LATEST ADDITIONS

Peter Pachal  |  Apr 03, 2006

With a sleek silver-gray finish, full-color LCD screen, and seductive curves, the Harmony 890 is ready for the centerfold of Remote Monthly. But it's not just another pretty wand - the 890 sends commands to your system via both infrared and RF (radio-frequency) signals, so you don't even have to be in the same room as your gear.

Ken Richardson  |  Apr 03, 2006

It's the side view of a speaker with no sides - and no back either! Jamo's dipolar Reference R 909 ($15,000 a pair) has two 15-inch woofers, a 5.5-inch midrange, and a 1-inch tweeter. But it doesn't have a traditional cabinet.

Michael Antonoff  |  Apr 03, 2006

Cable viewers who also want their HDTV have found their love affair with TiVo becoming strained the past few years. That's because TiVo's Series 2 recorders, unlike the DVRs leased by cable operators, have proved stubbornly incompatible with high-def channels. Hoping to make amends, TiVo has unveiled the Series 3 HD Digital Media Recorder with two CableCARD slots.

Rob Medich  |  Apr 03, 2006

Yes, it's two, two radios in one: the style is retro, but the technology is Space Age. Debuting at the Consumer Electronics Show and set for a spring launch, this tabletop model from Crosley offers AM and FM, but it's the company's first product equipped for XM satellite radio - hence its name, Explorer 1 ($250).

Eric Taub  |  Apr 03, 2006

Within a day of returning from the consumer electronics show, I was asked the same question by at least 10 people: "What was the most exciting product you saw in Las Vegas?" Unfortunately, my answer didn't excite anyone because, aside from a few clever little gadgets, I didn't see anything thrilling.

John Sciacca  |  Apr 03, 2006

For all of the benefits the digital revolution has brought to music - like streaming, unprecedented portability, and the ease of sorting and managing large collections - some people see it as not only a travesty but also a threat. Granted, these are usually the same people who lament the supposed lack of any advancement in audio quality since the birth of vinyl. But do they have a point?

Al Griffin  |  Apr 03, 2006

The compact Targus SoundUP iPod sound enhancer plugs into any third- or fourth-generation iPod or iPod photo and is said to "recreate studio-quality sound" from digitally compressed music. That's a big claim for such a little device - one we had to check out.

Rob Sabin  |  Apr 03, 2006
The Short Form
$200 / 72 x 22 x 28 IN / 10 LBS / antennavoodoo.com / 206-323-8845
Ken Korman  |  Apr 03, 2006
Tim Burton's Corpse Bride Warner
Movie •••• Picture/Sound •••• Extras
Jon M. Gibson  |  Apr 03, 2006
EA Games (PS2, Xbox)
Game ••••• Graphics/Sound ••••½
Flip open Webster's.

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