vcr stand alone or if you're looking to replace both at the same time I'd recomend this model. I'm sure there are higher quality playback and record features on some stand alones but I haven't had any qualms here. Also this is something of a space saver. If I had to do it over again I wouldn't hesitate picking this model again.

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I found this unit to have a very good picture quality in the VCR mode. In the DVD mode is not was as good as I thought it would be. It may be in the Quality of the DVD movies I tried. I do have it hooked up with the S-vidio cable to the TV. Hope to hear more form others that know more about this high-teck stuff. Thanks John

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I would at all costs stay away from any product made by Phillips. I bought a dvd/vcr combo, it broke, I shipped it to them for repair, they charged me shipping and then sent back another broken unit. They then refused to take it back at their expense, even though they had shipped a broken unit (The first time the dvd didn't work, the unit they shipped to me had a defective vcr). Their customer service people have no authority to help you, and neither does their management. Repeated attempts to move up the ladder were ignored (i.e. being constantly told they weren't available, they never returned phone calls even after telling me they would, etc.). Beware of any Phillips product.

I bought this model a year ago and love it! It's easy to use, easy to see and beautiful, and have had zero problems with it.

I bought a different brand for another room and have only used it 3 times since. That was about 9 months ago.

Guess which one I'm going to be buying again so I can get rid of the other? ;-)

Friday, August 22, 2014

Panasonic DVD-RV30 DVD Player

Panasonic DVD-RV30 DVD Player
  • Dolby Digital and DTS output
  • Component-video outputs
  • Virtual surround sound and dialogue enhancement mode
  • High-speed smooth-motion scan
  • 24-bit, 96 kHz audio digital-to-analog converter

I have owned a DVD-ROM drive since they were first introduced three years ago. I thought that DVD-ROM would be the standard media by now, but I guess I was wrong. The picture is very bad and movies on the player look like slide shows! So I decided to get a DVD player.

I researched for several months for the right player. I researched models from Samsung, Panasonic, Sony, Toshiba, and Pioneer. I wanted to buy a player for around $250 that only played one disc (I didn't need a multidisc model) and had excellent picture and sound quality. Also, I didn't need a player with Dolby Digital or DTS decoders built-in to the player. My receiver could do that. After researching and researching, I became interested in the Sony DVP-S360, the Pioneer DV-333, and the Panasonic DVD-RV30 player. All three players are good players, but people have been complaining that Sony's "PrecisionDrive" is very loud especially in the quiet scenes of a movie, which could get kind of annoying. Also, many reviewers were saying that the Sony produces a nice, but "soft" picture, not a crisp DVD-like picture. Many reviewers complained that the Pioneer DV-333 is not built well and also produces a soft picture.

Everyone seemed to love the Panasonic DVD-RV30 DVD player. They all said that it produced a very clear, crisp, and vivid picture that rivaled the $1000+ DVD players and that the sound it produced was great. Also, since Panasonic is offering a $50 mail-in-rebate, I decided to buy the Panasonic DVD-RV30.

Setup took me five minutes. I took the player out of the box, plugged the power cord in, plugged the TV cable in (only composite cables are included with the player), and inserted the batteries in my remote. That was it!

This player has many features including:

Virtual Surround Sound (VSS): Uses your stereo system's speakers or your TV speakers to produce delays in the sound recreating a surround sound experience. This is personally one of my favorite features of the player. I thought it would be a gimmick that didn't work, but it works really well! I am amazed at the sound produced when VSS is on!

Dialogue Enhancer: Dialogue enhancer is supposed to increase the center channel of your home theater system by 6 DB which allows for the dialogue to come out clearer. Even on a normal TV system, dialogue enhancer definitely improves those DVDs where the dialogue is so hard to hear. I usually always leave dialogue enhancer on. Also, at night, I can turn the sound down and yet still understand what people are saying. This way, I won't wake up my family! :-)

Digital Cinema Mode: Supposed to improve the detail of the picture in dark scenes. I personally have not used this feature yet.

A direct-bass output is also featured. It allows you to connect your player directly to a subwoofer to enjoy the same kind of bass effects you would only usually get through a home theater system.

Other features include component video out, S-video out, and optical sound output for Dolby Digital and DTS. I am currently testing this player using just composite cables, and the picture is so amazingly clear on just composite cables! It is like you are in the movie when you use component video output cables, but your TV must support it. Check your TV manual to see whether it supports component video, S-video, or composite cable connections.

The remote is very intuitive and easy to use. All of the features the player is capable of is easily accessible through the remote. My only complaint is that you can't select a chapter in any sort of one-click way. That would have been a great feature, but it is not necessary.

I really like the resume feature this player has. If you decide to stop to run an errand in the middle of movie, even if you turn off the player and back on, the player will "remember" where you were in the movie and immediately take you there!

I have to agree with all of the reviews I read. Sound quality and picture quality is superb! Details are very crisp and easy to see, and fast action scenes are like a walk-in-the-park for this player. I threw all kinds of movies at my player, and it didn't seem to stress at all with any kind of scene. Even layer changes are very smooth. I did not even notice a single hint of a layer change in the movies I watched.

Finally, after playing about four hours worth of movies, the player did not get hot at all. The DVD inside the player wasn't even hot. Everything about this player seems very solid and will last a lifetime.

All in all, this player has to be one of the best players out onthe market right now, literally.

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This entry-level DVD player comes with some nice features. The Virtual Surround Sound may not be completely obvious on all DVDs but it certainly enhances the quality of the sound for a good cinematic experience even if you are like me and only have to speakers. The Cinema button on the player is supposed to clarify darker scenes and make the picture more theatrical. It does lighten the scenes a bit but you will probably find yourself keeping that function off and allowing the darker scenes to be dark; only turning it on to find details in poorly lit scenes. The remote, though small, is quite easy to use and you can adjust to it quickly. Many of the buttons are a little small, but you rarely use the features on the small buttons anyway. Overall, I give this five stars for getting everything necessary and a little more for [the price]. So, if you are looking for the best DVD player at entry level, I would choose this one...oh yeah, the one-year warranty is always nice, too.

Read Best Reviews of Panasonic DVD-RV30 DVD Player Here

I don't have a digital-ready receiver so I decided to get a low-end DVD. I did a little DCD-player studying with the intent of purchasing a Sony S360 (my friend has one). We've watched movies together on it, and it was so much better than my PC DVD that I had to go get one. *+*I then learned that the Sony makes a weird whirling sound while playing. The sound continues as long as a movie is playing, and can be heard if the soundtrack of the movie is quiet.*+* Because of this reason and because I wanted to be different from my friend, I bought the Panasonic. I am VERY happy. It's small, lightweight, and doesn't have the audio and video gliches my PC DVD has. I'd say if you don't have a digital receiver or a receiver at all, buy this model.

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I really did my home work before I bought this unit. I compared sound specs, video specs, and DTS capability. You don't need to know one piece of technical info to understnad my review.

I went to a local store and looked at five units between 199 and 350 dollars. This RV-30 offered as much as any at the best price. I even asked a kid at (a stoor) what the real difference was. He said he could have bought any one but got this one because it was the best.

I bought it and use it daily. [wasn't supposed to open it until xmas]. Super picture quality and easy to use. Not one draw back at all.

The Panasonic DVD RV-30 is the first DVD player I havepurchased.The player was easy to setup and run. I spent a lot of time reading reviews, not only from Amazon but other websites. I was looking for a good entry level DVD and the RV-30 and Sony's 360 models were the two having the least problems of the low end models.

Setup was easy and the manual was complete (Yes, I do read manuals). I did spend quite a bit of time searching for a specific item of information in the manual, but again, it is very complete.

I found the video and audio to be as expected. The picture looks extremely good on my 27" Sanyo using a RF modulator bought at Radio Shack specificly designed to connect DVD players to older style TVs. I don't have RGB connectors on the TV. I patched the yellow video cord from the DVD player to the RF modulator and coaxial from the modulator to the TV.

The sound goes to a receiver with digital decoding using the optical output from the DVD player to the receiver. The receiver does all the work and does it well. I'm sure the RV-30 is helping but the receiver does most of the work, and the sound is excellent.

Now the reason for 4 versus 5 stars. At about 1 hour 16 minutes to 1 hour 24 minutes into a movie, all the DVDs I have played skipped. They only skipped once but skip they did. Before this time period and after the time period has passed, no skipping. I'm at a loss but am going to continue to use the machine to see if this unique problem goes away or maybe occurs only on certain DVDs. It could be a dirty disk surface (all the DVDs I've played are rentals) but I'm just not sure.

Other than this one problem, everything is perfect.

Oh, by the way, I read other reviewers of DVD players talking about how long it takes the players they own to respond to remote control commands. Whats this all about? This unit responds very quickly to remote commands. By the time I find the button, press it and look up at the TV screen, the command has taken place. I guess some people have very, very quick eye to hand coordination

Saturday, August 9, 2014

1 Input to 2 Output Video Distributor

1 Input to 2 Output Video DistributorI had a project at work that needed a full time, faultless video splitter that was small and inexpensive, but reliable and this product fits that bill. I have used it before so I decided to use it again and was not disappointed.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

DIGISTOR External Blu-ray Burner USB 2.0 with Multimedia & Archive Suites (Tray Load)

DIGISTOR External Blu-ray Burner USB 2.0 with Multimedia & Archive SuitesFYI: I copied over my review from the slot load, 'coz I actually got a TRAY LOAD version, not a SLOT-LOAD one. I like the safety of having an emergency eject hole. Otherwise, everything holds true.

