Wireless Blu-ray Player Face-off Page 3

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Key Features
$350 SONYSTYLE.COM
• DLNA-certified for photo streaming from networked PC • Wi-Fi-ready • (2) USB, LAN ports • Outputs: HDMI, component, and composite video; optical and coaxial digital, and stereo analog audio Dimensions • Weight 17 x 81?2 x 23?4 in; 61?2 lb

SONY BDP-S560

If our Blu-ray player test were a Little League baseball championship, Sony's BDP-S560 would be the Bad News Bears: a competitor with strong basic abilities but not too much in the way of surface flash. Sony doesn't attempt to grab your attention with media streaming, although its player can display photos from a DLNA PC. The BDP-S560's key strengths can mostly be found under the hood - something I'll discuss further in the Performance section.

True to BNB form, the Sony player's exterior has a straightforward design. A glossy front panel flips down when you hit the Disc Tray Open/Close button; outside of this, the only other visible features are the Stop and Play buttons and a USB port. Around back you'll find a standard set of A/V connections, including HDMI and component-video jacks. There's also a second USB port for plugging in a flash drive - something you'll need to do if you want to enable BD-Live features on discs. (Unlike the other two players here, the Sony doesn't have built-in memory.)

Sony's remote control doesn't have a backlit keypad, but its buttons are clearly sectioned into groups: disc transport controls at the bottom, menu navigation in the middle, and other controls on top. One button that's conspicuously absent is Disc Eject - you literally have to get up and push that on the player's front panel, which defeats the whole purpose of having a remote control in the first place! The wealth of information that pops up when you press the remote's Display button almost makes up for the omission, though: Along with video encoding format (AVC, VC-1), soundtrack format/sampling rate, and video data rate, it shows a graphic timeline displaying total disc time/currently elapsed time. Yet another smooth Sony touch is an onscreen fade-to-black effect that gets triggered when you press the Stop button.

Sony's Internet Settings menu for connecting the player to a Wi-Fi network was fairly easy to follow, although entering passwords manually via its onscreen virtual keypad was a slow, tiresome process. Unfortunately, the first BDP-S560 I checked out abruptly died and its departure proved to be permanent. (A second unit that Sony sent worked fine, however.)

PERFORMANCE

With the Sony's Quick Start mode selected, operation proved to be adequately zippy. Only 5 seconds elapsed between the moment I pressed the Power button and the moment the disc tray could eject. Most movies loaded up and displayed an image after 23 seconds. The player's 2X fast-scan mode delivered choppy picture quality when searching discs; performance here lagged behind both the Samsung and LG.

Like the other two players here, the BDP-S560 sailed through all our high-def disc tests for both film and video-sourced material. The real surprise with this player, however, turned out to be its DVD upconversion. After plugging in the Sony and checking out a few DVDs, I couldn't help but admire how clean, sharp, and solid its picture looked. And when I ran my standard round of HQV DVD tests, it passed every one, including the tough Assorted Cadences tests, which trip up virtually every player except for those that actually feature built-in HQV processing. In addition to its awesome standard-def upconversion, the BDP-S560's noise reduction didn't result in any picture softening.

BOTTOM LINE

Sony's BDP-S560 lacks the media-streaming features found in the two other players, and you'll need to plug in your own flash memory to enable BD-Live features on discs. Even so, when the moment of truth arrives and it steps up to the plate to play Blu-ray Discs and DVDs, this Sony's video performance is nothing short of stunning. I don't know about you, but that's the main thing I expect from my Blu-ray Disc player.

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