LATEST ADDITIONS

Kris Deering  |  Jan 13, 2010
Movie: 2.75
Picture/Sound: 4.5/4.5
Extras: 3.5
Kris Deering  |  Jan 13, 2010
Movie: 3.5
Picture/Sound: 4/4.5
Extras: 3.5
Kris Deering  |  Jan 13, 2010
Movie: 4
Picture/Sound: 4/4
Extras: 2.5
Kris Deering  |  Jan 13, 2010
Movie: 2.5
Picture/Sound: 3/4
Extras: 3
David Vaughn  |  Jan 13, 2010

<IMG SRC="/images/archivesart/invention.jpg" WIDTH=200 BORDER=0 ALIGN=RIGHT>In an alternate reality in which lying doesn't exist and everyone speaks the truth and nothing but the truth with no worry of hurt feelings. When one man (Ricky Gervais) suddenly develops the ability to lie, he finds it has its rewards. A new world of fame and fortune opens up but he steadfastly refuses to fib his way into the heart of the woman he loves. Can he get the girl on his own merits?

SV Staff  |  Jan 13, 2010
 Netflix is continuing on its quest for omnipresence by sliding its way onto Nintendo's oh-so-cute Wii console later this year. According to the Associated Press, the service will work much like it does on the PS3 in that you'll need...
Mark Fleischmann  |  Jan 13, 2010
Remember when we reported on DirecTV's 3D channel around the turn of the year? Well, it has company. Discovery, Sony, and IMAX have announced that they too will launch a 3D venture, as will ESPN.
Scott Wilkinson  |  Jan 12, 2010  |  First Published: Jan 13, 2010

I must be a glutton for punishment. After spending five grueling days at CES, I decided to stick around Las Vegas for THX's Home Theater 2 training course. I've already taken the Home Theater 1 and Video Calibration courses, so I figured why not complete the training offered by THX? At least I'd be sitting most of the time.

Tom Norton  |  Jan 12, 2010
CES 2010 is now just a memory, but hopefully not a fading one. On my last day or two I saw a few things that I couldn't get posted while still in Vegas. IDT, the company that now owns the HQV Reon video processing technology, showed a number of interesting new technologies. The most intriguing was a small, nondescript box (no wasted funds on here on cosmetics!) that can perform all the Reon video processing functions, including deinterlacing, upconverting, and noise reduction, plus flesh tone correction&$151;the latter said to be more sophisticated than the flesh tone correction offered in some televisions. No decision yet as to whether it will be marketed under IDT's own brand name or by a third party. The price could be as low as under $100, which would be a huge plus for those whose HDTVs have mediocre built-in video processing.

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