HD experience to consumers with its Blu-ray Disc player (BDP9000). Shown today at the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the Blu-ray Disc player pairs stylish design with unbeatable sound and ...
RUTHERFORD, NJ, September 6, 2017 – A new Philips Dolby Vision™ capable 4K UHD Blu-ray player is now available for purchase, announced P&F USA, Inc., the exclusive North American license partner for ...
We stopped by the Philips booth and were fortunate enough to speak with one of their product engineers who took us through the upcoming Blu-ray disc products. The first product slated to hit the ...
Even as Ultra HD Blu-ray discs continue to trickle out, in the US there's only one option to play them -- Samsung's UBD-K8500. That should change next month as Philips introduces its own Ultra HD ...
4K content is coming to physical media, and Panasonic, Philips, and Samsung all have Blu-ray players in the works. Will is a seasoned reviewer and certified TV calibrator with 20 years of experience, ...
Audio outputs: left/right front, left/right surround, center, subwoofer, "stereo." A friend of mine came up to me a few weeks ago and made the following announcement. " Dan, do you want to borrow my ...
With the release of the ="http: www.cnet.com.au="" games="" hardware="" 0,239029706,240054851,00.htm"="">PlayStation 3 and other HD players some people have already made their choice, but it's still ...
Consider yourself an HD junkie? You're in for a treat. A feast of treats, actually. Philips has just let loose a veritable smorgasbord of new HD kit at CES this morning, from LCD HDTVs to Blu-ray ...
Discover the surprising reasons why HD-DVD was technically superior to Blu-Ray and how Sony's strategic moves ultimately led ...
From a manufacturing standpoint, one of the banes of Blu-ray Disc’s existence has long been the muddled licensing process. To incorporate the Blu-ray Disc format–as well as the CD and DVD formats–into ...
The high-definition movie disc battle between HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc can be traced all the way back to 2000, when companies began experimenting with using new blue lasers in optical disc systems.
For more than a decade, malicious hackers have used booby-trapped USB sticks to infect would-be victims, in rare cases to spread virulent, self-replicating malware on air-gapped computers inside a ...