LATEST ADDITIONS

HT Staff  |  Jan 30, 2013
Video streaming may be growing in popularity but sales of Blu-ray discs and DVDs still accounted for 61 percent of home-video spending on movies in 2012, according to the latest statistics from market research firm The NPD Group.

Does video streaming play a role in how you experience TV and movies at home? If so, take part in this week's Home Theater Poll and let us know which service you use most.

HT Poll: Which Service Do You Use Most for Streaming Movies and TV?
Netflix
46% (569 votes)
Amazon Instant Video/Amazon Prime
9% (118 votes)
Hulu/Hulu Plus
4% (46 votes)
iTunes
6% (74 votes)
Redbox Instant
0% (3 votes)
Vudu
5% (63 votes)
Cable/Satellite On Demand
6% (71 votes)
Other Service
3% (41 votes)
None - I don't stream video
21% (265 votes)
Total votes: 1250
Michael Berk  |  Jan 30, 2013

Another day, another wireless speaker, right? We're pretty much much drowning in post-docks here at S+V these days, and aside from preferred protocol (AirPlay, DLNA, Bluetooth, pick your poison), most of these little guys have started to seem just a tad samey-samey.

HT Staff  |  Jan 30, 2013
The results of last week’s OLED vs 4K Ultra HD survey are in. We asked which technology you prefer and here’s what you said…
Rob Sabin  |  Jan 29, 2013
At Home Theater, we’ve long been fans of set-up DVDs and Blu-ray discs that allow you to tune your television or projector for the optimum image. Now, just in time for the Super Bowl, THX has launched a mobile app designed to help sports fans and movie lovers do just that.

“THX tune-up” is an iOS app for iPad (2 and higher), iPad mini, iPhone (4 and higher), and iPod touch (Gen 4 and higher). To commemorate the Big Game and assist as many as possible of the 7.5 million people expected to purchase a new set just for the occasion, THX is offering the app as a free download from the iTunes store through Monday, February 4th. After that, it’ll cost $1.99. An Android version is expected to be released next spring.

Before your inner geek gets too worked up, neither the THX tune-up app nor any set-up disc...

Mark Fleischmann  |  Jan 28, 2013

Audio Performance
Video Performance
Features
Ergonomics
Value
Price: $1,100 At A Glance: 125 x 7 watts D³ power • Brawny, assured bass • Network audio cornucopia

Someday I will be able to review a Class D receiver without mentioning this up-and-coming amplifier technology in the lead. That day hasn’t come yet and probably won’t in the next few years. But I can see it shimmering on the horizon.

Class D has been steadily infiltrating Pioneer’s upper-crust Elite line since 2008 and now accounts for five of the line’s seven models. With the SC-61, reviewed here, the latest version of the technology—which Pioneer calls D3—has come down in price to as little as $1,100. That’s a far cry from the $7,000 Pioneer charged for its first-ever Class D model five years ago.

Brent Butterworth  |  Jan 28, 2013

I've dreamed of a bicycle sound system for years. I've tried several, even jury-rigged a few of my own, but always ended up discarding them 'cause they sounded lousy, fell apart, or were just a hassle to deal with. But two trends might make decent cycle-sound systems possible.

First there's Bluetooth, which lets you stream MP3s, Internet radio, and podcasts from your smartphone. Then there's the recent explosion in relatively high-quality miniature sound systems like the Soundmatters FoxL and the Jawbone Jambox.

The $99 NYNE Multimedia NB-200 is one of the first Bluetooth speakers designed specifically for cycling. Its driver layout-two 1.5-inch drivers with a 3- by 1.5-inch passive radiator-is somewhat similar to that of a FoxL. While you can get a bike mount for the FoxL, the NB-200 was designed from scratch as a bike speaker. The enclosure has slots that match up with a couple of handlebar clips.

Ariel Bitran  |  Jan 28, 2013
Bryan Keeler of Woods Cross, Utah is the proud winner of the AudioQuest Dragonfly DAC/Headphone Amplifier and Sydney interconnect sweepstakes. At first, Bryan wasn't sure whether to trust me. Understandable.
Brent Butterworth  |  Jan 28, 2013

Even though I campaigned against California's Proposition 8, I have to confess that I can't quite get the whole product positioning and marketing of the Fanny Wang brand. The WangBud increases my confusion, although it intrigues me at the same time.

For its first in-ear headphone, Fanny Wang didn't just get some generic IEM and slap its logo on. It created a product unlike any other I've encountered: a headphone using dual dynamic drivers, with earpieces the size of the old iPod earbuds and oblong silicon tips like those supplied with most Bluetooth headsets.

Brent Butterworth  |  Jan 28, 2013

Even though I campaigned against California’s Proposition 8, I have to confess that I can’t quite get the whole product positioning and marketing of the Fanny Wang brand. The WangBud increases my confusion, although it intrigues me at the same time.

For its first in-ear headphone, Fanny Wang didn’t just get some generic IEM and slap its logo on. It created a product unlike any other I’ve encountered: a headphone using dual dynamic drivers, with earpieces the size of the old iPod earbuds and oblong silicon tips like those supplied with most Bluetooth headsets.

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