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I got this DIGISTOR Blu-Ray burner for my HD videos. I am a semi-professional videographer and I record some of my shoots/subjects/videos in High-Definition. At one point earlier this year, I realized that burning to DVDs just will not be enough for HD content the 4-something gigabytes just won't cut it.

I decided to get DIGISTOR's blu-ray burner because I got one of their their DVD burners as well External USB 2.0 Powered 8x DVD Burner by DIGISTOR and I saw from their website that they had a similarly designed Blu-Ray burner.

The reason I was so happy with the DVD burner was that it did not need a power cord for it. I am happy to say that this Blu-Ray burner is the same no power cord. I use it for my HD video editing, connected to my PC. I also bring it around, it is very light and portable, on my shoots should there be a need to burn output onsite.

It's plug-and-play, no need for drivers Vista and Windows 7 supports blu-ray natively. And I have yet to encounter a bad burn on this drive. Something to do with it's battery powered operation, but I also made sure it has enough power for burning, I got the dual USB accessory.

I'm very happy with the product.

I manage an audio recording studio and video/post editing facility where we deal with tons of digital data on a daily basis. We have terabytes of storage in our studios for the online edit sessions but when it comes to archiving our productions, especially the video productions, we have to deal with TENS of DVD discs to hold the raw archive data (and that's just SD material). To store so many DVDs discs is also a task we'd rather not have to deal with. So, we had our eye on Blu-ray for quite sometime as the data archive medium of choice, what with the 25GB capacity we can store 5 MiniDV raw footage in one BD-R disc! And for video projects with more than 5 miniDV, there are 50GB Blu-ray discs that can handle the job.

This DIGISTOR Blu-ray burner is perfect for our sneakernet and mixed-OS operations, it's external USB 2. bus powered that we can take from one room/suite to the other without worrying about compatibility. it's also pretty rugged despite the plastic enclosure, it has been dropped once since yet no hiccups. Blu-ray data burning and reading is native on both Windows PC (we're running Vista and Windows 7) and Mac OS X (we have 10.3.9, 10.4.11 and 10.6.3).

Now with this external Blu-ray burner, we have minimized the number of discs that we have to handle, we have also minimized the time spent on managing a backup/archiving session since we just drop all the data to one disc, no need to calculate how many discs to use and how to split the data into several discs.

Hope this review helps.

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Reliable blu ray burner is a great deal for the price. Only drawback is that I have not had any luck with the included software burning blu rays. I am using a properly updated version of adobe encore cs4 and it works amazingly well.

Update

Digistor contacted me to help me figure out how to properly work with the included software. Great customer service. Highly recommended

Read Best Reviews of DIGISTOR External Blu-ray Burner USB 2.0 with Multimedia & Archive Suites (Tray Load) Here

This DIGISTOR Blu-ray Tray-Load Blu-ray burner works very well as advertised, and the Roxio 10 software that came with it even includes the updated version (10.08, if I recall correctly). It seems to burn discs very well at a slower speed, and even though the resulting Blu-ray disc has some 'burned image' differences in 'color depth' (may be a ring slightly lighter on the burn) might be due to the sensitivity or region of the disc's dye, but only time will tell whether this affects readability.

The drive will draw too much power when connected to the USB ports on the monitor (you have to restart or shut down Mac--logging off won't allow the system to recognize powering on the drive), so using the front or back USB ports on the tower is required for the 'double' USB connection. This ensures unlimited burning without worry of the battery running down too low, but if you want to burn via a slower BUS speed, use the single USB that will recharge the battery only when the drive is idle, and therefore draws less power (demand).

When viewing a video file, the drive will slow down to help conserve the battery a little, but while the audio plays fine, the video will stutter or lag (drop frames) then the RPM picks up to play 'catch-up,' so probably playing Blu-ray movies on this thing isn't ideal due to slower read speed. You should probably have a Blu-ray player (with a better cache and/or read speed) connected to your TV for that purpose anyway. Maybe an internal Blu-ray drive in a computer with a higher read speed would be ideal, so I am assuming that this DIGISTOR has a limited buffer/cache and read speed. You can burn up to 6X but for readability reasons I use 2X, which takes about 45-50 minutes with 25 GB of data (capacity). Haven't tried burning HD to Blu-ray yet. Remember, writing to the disc is fine, but playback, you might as well copy the video (such as something you shot with a digital camera) to the hard drive and go from there.

This drive is very much like that in a laptop computer and probably built from the same components and configuration (it is more like a CD player, such as Walkman) though a bit thinner. You have to make sure to handle a blank disc on the edges and carefully press down in the center to lock the disc onto the spindle. Ejection can be done via the front button or by computer command (often the eject button on the keyboard if it has one). Very lightweight too. You can use AC power but doesn't come with an AC cord.

Avoid LTH discs if possible. The manufacturer claims they can be burned but don't last as long and are less compatible than 'regular' Blu-ray because LTH uses organic dyes, whatever chemistry that is. LTH discs are golden but the discs you want to use are dark navy blue or dark gray-black. I mistakenly bought Verbatim LTH and haven't used them--then bought the non-LTH type, which consequently, cost more, but will be more likely to last. Both types are much more resistant to scratches like commercial 'stamped' discs. The included Blu-ray disc is dark navy blue where written, but more of a dark blue-gray color where blank or unwritten bits.

All of the above said, I would give this drive 4.5 out of 5 stars, but convenience a 5, so overall a five-star review on this product. Great for someone who has many gigabytes of video files otherwise using up several DVD-Rs or many CD-Rs (with HD video, it is easy to record long enough it is larger than 700 MB, the capacity of standard CD-R).

Given the technical specifications and portability, power and playback limitations are expected, so please consider whether these are of concern to you. If not, this drive is recommended, although a bit on the expensive side.

Hope this helps, and good luck.

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Darn thing works as advertised. Only crummy part is that the cost of the bluray media is so rediculously super expensive that I do not think bluray recording will jump to mainstream.

On the other hand, the thing is fast and very very quiet compared to my other external slim dvd+R/-R recorder. And it also has a built in battery. I was hoping to have an eSATA version though but oh well. Also, for the price, it would be nice if it comes with a standard power adapter that you plug into a wall instead of the dual-heal to dual-USB connector. Nevertheless, it was well worth the purchase.

I got the tray-load version because it was faster than the slot load. If you need to decide, get the tray load. The slot load is somehow 4x max recording while the tray load is 6x max. I don't think it matters though since media out there can only go 4x fast. However, maybe future media will be faster than 4x.

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Tuesday, July 15, 2014

QNAP VS-2008-PRO-US 2-Bay NVR 8-Channel Surveillance System

QNAP VS-2008-PRO-US 2-Bay NVR 8-Channel Surveillance SystemI bough this unit for use with my foscam cameras (fi8905w). Out the box it did not find the cameras. Once I upgraded the firmware everything worked like a charm. I did not spend much time with this unit as I upgraded it for the VS-2012-PRO-US In order to add more cameras. I will also review that unit with more details.

This system is set up well, easy to navigate, and has options, but the one i bought will not connect to my cameras and either brand is listed on the system, so i have tried all ways of contact to get help (phone, email, skype, website).It has been over a week and i have been trying every day to contact someone still no replay i even expressed how i needed up to 8 nvrs and i still have no relay. The set up is nice if you have a camera that is listed im sure but for every other ip camera out there no, but dont expect any tech support from anywhere.

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Friday, July 11, 2014

Sescom LN2MIC-PCDM50 3.5 Line to Mic 35dB Attenuation 9 Inch DSLR Cable for Sony PCM-D50

Sescom LN2MIC-PCDM50 3.5 Line to Mic 35dB Attenuation 9 Inch DSLR Cable for Sony PCM-D50I am happy with this product. It works very well considering the limitations of the audio in my 7D Canon camera. I still recommended using the original audio file from your recording device, I use the Sony PCM-D50. That being said, the file that you end up getting in the camera itself with this cable is impressively better then with the camera's build in mic.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Toshiba SD4700 Progressive-Scan DVD Player

Toshiba SD4700 Progressive-Scan DVD Player
  • Super ColorStream Pro progressive-scan component-video outputs (deliver stunning visuals on HD-ready TVs)
  • DVD-Video/DVD-Audio/CD/video CD/CD-R/DVD-R compatible (also displays CD and DVD Text)
  • 24-bit, 192 kHz high-resolution, multi-channel DVD-Audio decoding and playback (for unparalleled realism and immersive music mixes)
  • Video black-level expansion and PLUGE (for optimizing theater-like conditions in your home)
  • Aspect ratio control and NAVI menu simplify setup and picture adjustments

This player packs a lot of value into a relatively well priced package. On average, for a few more bucks than it's main competition (ehem...Panasonic, etc.), not only do you get progressive scan and CD, CD-R, CD-RW, MP3 playback but this unit also includes DVD-Audio, which delivers amazing sounding 24-bit 96KHz audio on 6 channels (or 2 if you prefer). It just kills regular CD audio. Toshiba's Colorstream Pro progressive picture on my Toshiba 43H70 TV (high def progressive rear projection) is as good as it gets for picture quality in this price range. No aliasing or artifacts, rich and detailed picture. Add optical, coax, and 5.1 outputs (all gold plated) plus component out (of course) plus cool looks (blue LED, scrolling + fading matrix display, cool navi menu, etc.) and you have an awsome player that people will drool over. Best in class for the money.

