LATEST ADDITIONS

David Ranada  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Getting the best picture resolution remains one of the chief goals of HDTV shoppers. But as I explained in last month's "Tech Talk," human visual acuity limits how much detail you can see in any image, live or onscreen.

David Ranada  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Like swimmers in some Darwinian gene pool, DVD recorders are quickly mutating to fill every possible niche. Yet as they evolve, you can count on finding a core set of features in most decks - a TV tuner, a VCR-style timer, and a handful of recording "modes" that let you trade picture quality for playback time.

Michael Antonoff  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments
The Short Form
$349 / 17 x 10 x 2 IN / www.araccessories.com / 800-276-0509
Pl
Peter Pachal  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments
The Short Form
$600 / kodak.com / 800-235-6325 / 4.125 x 2.5 x 1 IN / 8 OZ
Plus
John Sciacca  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Considering the rapid way A/V technology evolves, I'll bet Charles Darwin would have been a Sound & Vision subscriber. And survival of the fittest and natural selection are definitely alive and well in my equipment rack. In fact, all you have to do is look at it to see the history of recorded video at a glance.

Ken C. Pohlmann  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments
The Short Form
$900 / 31.5 x 6 x 4.5 IN / 19.875 LBS / yamaha.com/yec / 800-492-6242
John Sciacca  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments
The Short Form
$330 plus Sirius subscription / 2 x 3.875 x 0.625 IN / 6 OZ / sirius.com / 888-539-7474
Al Griffin  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Speaker maker JBL is just one part of the Harman International family, but for a brand that makes up only a single slice of a large pie, it has an incredibly diverse product mix. Along with home theater speakers, JBL makes systems for music-recording and film sound-mixing studios, movie theaters, concert halls, computers, and cars.

Michael Antonoff  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Computer companies have been trying to get off your desktop and into your entertainment rack for a decade. Ever since the invention of tuner cards for PCs and giant computer monitors that doubled as TVs, they've been pushing the "convergence" of entertainment and computing on a wary public. The reception from A/V enthusiasts has been, to put it politely, less than enthusiastic.

John Sciacca  |  Feb 03, 2006  |  0 comments

To quote Janet Jackson (Ms. Jackson if you're nasty), "This is a story about control." And whether your lifestyle is Joe Schmo, Average Joe, or Joe Millionaire, control is something we can all use a little more of in our lives. Fortunately, achieving some level of control over our A/V systems is easily done.

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