(February 14, 2024) Magnetar Audio is helping consumers establish a new love for physical media and enabling concert fans and movie buffs to reconnect with their beloved Blu-ray Disc collections with ...
Everyone knows Blu-ray looks fantastic, but its audio properties are less well known. In fact, the superior sound quality could be what helps the format not only survive the streaming age, but thrive.
After a year when movies and shows mysteriously disappeared from their streaming platforms (R.I.P. Westworld), perhaps it’s time to reconsider the virtues of physical media. If you have a collection ...
Everyone knows Blu-ray looks fantastic, but its audio properties are less well known. In fact, the superior sound quality could be what helps the format not only survive the streaming age, but thrive.
Remember Blu-ray Audio? It was the format pitched at audiophiles, which never really took off. Now the Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, is having another crack at it – this time with Dolby Atmos.
McIntosh Laboratory just announced the introduction of its first ever Universal Audio/Video Blu-ray Player, the model MVP881BR (SRP: $8,000). Scheduled for availability in January 2010, the MVP881BR ...
NAD Electronics has introduced the T577 Blu-ray Player. The Wi-Fi equipped T577 expands the horizons of Home Cinema fans by expanding the viewing options to include the Internet and the ability to ...
Reader Derrick Crandall has one chunk of media that he’d like to turn into more. He writes: I have a concert recording on a Blu-ray disc. I’d like to use my Mac to extract the audio from it so I can ...
Leave it to Norway to come up with the first Blu-ray audio disc. The TrondheimSolistene Ensemble, which has been together since 1988, has produced a two-fer set titled Divertimenti. The first is a ...
Pioneer Electronics (USA) today introduced one of the world's first Blu-ray Disc players, marking an innovation in home entertainment that allows consumers to experience the ultimate in ...
[Editor’s note: The MPAA and most media companies argue that you can’t legally copy or convert commercial DVDs for any reason. We (and others) think that, if you own a DVD, you should be able to ...
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