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FEATURES: Holiday Gift Guide 3D tech comes home
  • Geronimo
  • Member Since Jan 17th, 2008
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Engadget HD4 Comments

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When it comes to quality for the price, Samsung is hard to beat. I've recently owned LCDs by Sony and Samsung, plus a Hitachi plasma. I love my 52 inch 650-series LCD by Samsung--amazing picture!
The U-Verse box has been in place at the end of my street for a few weeks now. I'd seriously consider switching to AT&T from Dish if they would offer a low price HD-only package that could compete with TurboHD. Unfortunately, it doesn't look like pricing for AT&T is much better than Comcast.
I got my Samsung BD-P2500 yesterday and the Netflix streaming was the first thing I tried after updating my firmwire via ethernet. I watched Groundhog Day in SD and it looked pretty good. The quality reminded me of analog cable...not a lot of digital artifacts but everything was slightly fuzzy and the colors weren't very punchy. Overall, I was pleased with it. Then I tried watching Ben Stein's Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed in HD. This was between 3 and 5 in the afternoon and my bandwidth meter was between one-half and two-thirds, meaning it didn't even try to stream HD. The video quality was pretty awful! It looked much worse than Groundhog Day in SD. LOTS of compression artifacts and digital garbage. It was still watchable but at times reminded me of watching YouTube.

I tried another HD movie, Widows' Peak, last night around midnight. Netflix's bandwidth meter filled all the way across and displayed "HD". The quality was great! It looked like a lower-quality HD broadcast on cable TV...not up to the quality of OTA prime time HD, certainly not Blu-ray quality, but still HD. Very nice! At one point, though, I paused the movie for several minutes. When I resumed, it had to re-assess my bandwidth and rated me slightly below full quality (maybe 85%). The difference was pretty severe--there was no mistaking that for HD!

Netflix streaming is a nice bonus but it's really just a supplement to cable and Blu-ray. The HD selection is tiny and even then you need a good internet connection, which can be hit or miss. The SD selection is decent and gives you instant gratification. It's good for watching B-movies or stuff you've already seen, but if it's a movie I really want to see, I'll wait to get the Blu-ray in the mail from Netflix or watch it on Cinemax HD so that I can truly enjoy it.

(Oh, BTW, this player does a *great* job of upconverting DVDs to near-HD quality. And Blu-ray, of course, looks amazing!)
I saw this article and went over to the Elgato site since I had been thinking about getting a tuner but needed QAM capability. When I got there, I found that the EyeTV Hybrid, normally priced at $150, is now on sale for $100 during MacWorld! Plus, if you look around online, you can find an extra 10% discount! That's quite a deal. Looking forward to some sweet HD on my Mac...
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I just moved into a new apartment and have been reading about all of the new power strips out there, especially the green ones. I was wondering if you had any suggestions about which "green "power strips are out there with decent joules ratings. And when I say green, I mean power strips that have the remotes or switches to turn off all electricity flowing to certain plugs and with at least 2 plugs that are always on. I was looking specifically at sub $50 because I will need two, but if that is not possible I could be convinced otherwise. Thanks!"

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