LATEST ADDITIONS

SV Staff  |  Sep 05, 2008
Exhale. —Ken C. Pohlmann ...
Fred Manteghian  |  Sep 05, 2008

The MCD500 is probably the last 2-channel SACD / CD player you'll ever need, and at these prices, it had better be. Still, it's a McIntosh so it will hopefully out live you.

Tom Norton  |  Sep 05, 2008
Infinity has a new speaker to top the Cascade range, the Cascade 40 ($6000 each)
Tom Norton  |  Sep 05, 2008
Now at last there's a CEDIA booth for the average Joe.
Fred Manteghian  |  Sep 05, 2008

Not new, the VS3002 has been out a year now, but not many people know about it. It's a simple HDMI (V1.3a), but six-in, two-out make it a good option for someone with a decent AVR that's a little short on HDMI inputs. Placed between you devices and one of your current AVR's HDMI inputs will instantly give you more capacity and a new remote control to lose.

Tom Norton  |  Sep 05, 2008
JBL's Control Now all weather speaker comes in the form of a quarter circle. Use one as is, or two on the wall as shown, or four as a full omni donut. Comes in sugared (white) or chocolate (black).
Tom Norton  |  Sep 05, 2008
Mitsubishi's new HC7000 projector is a lot sharper looking than this artistic photo might suggest. (OK, the artsy look was an accident; it's hard to get a clean shot when the subject is rotating around behind glass). Said to offer an ANSI contrast ratio of 1000:1 and a peak contrast of 72,000:1. $3995, in mid to late October.
SV Staff  |  Sep 05, 2008
Yep, love it or hate it, Blu-ray is springing up all over. Denon showed its "affordable" player, the DVD-1800BD. This profile 1.0 version 1.1 player features HDMI 1.3a output, Deep Color and BonusView support, full bitstream output of...
SV Staff  |  Sep 05, 2008
The CEDIA (Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association) expo in Denver is hot and heavy with new Blu-ray players, just in time for the upcoming holiday season. Perhaps one of the most anticipated players is from Yamaha. Yamaha is going...
Darryl Wilkinson  |  Sep 05, 2008
Quiet Solution makes a variety of products designed to keep your home theater room quiet – both inside and out – such as QuietRock drywall panels and QuietWood for floors and the like. Now you can even soundproof the door in your home theater with the company’s QuietHome doors, which are about as heavy and dense as a door you might find on one of the Egyptian pyramids (of course, they didn’t have hinges then). The door ships pre-hung, and the frame includes a foam-like gasket that seals the door when it’s closed. There’s also a gasket the seals the bottom of the door against the threshold. A 2.25” THX certified version is available for $1,995. The 1.75” non-certified version is $1,499, which the company says is up to 50% less than other acoustic doors.

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