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I purchased the SD-4700 mainly for its progressive scan feature and I must say that it does make a big difference. I'm using this player with a Philips digital widescreen HDTV (32" tube) and, finally, I'm starting to see the full potential of the DVD format. Some people may argue that since a lot of new TVs (especially HDTVs) are equipped with high quality line doublers, you get all the benefits of progressive scanning directly from your TV, but at least in my case, the SD-4700 does a much better job than Philips' own "Natural Motion" technology in presenting progressive output while still maintaining that "film quality" of the... err... film :)

The remote control is a lot easier to use than previous Toshiba models and provides very easy access to all the features you may need during playback (e.g. subtitles, audio and angle selection). It also contains a rather large joystick that makes it very easy to navigate menus. Also worth mentioning is the fact that all the controls are also available on the player itself. Very useful for these times when you accidentally "misplace" the remote.

As for the supported formats, I had no problems playing DVDs, VCDs, music CDs & CDRs and MP3 CDRs. The MP3 support is very basic and has some quirks. For example, I still can't really understand how the player determines the order of tracks. Seems a bit random to me but there must be a logical explanation here :). Anyway, the feature actually does work, the overall sound quality is good and that's what counts. I haven't tested the player with DVD Audio discs yet so I can neither confirm nor deny the problems reported in other reviews.

Now for the kinks, which are minor but still prevent this player from getting 5 stars:

1. Some widescreen HDTVs (my Philips among them) do not allow the user to manually set the aspect ratio for progressive signals. This means that you may get just a little bit frustrated when you play widescreen, NON-anamorphic DVDs ("letterboxed" -where the "black bars" are coded into the frame to make it display correctly on 4:3 TVs). Your options with these DVDs are to either watch them letterboxed in a rather small 4:3 viewing area (annoying!), have the SD-4700 stretch them to 16:9 (annoying because it will mess up the aspect ratio) or use the zoom feature of the player to try and get the optimal picture (frustrating but doable). What this player really needs is a smart zoom feature that removes the black bars and scales the picture to fit the screen (like most widescreen TVs have) but I guess you just can't get it all. That said, since most new DVDs are anamorphic (contain no black bars and therefore always displayed in the correct aspect ratio), this can be considered a minor inconvenience.

2. The player has some problems displaying menu items in 4:3 progressive mode: highlighted menu items sometimes get totally messed up. This doesn't happen with native 16:9 DVDs or when you set the player to stretch everything to 16:9, so it's not really that big of a deal.

3. Pixel cropping I think this player crops almost half an inch off the bottom of your picture (I made sure this was not a problem with my TV not being properly aligned). According to the AVIA test signals I used, over 25 pixels were cropped out and that's considered a little too much. Still, I guess many people wouldn't notice this glitch because their TVs are probably cropping so much more... :).

All in all, I am very pleased with this player. You really do get a lot for your money here! Sure, there are a few kinks but they are not horrible (unless you are a non-compromising videophile). If you have an HDTV, you really owe it to yourself to get a progressive scan DVD player, and this is probably one of the better (and cheaper) ones out there.

Read Best Reviews of Toshiba SD4700 Progressive-Scan DVD Player Here

I purchased this unit wanting to have one player handle all formats, as well as progressive scan, which will be my next upgrade (16:9 format screen).

As a DVD player, it doesn't get better than this! The player has exceptional picture quality with no "hangs" or artifacts. The freeze frames are crystal clear. The zoom function was far more useful than I had expected. It is amazing how far you can zoom in on a picture with minimal picture quality degradation. If you do not care for the black bars you are forced to have on some wide screen DVD movies, you can "zoom" as much of them away as you want! Right now it is connected to a Mitsubishi 46" with an S-video cable. This is the best picture this set has ever displayed. I can't wait to see what it will do on a progressive scan set! All the outputs you need for audio are there coax, RCA, and optical, as well as the ability to handle Dolby Digital, DTS, etc.

As an MP3 player, I am disappointed. Some files that played flawlessly on an MP3 player or PC had distortion, and LOUD sound artifacts when played on the Toshiba. Other similar files played fine. Although the addendum sheet stated to use 8 character file names and no more than a 74 minute CD-R, it seems to work also with 80 minute CD-Rs and CDR-Ws (same results with MP3 poor). No problems when the MP3 file was burned in standard CD audio format, though.)Also, no problems with standard audio CD playback.

The remote control was easy to use and intuitive for major functions. It is not the "universal" type. The menu structure is easy to use.

The manual was clear, but I would like to have seen it broken down by type of media being played back. An extra manual is included to correct all the errors in the original manual Most of these correct functions the manual states the player will do, but in reality does not do.

Overall, I am pleased with the machine as a DVD/CD player.

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The perfect DVD player. It has all the features you could want, and if you someday plan on upgrading your TV to HDTV (and you should), the progressive scan feature on this player will blow you away. This model packs in all the high-tech yet user-friendly features you'd want. Did you know that hardly any other brands feature a ZOOM feature like Toshiba does? Gosh, I thought it should be a standard feature. The Toshiba SD4700 (and most other Toshiba models) has it, as well as every stereo decoding feature you'll want or need. Prepare to be awestruck by the superior sound, picture, and breadth of options!

Considering this is my first standalone dvd player, it's hard for me to fully ascertain how strong this product is. I bought the 4700 for the video quality more than the audio features, and in this respect, I am more than pleased. But it's not all peaches.

After two months of owning this product, I have confirmed that this dvd player has the ill-fated "chroma bug" problem. I only became aware of this recently when watching Vertical Limit on DVD. While watching the "making of" featurette, there was significant bleeding of bright red, especially evident with the subheadings. For the more casual consumer, this isn't that big of a problem, because it's hard to notice. But I'm sure any meticulous buyer will want to know. However, since many of Toshiba's, Sony's and Pioneer's lines of dvd players are conflicted with this problem, I don't see any reason to particularly bash this model. (By the way, this chroma bug flaw can't be fixed. Let's just hope future mpeg decoding technology will overcome this problem. As far as I know, only the Panasonic brand has consistently avoided the bug.)

The chroma bug issue is not a big deal, since it's rarely noticeable to the untrained eye. What's more important is the overall picture quality, and that's where this product shines. I'm using this player with standard analog connection (no S-video, no hdtv, interlaced mode), and the video is SUPERB. I can only imagine how much better the progressive scan would be. There should be no concern that the video display will far surpass expectations.

However, dealing with the audio features can be frustrating. Switching between 5.1 Dolby Digital audio, DVD-audio discs, normal CDs, and mp3 music requires you to switch modes manually. There is no automatic conversion, so if you use this player a lot for audio playback between different mediums, be prepared for some tedious menu changing. Some reviewers have complained of the player's poor mp3 playback. I don't know personally since I only use this player to watch DVD movies, but I could imagine audio problems existing. The LCD panel only has 8 characters, so I'm sure this will come as a problem for long mp3 filenames.

The zoom feature was surprisingly good, and although I think the remote is ugly and bulky, I quickly adapted to it. The manuals and documentation were pretty good, and the Toshiba website seems to provide good support and FAQs, although I haven't found them to be necessary yet (that's always a good thing). The warranty is only three months, which is downright sad.

Despite it's flaws, I'm still giving it 5 stars. Why? Because 1) the video is superb (my main priority), 2) there are a plethora of features, 3) lots of connectivity choices (all gold-plated), 4) $250 (Best Buy) is an absolute steal for a progressive scan player, 5) very simple graphical menu system and ease of installation, 6) fast and silent disc loading, 7) plays problematic discs (ex. Matrix) without fault, and 8) it doesn't heat up and seems to have strong build quality.

Weighing the cost-benefits, I'd say it's as close a perfect product as one could get for the first-time or casual DVD consumer. An audiophile, however, might want to entertain more scrutiny.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

IRP-2 Dual Frequency IRI,CFL,ESI,EMI,LCD and Plasma Proof IR Repeater Kit for all CATV, IPTV,CCTV,

IRP-2 Dual Frequency IRI,CFL,ESI,EMI,LCD and Plasma Proof IR Repeater Kit for all CATV, IPTV,CCTV, DVR, ATT Uverse, Scientific Atlanta STB's, and A/V Stereo ReceiversThis is a wonderful solution for those of us who wish to bury our STB out of sight etc. We have a Sony TV which we in one of the mirror units and have a DirectTV box in a drawer. Initially, operation of the DirectTV was intermittent. This was because I had the IR Receiver on top of the TV. It is quite sensitive and broad band and I believe it was picking up IR "noise" from the TV. I moved it up and behind the TV and shielded the DirectTV box from the remote (to avoid duplicate signals) and all is good! With questionable significance, I also applied some black electrical tape to the IR Sensor (like blinders) to eliminate other IR "noises." Again, this is a wonderful solution if you desire to hide or move your STB out of sight just be aware that you may have to work a little with the placement of the IR Receiver etc.

Like many people, I wanted to hide my cable DVR and sound system. After scouring the internet looking at all kinds of different systems I finally decided to try this kit. The price was right and works on two different components.

I could not be happier! They work as advertised and are easy to install. Took about 5 minutes to hook up my DVR and sound system. The only difficult part was finding the IR "eye" on my DVR. The cable company told me the wrong spot. So I just googled the make and model number and found the owner's manual. It had pictures showing exactly where it was. I placed the reciever on the front of my 60" flat screen and it blends right in. You don't notice it unless you're looking for it.

