Author Topic: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player  (Read 3951 times)

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Offline JAQY888

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PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« on: May 29, 2008 at 07:05 PM »
PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD PLAYER  ---- with 500gb HDD

Panasonic is set to release the DMR-BW500 in Australia this June. It offers the highest recording available with full 1080p recording onto the built in 500GB HDD or Blu-ray media. The HDD holds up to 72 hours of 1080p content while a 50GB double-layer Blu-ray disc will hold 6 hours and 40 minutes in 1080p. On the audio front, it can record 5.1-channel Dolby Digital surround sound broadcasts with no deterioration in sound quality or surround effects. Other models that have been announced are the DMR-EX88, DMR-EX78 and DMR-EZ48V.

The DMR-BW500 offers the highest recording quality available with Full High Definition 1080p recording onto the built in 500GB Hard Disk Drive (HDD) or Blu-ray Disc. It can record up to 72 hours of 1080p content onto the HDD or 6 hours 40 min (1080p) on a 50GB double layer Blu-ray Disc. In addition to video, it can record 5.1-channel Dolby Digital surround sound broadcasts without deterioration in sound quality or surround effects.

Panasonic Australia's Director for Consumer Electronics Group, Paul Reid said, "Panasonic has led the way in home entertainment products and continues to bring innovation to the market with Australia's first Blu-ray Recorder for the living room. This product is a significant breakthrough for Blu-ray and sets the standard in Full High Definition recording. With a twin High Definition Tuner and 500 GB Hard Disk Drive it is the ideal one-box solution for any home."

The Blu-ray Disc Recorder can also play Blu-ray movies in studio-master quality at a frame rate of 24 frames per second and offers twin DVB-T High Definition (HD) tuner and support for 7-day Electronic Program Guide. Panasonic's intelligent VIERA Link takes this a step further by offering single-remote control of Panasonic AV devices via HDMI and streamlining operation with features such as Pause Live TV, Direct TV Record and Auto Preset Download. (smarthouse.com)

==================================================

looky looky .....  ;D

« Last Edit: May 29, 2008 at 07:10 PM by JAQY888 »
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Offline threadlock

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #1 on: May 29, 2008 at 08:56 PM »
wow! That's quite sleek than other BD players i've seen!  :D
With too many options you could end up not choosing one

Offline JAQY888

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2008 at 04:08 AM »
another view ....


MSRP: $2,299.00  >:( >:( >:(
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Offline steelcrazy

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2008 at 04:31 AM »
oks yan a stand alone BD player w/ 500 gb hard disk for storing hi def movie files. Very good innovation from panasonic.
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Offline JAQY888

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #4 on: May 30, 2008 at 05:36 AM »
Review of this product from GADGETGUY: http://www.gadgetguy.com.au/product.asp?m_review=152256

Performance

Although this section is labelled 'Performance', I am going to continue to talk about features for a while, simply because it's convenient. Unless I write otherwise, any feature I mention here works properly, as stated by Panasonic.

Recording TV, as we all know from VCRs, leaves chunks of advertisements interrupting our playback pleasure. So decent DVD recorders allow you to record TV to a hard disk drive, upon which you may edit the video before finally dubbing to a DVD. This unit allows the same, except that in the case of high definition video you can dub to Blu-ray (actually, you can copy enormous amounts of SD material to Blu-ray as well). And before that, you can do seamless editing on the hard disk, down to a precise frame, removing the bits of the program that you don't want. This editing is far, far better in quality than any offered on any existing HDTV PVR.

With the unit you get three 25GB BD-RE discs (that's what rewriteable ones are called). The video and sound quality provided on these is identical as the original recording. When recording from broadcast to the hard disk, all the unit does is make the necessary adjustments to the stream packaging so that it records properly on the hard disk. It does the same when you're dubbing to BD-R/RE. If the sound of the program is Dolby Digital 5.1, that's what your final recording will also have.

Incidentally, if it has subtitles, so will your recording!