My remote has never worked better. I don't even have to aim it at the tv and it works flawlessly.

A big thanks to all the awesome Amazon reviewers that helped with my decision.

Buy IRP-2 Dual Frequency IRI,CFL,ESI,EMI,LCD and Plasma Proof IR Repeater Kit for all CATV, IPTV,CCTV, Now

Worked well with Cisco Explorer 8642hd. Quick very easy set up. No issues with LG Plasma TV interference. Very discreet and hides nicely. Great range, tried up to 20 feet.

Shipping was prompt and product was exactly as shown.

Read Best Reviews of IRP-2 Dual Frequency IRI,CFL,ESI,EMI,LCD and Plasma Proof IR Repeater Kit for all CATV, IPTV,CCTV, Here

Installed this on the ATT Uverse Motorola model 1225 DVR. Apparently Uverse DVRs have a "difficult" code for infrared receivers. I wasn't going to pay $200 plus for this item, but this one works fine. One hint. Make sure you locate where in the DVR the infrared sensor is located (...mine is just to the right of the red record light). Once I accurately located the pulse button over the DVR sensor the repeater worked fine. So fairly inexpensive and it works for ATT Uverse.

Want IRP-2 Dual Frequency IRI,CFL,ESI,EMI,LCD and Plasma Proof IR Repeater Kit for all CATV, IPTV,CCTV, Discount?

Looked at many reviews to find an inexpensive IR repeater that would work with the Tivo Premiere. Tested this unit before before installation--bingo! No problems post-installation. As others have commented, there is noticeable latency but it is minor relative to the overall utility.

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Friday, February 28, 2014

Casio Exilim EXZ750 7MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Casio Exilim EXZ750 7MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical ZoomI have been giving less and less credibility to the so-called digital camera reviewing websites lately as digital cameras get past the gee-whiz-gadget stage and become true instruments of photography. The review sites are ok when they talk about their interpretations of published specs but they leave me cold when it comes to how good a digital camera is at making a memorable photograph. Yes, things like start-up time, internal memory capacity, and battery life are good to know because if a camera scores really badly on certain specs it can become a chore to use. But how well a digital camera helps create a photograph is still the most important thing that needs to be considered.

I have preached the mantra that "more megapixels doesn't mean a better picture" for years and I still believe it, but I also believe that some of the newer high megapixel cameras are also now giving us better lenses and processors, which are the two main things that make one digital camera better than another. And I've resisted getting suckered into the hype about some manufacturers putting exotic-sounding names on their lenses. All that really means is that they paid to license the lens name, it doesn't mean each lens is hand made in the Black Forest by old bearded craftsmen.

The same review sites mentioned above seem to kiss the feet of anything with the name Canon on it to the point of putting their independent review status in severe jeopardy. Yes, Canon makes some good cameras but they really don't have any more real experience in the business than most other DIGITAL brands and in my estimation they consistently fall just slightly short of the mark. Yeah, most people buy them, but then again most people eat at McDonalds.

So what do I think is the very best all around consumer digital camera on the market regardless of price? To me it's the Nikon D70S priced right, near perfect design, and slightly more accurate at capturing images than the Canon counterpart. But I don't want to lug a huge camera and a bag of lenses around with me all the time, that's why I was so excited when high-quality pocket-size digital cameras were invented, so I could leave my old Nikon SLR on the shelf and be prepared to make good photographs wherever I happened to go.

Since I put the old film cameras into semi-retirement, I have had digital cameras from Panasonic, Canon, Olympus and HP and they were all adequate but suffered from that "chore" syndrome mentioned above with their horrendous shutter lag, dismal startup time and wretched battery life. This time around I wanted a camera I could truly carry in my pants pocket, yet has a good (no make that great) lens, excellent battery life, as many manual features as I could get in a tiny package, and something that didn't feel like a plastic toy.

I considered Panasonic Lumix, Canon, Nikon and Sony. The other brands I looked at had some good stuff but didn't seem to fill my desire for a true photographer's quality instrument. Sony got booted off the list fairly fast. They are such a fine company, why can't they make a camera that actually takes a great picture?

I am intrigued by Lumix, the quality of the pictures seems first-class, I love the image stabilizer, and they are very feature-rich, but most of the pocket-size models feel just a little cheesy. Canon makes pocket cameras that take good pictures, but I feel Canon is resting on their reputation instead of trying to build a product that's worth the asking price.

And Nikon would have come in a strong second, just missing first place because of weak ergonomics. I never seriously considered Casio, ok maybe for a watch or calculator, but I asked myself what they would know about photography. Turns out they know a lot. They've actually been making digital cameras longer than almost anyone, and when it comes to the right buttons in the right place they are geniuses. I'll go further than that, the whole concept of the Exilim EX-Z750 is genius. It you total up all it offers I would have to give it the honor of being the only perfect pocket-size digital camera on the market.

As soon as I touched on I was impressed by its quality. It feels like it's machined out of block of solid aluminum (its not). The controls give you nearly everything you will every want using buttons that make sense and don't require you to go many levels deep in the menu. I love the HUGE 2.5" LCD screen but no LCD screen is fully useful in direct sunlight no matter what anyone says, so Casio thoughtfully brought back the optical viewfinder.

It seems 9 out of 10 reviewers who mention the optical viewfinder say they hate it because it's so tiny. Who cares? It's there when you need it, and it's sharp and clear. If it makes the difference between getting a priceless picture or missing it, I'll take a tiny viewfinder instead of none anytime.

The EX-Z750 starts up and is ready to shoot by the time I get my finger from the off/on switch to the shutter release. Can't be any faster than that. I have still not found any instance where shutter lag has caused me to miss what I wanted to capture, in other words there really isn't any shutter lag in real life.

Rather than go into every detail of the camera, I'll mention a few of the biggest high points that sets this camera apart from every other one in the category.

1. The EX-Z750 remembers the zoom position when you turn it off and back on again. I have dreamt of a feature like this! There are so many times I have had the camera all set up and had to turn it off to wait for something to be ready, only to have to turn a camera back on and make several readjustments. With the EX-Z750 I can turn it back on and EVERYTHING is set exactly the way I left it.

2. Some cameras have some limited function to remember other favorite settings, the EX-Z750 seems to have the ability to remember nearly everything without having to commit it to a special "favorites" position on a switch or dial. So if I like -1 saturation (and this camera is slightly oversaturated in its default position) I can leave it at -1 forever.

3. You can turn the camera on and off with the on/off switch, or you can turn it on and off using the "record" "play" buttons to go directly to that mode. How cool is that?

4. The EX button makes it possible to very quickly adjust four of the most important shooting parameters without ever going into the menu mode.

5. The movie mode is incredible, and offers several unique features including a unique pre-movie that's already recording before you push the record button ... kinda like the way TIVO works ... it's weird and insanely brilliant. After seeing the quality I wonder who in their right mind would lug along a camcorder no matter how small it is on those trips to Disneyland when the EX-Z750 can take outstanding still pictures AND decent video in a camera you can hide in the palm of your hand.

6. Live RGB histogram? On a camera the size of a deck of cards (smaller actually)? WOW!

7. Battery life is one of the best in the industry.

8. 30 scene modes! Yeah I know I said I wanted something to take professional quality photographs and I wanted manual overrides, but sometimes you don't want to spend 10 minutes setting the camera like when the sun is setting in 30 seconds. I can't believe how versatile the scene modes are.

Last but not least, the picture quality is shocking. I compared two pictures taken at the same time of the same scene with the EX-Z750 and the $1300 Nikon D70S. I showed them side-by-side to several people who should have been able to tell the difference. Nobody could.

The negative side? Slight oversaturation as it comes out of the box. For snapshots it may help most people make a blah picture look a little more exciting. For someone more critical, just set the new default to -1 and you've got yourself a low-price, pocket-size D70S. To the reviewers who can't figure that out, get over it and go get a job at McDonalds.

The other small negative is that I love panorama assist. I take a lot of panorama pictures and I can't figure out how Casio missed putting in this one obvious feature. Must be some fear they have of absolute total perfection ;-) I rate the Casio EX-Z750 a 10 out of 10

Footnote: I've had the EX-Z50 for a week now. I've taken it on a trip and taken a variety of photographs and even submitted a few to be judged. The sharpness of the lens on this little pocket camera is unbelievable. The realism of colors is uncanny. Overall I can say photographs taken with this camera are so far beyond my expectations I would call them thrilling. I'm still going to buy a digital SLR but I'm in less of a hurry now that I see what I can do with my pocketable Casio.

As other reviewers have already noted, the EX-Z750 is nearly unbeatable in terms of its design and feature set. It is the only subcompact camera to offer such a comprehensive amount of control in such a small package. However, my experience indicates some troubling quality control issues that potential buyers should be aware of. First, however, pros and cons of the camera.

Pros:

--Excellent battery life.

--Excellent menu system and ergonomics.

--Very, very fast and responsive both in playback and record modes.

--Small size, all-metal construction.

--Included docking station.

--Good movie mode.

--Large LCD screen.

--Good flash performance.

Cons:

--Default saturation is really too high. I suggest setting it to -1 in the menu. Even with this corrected, though, I tend to prefer the colors produced by Canon and Fuji. That, however, is a personal preference.

--Images are slightly noisy. (Not enough to mar reasonably-sized prints, however)

--The zoom has relatively few steps between wide-angle and telephoto. Not a big problem, certainly not an uncommon one in point-and-shoot digitals.

Having said that, however, I should mention that my unit was defective. The autofocus system missed consistently (If I had to guess, I'd say that 75% of the shots were blown). Also, mine had a completely bizarre sensor problem; the images were blocky and pixelated even at full resolution and full quality, appearing as though they were of much lower resolution. I took these images to my local camera store and had this impression confirmed.

Anyway, it turns out that I am not alone, especially with the autofocus problems. A not-inconsiderable number of users have been reporting problems with the autofocus system, optical problems with their lenses, and another troubling mechanical problem that I'll explain below. (For these discussions, head over to dpreview.com, select "Forums" on the left, followed by "Casio Talk")

The troubling mechanical problem I mentioned earlier is this: If the camera is ever accidentally powered on while the lens barrel is obstructed, you will probably receive a "Lens error" message. To my understanding, this situation can also damage or break the autofocus motor. It seems like common sense not to turn it on while it's in the case, but accidents happen to the best of us (and other models do not seem nearly as susceptible to this problem). The Casio's easy-to-press raised power button makes accidental power-on more likely; so does the ability to turn the camera on with the "Record" and "Playback" mode buttons (also raised) on the back of the camera. This behavior can be disabled through the menu system; I recommend doing so.

In conclusion, then, the EX-Z750 is endowed with a nearly unbeatable combination of design, features, and image quality at this price point. And despite the problems that I mentioned, realize that all consumer electronics have a reasonable rate of failure. Nonetheless, my impression (both from my personal experience and from the anecdotal evidence I've gathered from the forums) is that this might not be the most trustworthy and reliable camera around.

If you decide to go with the Z750, shoot a LOT of pictures when you receive yours. Shoot some houses on your street; definitely shoot some portraits. Put the camera through its paces in the first couple of days, then examine all the images at actual size on your computer screen and make sure that the focus is accurate and that the resolution and detail is all there. Especially when dealing with third-party merchants who sometimes have VERY short return/exchange periods (mine required getting it postmarked for return within seven days of receipt), it is important for you to establish that your camera is working well right off the bat. And, again, make sure to disable the power-on function for the record and playback buttons on the back of the body.

Some other models you may want to consider in the same (roughly) size/price range:

--Fuji F10. Terrific noise control, very fast-operating camera. A little bigger than the Casio and short on manual controls, but endowed with good battery life, beautiful 6.3MP images, and Fuji's (to my eye) excellent image quality. It has some downsides, too; be sure to read up on it.

--Canon SD500. A very popular choice-watch out for fragile LCD screens, though. Limited manual controls. Many have reported breakages that Canon will not cover under warranty.

--Sony DSC-P150. I'm not too familiar with it, but it is favorably reviewed.

Lastly, make sure that you really need a camera this small. There is something to be said for the way that a larger camera feels in the hand, and there are plenty of attractive super-zoom models for similar prices as these point-and-shoots. Making things smaller always entails some kind of compromise. However, the good news is that these small point-and-shoots (in my opinion, particularly the Fuji) deliver outstanding images on par with much larger and much more expensive cameras. Just make sure that your particular camera's optics and focusing systems are delivering the results you expect.

My four-star rating for this camera combines impressions of my actual experience with the expected image quality of a non-defective unit. I gave it four stars instead of five because of reliability concerns and slight image problems (too-high saturation, noise levels, good but not great color rendition, in my opinion).

Buy Casio Exilim EXZ750 7MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom Now

I've researched and debated on buying a camera in this class for a couple months and my choices were the Casio Z750, Casio s500, Casio s600, Canon SD450, and the Canon SD550. Lots of great reviews for all these cameras, and all seemed to have their pros and cons. In the end, it came down to the Z750 and the SD550 (wanted to go for the 7 megapixels because my wife really likes to do stuff with photoshop and print large layouts of pictures).

I'm not a photographer, just the average person who likes to take pictures at social events and vacations, and wants a good camera that I easily take with me in my pocket. I can't really tell the difference that a lot of reviewers talk about in image quality, and frankly I don't really care about purple fringing, softness, contrast, saturation, blah blah blah...as long as the picture looks good to me and takes me back to the moment then I'm happy. Therefore the images produced by both the Z750 and SD550 (and the others as well) were all good enough for me.

Here's the dealbreaker that led me to buying the Z750 over either of the Canon's...SPEED. I've read just about every review out there and although they talk about how fast this camera is, they don't really relay just how much faster this camera is when you simply push the button. I'm the guy who's on vacation who will bother a stranger to take a picture of me and my wife or friends, and I can't tell you how many times we've had to tell these strangers how they need to hold the button down halfway, let the camera focus first, then push it all the way down. Only for them to not understand or not be able to do this. Then we end up getting crappy shots or have to ask someone else who looks younger and more in tune with today's digital cameras. I'm sure a lot of you know what I'm talking about. So a major concern of mine when selecting a new camera was the ability to hand the camera to anyone walking along the street and let them simply push a button and take my picture. Here is where the Z750 sealed the deal for me.

I went to a couple of stores, turned on each camera, pointed at something in the store and pushed the little button to get a picture. The Canons (both SD450 and SD550) wouldn't take the picture, and I ran into the same "hold the button down halfway" problem. Even though they were quick to focus once I held the button down halfway and quick to take the picture once I fully pressed, neither would take a picture if I simply pushed the button all the way. On the other hand, all the Casio's took a picture immediately. They all have extremely quick autofocuses and in combination with this, if your finger is too quick for the autofocus there's a quick-shutter option that will allow the camera to bypass the focus and still take the picture. Some reviews say the autofocus is so fast that it's hard to even get to the quick shutter phase, and some say that the quick shutter sort of guesses on a focus and takes the picture based on this guess. I don't really know what to believe, but what I do know is that either way when I just press the little button, I get great looking pictures.

So if you're like me and need a camera that will take a good picture while handing it over to a stranger , then the Z750 is the better choice. If you're the only person who's going to handle your camera and know all the ins-and-outs of digital photography, you'll probably have a much tougher decision.

Read Best Reviews of Casio Exilim EXZ750 7MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom Here

The lens error problem is real. It is a design flaw (in my opinion as a Electrical Engineer). I experienced the problem about 10 minutes from opening the box.

The sensitivity to go into the lens error failure mode is too high. Any pressure (even the slightest) on the lens at opening will shut the camera down w/error. After that, each time you try to power up the camera it will keep displaying the lens error and power down immediately. The only way to get it working again is to re-apply very slight pressure to the lens. I know this is counter intuitive and in fact scary, especially on a new camera w/warranty disclaimers on power lens failure due to the blockage / abuse. It may take several trys. You may even hear a ratcheting sound from the lens. But it works !

If necessary, you can recalibrate the autofocus by zooming in / out completely.

Turn off the digital zoom. It seemed to aggravate the probability of the lens error problem when zooming the lens in and out specifically when switching (crossing over) to/from digital zoom mode. Digital Zoom doesn't really help anyway.

The case also has a padded insert causing the case to be way too tight remove the padded insert !

Out of the box the unit powers on in multiple ways. This can cause inadvertant power up w/lens blocked. Turn off those power up options.

Double check the picture mode each time you start taking pictures the dial tends to rotate when handling the camera out of the case.

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Hi all. First of all, I must say the main idea of this comment. THIS IS A DIGITAL CAMERA... AND ITS MAIN FUNCTION IS TAKING PHOTOS.

I bought this camera a couple of months ago, after a very deep research, investigation and comparissons. The first thing I was looking for, was a good resolution and high quality photos. Then I wanted a big LCD screen and of course, good image stabilization. After that, the size of the camera was very important, memory and storage features and then, price and brand.

When I saw this camera for the first time, I got very interested with its 7.2 megapixeles. When I took some trial photos (when I had already bought it, of course) the results where amazing. Its 3x optical zoom is just enough if you have modes to take huge photos (fixed to be printed in a A3 paper). So, my first conclusion was: If I don't have the 5x or 10x of optical zoom that other cameras offer... I can select the biggest printing size for my photos and equal that quality. it's not dissapointing at all, I swear.

Then, I read carefully about the different modes it has to fix images according to light conditions. You can easily go from a sunset landscape to a fireworks scene, from a backlight picture to a night portrait... and it really works well. And you get it, just selecting the auto-configured modes. One trick I always do is (if I'm in doubt about which mode to use) taking trial photos with the possible modes, and then compare them (the huge 2.5" LCD screen is very helpful here). The result is the perfect photo, the best flash setting, contrast and white balance. Simply awesome. I almost forgot, if you take an action scene with the standard mode, you get a great picture too (this camera has an almost instant photo taking from the time you press the buttom).

After those photo features, I found a very friendly menu. it's really easy to change settings and modes. You can do it from the complete menu, or the wonderful quick access buttom to edit or modify the most common settings for a fast configuration. You also have to buttoms to switch between the play mode and the camera itself. Then, you have a very friendly and easy to understand menu and structure.

Another outstanding feature of this camera is the use of SD cards. This cards are widely used in many other devices as PDAs, cell phones, other brand cameras, whatever. This is not as the nasty and "exclusive" Sony's Memory Sticks, so, you won't have to buy many memory storage cards for each device you have (but you'll have if you have a Sony). Its LCD screen is simply wonderful, a great colour display and even the digital zoom (8x) is a helpful tool.