Now, at $30 each, you probably won't be rushing out to buy a stack of BD-RE discs. Eventually prices will fall (as they did with recordable DVDs), but until then you use regular DVDs for basic archiving. In this case you don't get HD, multiple audio streams, or subtitles. In fact, the unit downconverts the video to standard definition and uses one or more of the regular Panasonic recording modes (XP, SP etc, switching between them as required) to fit the program onto the blank disc.

Still, that does mean that you have access to the HD-only programs that some stations are broadcasting.

Oh golly, I've checked the word count and realised that I'm starting to run out of space. So let us hit the highlights.

More bells and whistles

First, as a high definition personal video recorder, this unit is the best one I have ever used - and I've used all the reputable ones. Why? For one reason alone: picture quality. I used the unit with a full high definition front projector and the picture quality was consistently brilliant, within the limits of the source. High definition was magnificent (I had the unit set to convert from 1080i to 1080p). But what really benefited was SDTV. Most HDTV receivers do a very poor job with SDTV. This unit does a great job.

And don't forget, this is also a Blu-ray player. In this regard, it is very similar to the Panasonic DMP-BD30 that we have previously reviewed. On the video side of things, it can deliver the very best of quality in the form of 1080p24. That means 24 frames per second video - the same as shown in a cinema - for the smoothest possible action.

The unit does not have decoders built-in for the new Blu-ray audio standards, but it can deliver the sound in 'bitstream' format over HDMI to any of the several new home theatre receivers that can decode these.

The unit is also 'Bonus View' enabled, which means that it supports the picture-in-picture features just coming out on some new Blu-ray discs. It also has so-called 'persistent storage' in the form of an SD card slot (this also supports the high capacity SDHC format).

SDHC cards are used in some new high definition video cameras as media to store recordings. This unit can play those back or dub them to hard disk or Blu-ray. Those recordings stay in the high quality H.264 format even after dubbing, so there is no loss of quality.

This unit has a whopper of a 500GB hard disk drive built-in, but you wouldn't know it. I am used to the various PVRs on my equipment shelf whirring and clicking as their hard disk drives start up or begin working hard. The drive in this unit was totally silent in my room. The only noise made by the unit at all was the standard racket from the optical disc drive when spun up to somewhere between 8x and 16x for a high speed dub onto DVD.

Conclusion

Panasonic is the official supplier of HD cameras for the Olympics and the broadcast partner to the Australian Games network, Channel 7, so the arrival of the DMR-BW500 two months out from the world's biggest sporting event is a well-timed marketing move. And, fortunately, there's real substance behind the strategy.

What is most extraordinary about the Panasonic DMR-BW500 is not that it is the first consumer Blu-ray recorder - although that is itself pretty extraordinary - but that it performs that (and its other functions) so well.

See if you can trade in your current Blu-ray player, HD PVR and DVD recorder, and buy one of these instead.

GadgetGuy Rating

Overall    *****
Features *****
Value for money *****
Performance      *****
Ease of use         ****

Excellent HD PVR functionality, HD editing, records HD to Blu-ray, convert HD to SD for DVD, excellent Blu-ray player performance, 3 25GB rewriteable (BD-RE) discs included, 500GB hard disk drive, twin high definition tuners.

Umm... no, I've got nothing negative to say.  ;D



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Offline steelcrazy

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #5 on: May 30, 2008 at 05:52 AM »
Review of this product from GADGETGUY: http://www.gadgetguy.com.au/product.asp?m_review=152256

Performance

Although this section is labelled 'Performance', I am going to continue to talk about features for a while, simply because it's convenient. Unless I write otherwise, any feature I mention here works properly, as stated by Panasonic.

Recording TV, as we all know from VCRs, leaves chunks of advertisements interrupting our playback pleasure. So decent DVD recorders allow you to record TV to a hard disk drive, upon which you may edit the video before finally dubbing to a DVD. This unit allows the same, except that in the case of high definition video you can dub to Blu-ray (actually, you can copy enormous amounts of SD material to Blu-ray as well). And before that, you can do seamless editing on the hard disk, down to a precise frame, removing the bits of the program that you don't want. This editing is far, far better in quality than any offered on any existing HDTV PVR.