Then... and finally... the video feature. This camera has 3 basic video modes. The first one, and the most common in other cameras is a poor video quality (320 x 240) which can be used for quick videos to be sent by Email. As I said at the beginning of this review, you're buying a photo camera, not a video recorder. But, this is your like day... If you use this camera's best movie quality mode (640 x 480) you'll get really GREAT and enjoyable videos. I went to Las Vegas for a holiday week and I spent a complete day taking videos with my camera. The quality is incredible for a photo camera (for both, images and sound) which can easily be played in a 15 inches screen without losing resolution. It's really cool.

For video editing, this camera comes with a CD containing an editing software to brun a VCD or DVD file, so you can enjoy in both two ways of your videos. Of course, you have the .mpg and .avi files.

So, my conclusion: This is the best camera I've ever had, about its price... I think it's fair, you have the best photo camera and a pretty cool video recorder (but, be sure of buying a 512 MB or more SD card to storage lots of video).

Friday, February 7, 2014

Sony CFD-E100 Portable CD Radio Cassette Recorder

Sony CFD-E100 Portable CD Radio Cassette Recorder
  • Revolutionary Design and Form Factor to Fit Most Places
  • Vertical Loading CD Mechanism
  • CD-R/RW Playback Compatibility
  • Digital AM/FM Stereo Tuner
  • Measures 15 1/16 x 7 1/8 x 6 9/14" (382 x 180.9 x 169mm) including handle

I looked for a long time for a stereo, boombox or undercounter radio that would fit well in my kitchen. I wanted something that would fit in a small space but still sound good and be able to tune in my favorite radio station which is not always easy to get in. I read tons of reviews and was getting very discouraged. But the Sony CFD-E100 is perfect for my needs. It sounds great, looks good, takes up only a little space and does *not* use the cord as an antenna which I have found to be an annoying "feature" of some radios. Also, the case is that same white appliance plastic that my coffee maker and toaster are made from, so it blends well in my kitchen and is easy to clean. I also think it's attractive with the blue accents. To save space, the CD player is vertical and in the front, while the cassette player is in the back. So you can't see the cassette player from the front, which confused my husband for a minute. But there's no reason that one way or the other has to be the "front" so you can just turn it around if you want to use the cassette player and need to see it. It also comes with a remote, which I have not had the need to use.

Pros:

* small footprint

* digital tuner that is fairly strong

* CD player

* cassette player-recorder

* pull-out antenna (not one of those "antenna in cord" things)

* easy to clean

* decent speakers

Cons

* a little hard to figure out how to set the radio pre-sets

* price I paid $70 not outrageous but not inexpensive

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I loved this unit... the size, the sound, the footprint. And the name SONY. But just after a few times, the CD player went bad. Now, when I put in a disk, I simply get a "No Disk" error. It has become a Radio-Tape boombox, no CD. Very disappointed. Then I went on the web and found others have been having this kind of problem with other SONY units and bemoaning the loss of the once revered SONY quality.

I understand things can go wrong and I am left wondering whether this was a stray problem or due to poor manufacturing quality. In either case I am stuck!

Read Best Reviews of Sony CFD-E100 Portable CD Radio Cassette Recorder Here

I bought this just last week. Amazon's delivery was on commited time. I was looking for a small, compact CD player that also have radio and cassette player. This Sony CFD-E100 exactly fit my bill. I have following observations to make for this player:

Pros:

1. Nice looks, compact size.

2. Good audio quality, for CDs and Cassettes.

3. Nice FM reception.

Cons:

1. You won't be able to preset FM channels without reading manual.

2. MegaBass is not that effective (if you are not audiophile, it is still good).

3. No MP3 support, this would have been great otherwise.

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Sony CFD-E100

An extremely well designed, great sounding unit with features and a style you won't find anywhere else.

23 years ago I built a boom box using the first ever Sony D-5 CD player as the anchor. It measured 14" X 10" X 4/12", sounded amazing and was completely portable. I would still be using it today but the speakers finally failed. There was not then anything like it, and when I went shopping last week I was not surprised to see there still wasn't.

Until I found the CFD-E100. I was startled by the similar dimensions. It seems we have come to accept as the norm, as one reviewer called them, those "bulbous giant-fungus shapes" but I was persistent in looking for something a bit more portable and less statement. I needed something for home and at various job sites that would be sturdy and unobtrusive and easy to perch somewhere. Or even hang by the handle. In the relatively unsophisticated shopping area such as mine, it seemed there was not much to chose from so it was great to find the Sony.

It sounds great, and seems rugged. The white color may be an issue if I am painting, but then it will develop "character". All functions seem perfectly acceptable, but it is only Week One. I was hoping for something easy to operate with gloves, and with the remote this is barely possible, but the wide spaced large buttons on the top panel are easy to operate.

Interesting to note you cannot turn the unit on with the remote if the unit is running on batteries. I am hoping the "No CD" error I have read about has been eliminated by now. Does well with CD-R, but alas, no MP3. I was surprised there is no display backlight, but eliminating anything that shortens battery life could be considered acceptable.

The "Mega-Bass" button could just as well be labeled "Less Shrill, which is fairly typical.

The CD handling is cute, it has a double-fold door that hands you the disk, and a snap-over hub design, which slightly irritating but unavoidable.

The cassette controls are firm but sturdy. The buttons override each other, which is handy when you're trying to get a tape going quickly. The mechanism does not pop off at the end of a tape, which seems unkind to the tape. The tape viewing window is a tiny magnified plastic slit that may as well not even be there, but since it's upside down on the back of the machine I guess we're not supposed to care. Anyway, it's now almost a novelty to find a cassette mechanism at all, so these shortcomings should hardly be surprising. It does a fine job of recording whatever source is playing. I have always wished they'd build a cassette servo in so you could use the remote to operate, but like I just said...

Mechanically, it is not completely confidence-inspiring, but compared to some of the alternatives I was considering, it is bulletproof. I would think these would be all over by now, but the fad of those giant fungi seems to be more like a permanent statement by now. But can you put one on a windowsill?

The Sony CFD E100 rates say 4 stars for my purposes*; for others', it might rate 5.

Mainly I wanted a good quality radio-cassette player boombox, with CD function optional, and little space usage. This model looked trustworthy, and could use my existing 6 rechargeable C-cells. I bought it online, used, unseen anywhere, and the price was right. (I'm one of those over-age-34 curmudgeons the marketers seem to hate. I bought the E100 mainly for playing tapes of my favorite radio news/opinion programs, i.e., time-shifting, to listen when my mind is less occupied. My cassettes are usually recorded by a high-quality deck with Dolby-B.)

The design/shape factor is a plus, avoiding the fad of bulbous giant-fungus shapes.

Sound quality is very good, but a bit bassy, at least on tape playback; voices tend to sound low and boxy. The "mega-bass" button makes practically no difference. I'd rather have normal tone balance as the default. Subwoofers be da_ned!

Presetting radio stations was not difficult, following directions. Radio performance seems fine. The antenna can be swiveled when its bottom section is fully extended.

(No comment on the remote control, which I lack and don't miss. It would only be needed for direct access to preset stations, rather than in step sequence.)

CD playing works well, and the sound balance is more brilliant than on the cassette sound; maybe a tad weak in mid-range. CD track playing does not seem to be programmable; no random or auto repeat. Handling CDs must be done carefully, as the laser player mechanism hinges outward a little when the front-facing door is opened, and a CD needs to be held nearly vertical and snapped onto the hub --better with 2 hands. No, it does not play MP3s, but my CD-R copies play fine.

The cassette door is similarly located on the back of the unit, but the in-&-out motions are more straightforward (up/down, simple). The carrying handle should be rotated down behind the unit to keep from interfering with cassette in-&-out. Cassette actions are full auto-stop. Only the "record" button is easily distinguishable, on the left end, with its red dot. Strangely, the cassette can be powered on by just pressing "Play," but after "Stop," the power is still ON. If not noticed, and you don't push "Power" off, this can drain your batteries!

Overall, the design and function is quite pleasing to my senses. The E100 targets a near-empty niche, with very good design and quality. [*For what I paid used, it's 5 stars.]

Friday, January 24, 2014

Sony CDP-CE535 5-CD Changer

Sony CDP-CE535 5-CD Changer
  • 5-disc capacity
  • Play exchange
  • Advanced Mega Storage control for a second CD changer
  • Optical digital output
  • Delete play

I purchased 2 of these units when they first came on the market. I am very pleased with them. Pluses: *I like the Control A-1 interface included on the unit, because I can use my computer to control both units, as well as record songs to my Minidisc deck (MDS-JB920) with a simple Drag & Drop. (PCLK-MD1) *The sound quality is great. *Plays CD-RWs. --I've rarely seen any changers which support this. *CD-Text. *"No Delay" play. (When you use 2 players.) On the negative side: -Only 12 characters allowed for naming a cd -you can use more on your computer, but they're not displayed on the player -You cannot set the time used for a "xfade". (Fading back and forth between players. -Output level is also the headphone level....no knob, just a + and on the remote. -I can enter titles for the discs with my PCLK-MD1 link kit, but the titles don't xfer to the player. And you can't transfer cd titles between players. -Power button is not a contact switch. It's a physical on/off, so you don't have power control with the remote. Overall I'm pleased with my purchase. I would have changed just a few things, though, if I was designing it.

Buy Sony CDP-CE535 5-CD Changer Now

an excellent machine at a reasonable price with enough bells and whistles to keep me busy

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***10/9/1999***

The Sony CDP-CE535 5-Disc CD Changer" and the CDP-525 5-Disc CD Changer share most of the same features. One of the improvements of the CDP-CE535 5 player is the time it takes to seek between tracks, particularly when doing a random search. It's tracking speed is faster and more even faster. Overall, this is a very solid player. Far more reliable than the "jukebox" style players.

***UPDATE 8/24/2000***

an excellent machine at a reasonable price with enough balls and whistles to keep me busy.

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The second Sony CDP-CE535 5-CD changer is working fine so far.The first unit had some problems.J&R exchanged it without any hassle.The service from J&R has been great thru. out the years that I have been dealing with them. The years mean;since J&R was only in one building behind the building that was ATT in the Manhattan Bur. hall city area.

Gregory

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Swann Alpha D03C6 SWA43-D3C6 8-Channel H.264 Security DVR and 8 Weather-Resistant Cameras

Swann Alpha D03C6 SWA43-D3C6 8-Channel H.264 Security DVR and 8 Weather-Resistant CamerasWe got the smaller Swann system for our home and it worked great (see my other review). So my husband decided to set this one up for our business with 8 cameras. The cameras are amazing hi-res quality-color in daytime and black and white in night vision. 8 cameras works well with the DVR and we set the DVR to only record motion so it does not run all day and night. That makes it easy to find stuff when it happens. The package came with everything that we needed, cable, connectors, remote, instructions. My husband found it helpful to go to their website and watch the how to videos for installation at

We hooked it up to an old TV for playback and monitoring. We can also watch the action live through my smartphone or you can use an iphone too. I like that there are no monthly fees like some other commercial systems. Happy with it!

After receiving the Swann system ahead of the planned delivery date, we installed it the next day. System is up and running, and we were really impressed with the night vision visibility. Specs say 65 ft, but it seems you can even see a little beyond that. Would definitely recommend this system, although we did wish there were other colors available. The black makes the cameras a little less discrete, but the performance there are no questions with. This definitely is an optimal system.

Very satisfied!!

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Had two questions about why I could not get the recorder to work correctly, emailed the questions. Eventually got a response that they were running 4-5 weeks behind on support. Never happened. May ship unit back to Amazon. Cameras are fine, recorder would be if all worked right. Would give four stars if all correct. Have seen several problem folk pointing at the mounted cameras--almost good enough with just that!

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There is no tech support, or customer service. I called for replacement fan.Was told it would be shipped two months ago. No fan. Emailed these ALIENS, and was aked for all information about my purchase. Replied emails asked for same info yesterday. Today they asked for the same info to verify my purchase. I emailed the Invoice from Amazon.con of the purchased with all the same info. I don't think Iwill get the fan, and feels I'm getting the run-around. Will by the fan myself because these CLOWNS do not support your purchase

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Worth the money. The dvr is a little noisy. The kit offers the needed parts to connect the cameras and the various pieces. I would buy again.

Save 44% Off

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Sharp DV-SR45U DVD Recorder with MP3 Playback

Sharp DV-SR45U DVD Recorder with MP3 PlaybackThis is a great product. I copied an old VHS tape to a DVD-R and for the most part was happy with the results. The picture actually looked clearer on the DVD than playing from my VCR. I was able to make chapter marks on the DVD-R but had to stop recording to do this and then start recording again. You could make automatic marks in 5, 10, 15, 30 minute intervals as well. You could only make manual chapter marks with a DVD-RW.

I have an old Panasonic DVD player and was able to play the finished DVD in the player. The nice part was instead of this playing like a VHS tape I now have a menu with my own titles to skip through.

The only two negatives so far are that If you delete a titled section, instead of the section moving to the block before it, it is deleted for good. I actually had this issue when using it. The second negative was it took a little while to finalize the DVD when finished. I walked away and just came back later. The process finished on its own and the menu was showing on the screen when I cam back. The DVD worked fined and was able to play in my old machine not before it was finalized though (which I expected).

Overall, for the price, I highly recommend this execellent machine. The only other gripe is there is no firewire connection for my camcorder. I did not make this a negative for the player since I can just use the RCA and S-video jacks.

This is a very good recorder with strong editing capabilities. Both the DVD-R & RW format disks offer track-editing options suitable for basic or more event-specific recordings from several sources. Recording from VHS often rewards you with a quality that in fact appears better than the original.

It has a quirk regarding the cooling fan which is easy to circumvent. What you can not work around however is its inability to function outside of 4X media. Though you may have an easier time with 2X or 1X, the proper media is DVD-R 4X (MAX) 4.7GB for this machine. You will not find this information easy to come by otherwise. Such 4X disks appear close to extinction, as they have often been replaced in catalogs and on shelves by 1x-8x disks -DO NOT BUY THESE -which are not compatible with this machine. There are no firmware upgrades available for this model.

If you have a stack of 4X max. disks on hand or know a source that can provide you with such media, then you will be quite satisfied. Without a firmware upgrade however, this recorder will soon suffer a fate not unlike death.

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I just bought two. These machines replaced an old, very poor Phillips DVD recorder and all the VHS machines. Picture is great. I found it easy to use and had no problems with 1x, 2x, and 4x DVD-R's and 1x-2x DVD-RW's and they played fine in other DVD players. I don't know where the other reviewers shop, but I had little trouble finding both DVD-R's and DVD-RW's for this machine online AND at Office Depot, CompUSA, Staples, Best Buy and even Big Lots, and all at reasonable prices (CompUSA having the best selection and prices). It also played a variety of DVD+R's, DVD-R's, DVD-RW's, and regular DVD's. It did play a DVD+R/DL, but only one with just the movie and no menus (store bought DVD's played just fine). Tuner and timer recording work great and menus are easy to navigate. Like most Sharp products, the remote is ergonomic and easy to use.

Sure, DVD's and formatting takes quite a while and reading takes a few seconds, but nothing longer than my expensive Pioneer Elite DV-37. And it is a change from VHS, but this is not a lifetime product. I do think it is a big improvement over past DVD products.

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Using a DVD-RW (Not DVD+RW) ver1.1/ 2x speed it works great and is re-recordable and simple. Haven't found a DVD-R that works with it yet (it tells you in the manual which ones will work but I just couldn't find the DVD-R of the correct write speed in stores). Recording works instantly (like a VCR) but takes between 20secs to a minute after recording is stopped to write to disc.

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I purchased this recorder and it never even worked coming out of the box. It won't read the media and now Sharp wants me to mail it into them. Should've purchased from a local retailer so I don't have to deal with additional shipping. This is horrible.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Broksonic VAHFA6741GST 4-Head Hi-Fi Stereo VCR

Broksonic VAHFA6741GST 4-Head Hi-Fi Stereo VCR
  • 4-head Hi-Fi VCR
  • Auto-rewind, auto-eject
  • Front A/V input
  • Standard remote included

The user review dated before mine is inaccurate. Indeed, this Broksonic player does have an RCA audio/video in, but it's located on the front panel, rather than in the rear next to the RCA audio/video out, and I make much use of it.

As to the machine itself ... It doesn't truly rate 5 stars when compared to higher end machines without regard to price: It has a clumsy and oddly configured remote control, some of whose bottons have odd names ["Call" instead of "Onscreen Display" or OSD is one]; and the design of its front panel is just as odd in an overly simple way; plus it makes the clunking noises cheap machines are wont to make, as it goes through its maneuvers. However --

When you get past all that: it makes pristine recordings (picture and hi-fi stereo sound), as good as those generated by my high-end GO-Video two-deck dubber, and recording that don't need tracking adjustments when played on most other VCRs. Furthermore it records in the middle LP mode, which most VCRs no longer do. Finally, it's damned sturdy. I give mine a workout, and it's been in service to me for nearly two years without a hint of malfunction or wear. Eventually of course, I'm sure, this bargain basement machine will have to reach its limit ... but for [$] it is excellent, and the easy comprehensive VCR answer for anyone on a serious budget, or needing a spare machine that won't cost more than spare change.

POSTSCRIPT, EIGHT YEARS LATER, 2011: The VCR is still goin' strong. Used a lot less, but still chugging with NO problems.

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I ordered this online, but I didn't even plug it in before I realized that it has RCA video out, but no RCA video in. It can only record off of the antenna. This wouldn't work for what I needed, so I had to return it.

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you can even check the picture here to find the rca input.

i used it for over 2 years already, the only problem i have is it is not so good to record the dvd on the tape

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Haier BDP100 Blu-Ray Disc Player

Haier BDP100 Blu-Ray Disc Player
  • Blu-ray playback up to 1080p; DVD Upconversion to 1080p
  • HDMI Version 1.3 and component video output
  • Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby True HD
  • MPEG2/4, MPEG4-AVC, H.264, VC-1, dts-HD, BD-Java
  • BD/DVD/VCD/CD/CD-R(RW)/DVD+R(RW)/MP3/WMA/JPEG Playback

I got this player about a year ago, and can tell you that I'm very happy with the picture on my 32" Vizio at 270. I'm not so happy about having to deal with the unit refusing to turn on (remote or physical -unplug to reset), subtitles displayed after resuming a DVD, and I can't figure out why it won't connect to my home network (no netflix or pandora).

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It was given to my brother-in-law as a gift and I've heard nothing but praise of its features. The best raved feature is the netflix intergration by simply plugging into the router and setting up netflix on the player.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

JVC Everio GZMC500 5MP 3CCD 4GB Microdrive Camcorder w/10x Optical Zoom

JVC Everio GZMC500 5MP 3CCD 4GB Microdrive Camcorder w/10x Optical ZoomHad this digicam for about 24 hours and here are my first impressions:

I own a Panasonic SV AV100 which saves mpeg2 video and mpg4 to a SD card. It did it well and I was pleased with it, but the low resolution digital camera function was surpassed by some wireless phones. I wanted a device that took high resolution photos and digital mpeg2 video saved to a memory card that could be immediately loaded to PC and burnt to DVD. The JVC GZ-MC100 and MC200 took 2mp pictures and saved mpeg2 video to a 4 gb microdrive or SD card, but had poor low light performance worse than my little Panasonic. So, it was with some anxiety that I shelled out $1595 for the GZ-MC500.

I bought it hoping that the new 3CCD video chip would not only give better color video and good 5mp jpeg pictures, but that JVC would have taken the time to improve low light performance... and they did.

In bright light the automatic videocam performance of the camera is really good. Indoors without any light on and bright sunlight coming in the window, the video remained sharp with pretty good color saturation and no graininess to my eye when played back on TV directly from camera. The MC500 seems to really be working much, much better in low light conditions than the MC100/200s before it. At night with room lights on, I took more videos and although there was some dimming of the picture, the video was still bright and not grainy. Color still looked good though there was some loss of color saturation in those conditions. In a completely dark room, forget about it since there is no infrared function. But I did not care about that. Much better in low light than my Panasonic SV-AV100 overall. Microphone picked up voices/sounds in stereo very well.

The interface is intuitive and easy to navigate for me.

The camera bottom heats up while recording to microdrive and I never recorded more than 5 minutes of video but the heat build up was quite noticeable. Unlike my Panasonic, there is no remote control which is quite disappointing in a $1600 digicam that is begging for immediate video playback to TV directly from camera.

In summary, I am both relieved at the camera's good low light performance and very happy with the camera's mpeg2 video quality and very happy with the 5mp jpeg picture performance. I would give this camera 4.5 stars out of five taking off 1/2 point for lack of remote control.

Go to this site and use translate option on google toolbar to read text or just download the duck video and jpegs to see this camera's quality. Rename video .mod extension to .mpg to view in WMP. Remember this is 720 x 480 mpg2

(...)

This small thing is so unique that your satisfaction level will only depend on what you need from a camcorder.

Firstly, everyone says this bug is not "that good" with low light. I can not agree with this, there are a few settings in the menu, and you can get really good results under low light. If you leave it at "auto" mode though, they're right. It sometimes sucks!

It also has issues with the other meaning of "light"... Weight is so low. Combined with its narrow-angled default lens, that lightness causes too much shake in the picture. But that can be solved by installing a wider lens. I don't like to turn on its digital image stabilizer, since it gives the picture an artificial effect, but it can work for you.

Another problem I experienced is: Your computer will see the camera as a hard disk. So when it's plugged, your computer will not recognize your other external hard disks. I had a huge external USB hard disk to store videos, but I can not transfer video files from camera to that disk directly, coz the computer does not allow both of them at the same time. First you must transfer from camera to your main internal disk, than you must plug the big external disk and move files to that one.

Still image quality is really bad for 5 megapixels. That's so clear.

But still I do not regret I bought this camcorder. The pain of capturing videos, splitting them, etc. are gone forever. You just drag & drop the files. And they already come splitted, because Everio takes every shot as another file. In other words, everytime you press the record/stop button, you create another video file. That's sooo useful.

I tried the included software. That video editing software is really primary, it will bore you after learning the basics. But you can get real stuff from Adobe instead. They offer trial versions of Premiere on the site.

Finally, buy this camcorder if you care about:

1) Easier editing

2) Size and Weight

3) 3 CCD (Not a big difference though)

And do not buy if you care about:

1) Need long battery life

2) Will make 1-piece long shootings, like sport matches, conferences, etc.

3) Have Parkinson disease ;)

4) Will use more for still pix, than video

Since editing is my priority, I rate it with four stars, but your rating will only depend on your purpose.

Buy JVC Everio GZMC500 5MP 3CCD 4GB Microdrive Camcorder w/10x Optical Zoom Now

I must say that amount of excitement and thrill I had with extremely high degree of anticipated satisfaction while I was getting this item packed, it didn't make it to my satisfaction in reality owing to vedio quality I'm getting for such a high price.

Good things:

1. Very compact, easy to carry

2. If someone is not too much fuss about quality, both video and still picture in one device which is great

3. Digital to digital transfer, saves heaps of time and pain for transfer from camera to PC. I have bought a portable hard disk of 40 GB capacity so that on trip I can transfer from camera to it without needing to carry my laptop everywhere

4. One of the very nice things I liked is ability to record just voice. Especially voice quality is pretty good so it is much appreciated feature.

Bad:

1. Video quality is good but not so good as one would expect with 3 CCD, digital storage and so much price. Final picture looks like as if a high quality recording with a dirty lense.

2. There is no manual view finder. so if sun is on on your back, you can't see a thing in digital view finder

3. Operation of record and stop button is not very ergonomic. I get strain my hand

4. Gets heated up very quickly.

5. Button to switch between still and video is pathetic. I never able to get it in right position

6. I'm surprised that JVC forced to adopt to Cyberlink editing software by creating .mod files. I hate it to bottom of my heart. I have to first open files in cyberlink software, create an AVI file which I then import into another video editing software like movie maker or Sony Vegas. This is extremely painful since it is time consuming and I suspect I'm loosing quality also.

7. Even though still picture resolution is 5 mega pixel, I don't get is quite as good I use to get in Sony 5 mega pixel even after using tripod.

8. Battery life is not very good.

Read Best Reviews of JVC Everio GZMC500 5MP 3CCD 4GB Microdrive Camcorder w/10x Optical Zoom Here

I make a living producing videos with Mac's. I own this camera and I love it but there is one truth: the camera is not supported by JVC for Mac's... but that does not matter since you can still have a great experience. It is actually simpler to use with a Mac than with a PC! No need to install drivers and softwares.

To summarize it:

1I did not install anything... there is no Mac software. You do not need it. Plug it in. It mounts the MicroDrive and you copy the files to your HD or burn a DVD from it. Without the need to copy files first (but recommended since microdrives are slow).

2You can import your photos from the SD with iPhoto. You are set. That's it.

So what can you do with the video?

1-Burn a copy of the MicroDrive content in about 10 mins! It cannot be simpler. Just drag the video folder to Roxio's Toast. It imports. Click burn. That's it! You have a DVD in about 10-15 minutes of the entire content. No conversions. No delays. Toast 7 will let you customize the DVD a bit and it makes a great backup of your digital memories. It cannot be simpler.

2-Need to edit the video? Download the free application MPEG Streamclip. Convert your video to editable formats. Plenty of options. Free. Very high quality conversions. Solid. Another option would be to import the saved-to-DVD files using DVDxDV and create your editable movies.

In my work I use professional cameras such as the HD Panasonic's AG-HVX200 and even when your are used to HD video, the quality of the video from this unit is very respectable, especially when you consider its size.

I love its size, wieght, media portability, etc. I do not know if this the right video recorder for you but for me, it was exactly what I was looking for. It fits my video workflow, style and usage.

I recommend HDD video recorders even for the casual home video producer.... shoot your video, trim it and burn it. That easy. By the way, make two DVDs, one for usage and the second for storing your memories (backup).

Summarizing, if you have a Mac and Toast, it is so simple that it silences the ignorant PCr2 user who "reviewed" it here.... the only thing he did was to critize what he does not understand (or do not want to understand). He probably does not want to use other operating systems because he might be too old to learn new and better things in life such as a reliable operating system.

If you are a Mac user, I recommend you to visit forums such as camcorderinfo.com to get the usefull information. As with anything, beware of biased opinings that do not help you solve your needs.

Technical note: Roxio's Toast will import all MOD video files directly into it. Since the video is not converted in any way, it preserves the original video and audio quality.

There are various things that can be better in this camera but you need to know what these are before you buy it. There are size, format, capacity and design limitations. Know them before you buy it and if it still meets your criteria, you'll agree that it is an amazing camera.

I gave it 4 out of 5 for minor things that I actually can live with such as a slow startup, the monitor does not flip out, no mic input, cannot turn information off while recording (just while playing) and nithing else. I knew these limitations before I bought it so it met my expectations.

Hope this helps.

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I was looking for a camcorder to replace my old Panasonic PV-L757 (VHS-C) camcorder but was overwhelmed by the number of available choices. Also, the Olympus D450Z still camera that I bought in 1999 is more than a little dated so upgrading to a better camera was important.

When I spotted a small writeup of the GZMC500 in "Wired" magazine I thought "This is the new camera I've been looking for." "I can kill two birds with one stone." A new baby just weeks away prompted me to get on Amazon's waiting list and wait for the camera to be released. The camera arrived in mid-July.

I have not been impressed.

The camera *is* quite small and easy to handle. Amazingly small, in fact. Unfortunately the camera does not have a built-in light so low light video is poor. To make matters worse the still pictures are also poor. I'm probably more disappointed with the still picture quality than the video quality. I've pretty much given up using the 500 as a still camera since the D450Z does a better, more predictable job.

I sprang for the accessory hard case with an extra battery but that probably wasn't a good choice. You can only charge the battery while it is installed in the camera so you end up opening and closing the camera to swap batteries for charging. With the experience I've had so far there's just no way I'll spend another $150 for the JVC dual battery charger. $150 for a battery charger!?! I don't think so...

This is not the camera I thought it would be.