With the unit you get three 25GB BD-RE discs (that's what rewriteable ones are called). The video and sound quality provided on these is identical as the original recording. When recording from broadcast to the hard disk, all the unit does is make the necessary adjustments to the stream packaging so that it records properly on the hard disk. It does the same when you're dubbing to BD-R/RE. If the sound of the program is Dolby Digital 5.1, that's what your final recording will also have.

Incidentally, if it has subtitles, so will your recording!

Now, at $30 each, you probably won't be rushing out to buy a stack of BD-RE discs. Eventually prices will fall (as they did with recordable DVDs), but until then you use regular DVDs for basic archiving. In this case you don't get HD, multiple audio streams, or subtitles. In fact, the unit downconverts the video to standard definition and uses one or more of the regular Panasonic recording modes (XP, SP etc, switching between them as required) to fit the program onto the blank disc.

Still, that does mean that you have access to the HD-only programs that some stations are broadcasting.

Oh golly, I've checked the word count and realised that I'm starting to run out of space. So let us hit the highlights.

More bells and whistles

First, as a high definition personal video recorder, this unit is the best one I have ever used - and I've used all the reputable ones. Why? For one reason alone: picture quality. I used the unit with a full high definition front projector and the picture quality was consistently brilliant, within the limits of the source. High definition was magnificent (I had the unit set to convert from 1080i to 1080p). But what really benefited was SDTV. Most HDTV receivers do a very poor job with SDTV. This unit does a great job.

And don't forget, this is also a Blu-ray player. In this regard, it is very similar to the Panasonic DMP-BD30 that we have previously reviewed. On the video side of things, it can deliver the very best of quality in the form of 1080p24. That means 24 frames per second video - the same as shown in a cinema - for the smoothest possible action.

The unit does not have decoders built-in for the new Blu-ray audio standards, but it can deliver the sound in 'bitstream' format over HDMI to any of the several new home theatre receivers that can decode these.

The unit is also 'Bonus View' enabled, which means that it supports the picture-in-picture features just coming out on some new Blu-ray discs. It also has so-called 'persistent storage' in the form of an SD card slot (this also supports the high capacity SDHC format).

SDHC cards are used in some new high definition video cameras as media to store recordings. This unit can play those back or dub them to hard disk or Blu-ray. Those recordings stay in the high quality H.264 format even after dubbing, so there is no loss of quality.

This unit has a whopper of a 500GB hard disk drive built-in, but you wouldn't know it. I am used to the various PVRs on my equipment shelf whirring and clicking as their hard disk drives start up or begin working hard. The drive in this unit was totally silent in my room. The only noise made by the unit at all was the standard racket from the optical disc drive when spun up to somewhere between 8x and 16x for a high speed dub onto DVD.

Conclusion

Panasonic is the official supplier of HD cameras for the Olympics and the broadcast partner to the Australian Games network, Channel 7, so the arrival of the DMR-BW500 two months out from the world's biggest sporting event is a well-timed marketing move. And, fortunately, there's real substance behind the strategy.

What is most extraordinary about the Panasonic DMR-BW500 is not that it is the first consumer Blu-ray recorder - although that is itself pretty extraordinary - but that it performs that (and its other functions) so well.

See if you can trade in your current Blu-ray player, HD PVR and DVD recorder, and buy one of these instead.

GadgetGuy Rating

Overall    *****
Features *****
Value for money *****
Performance      *****
Ease of use         ****

Excellent HD PVR functionality, HD editing, records HD to Blu-ray, convert HD to SD for DVD, excellent Blu-ray player performance, 3 25GB rewriteable (BD-RE) discs included, 500GB hard disk drive, twin high definition tuners.

Umm... no, I've got nothing negative to say.  ;D




excellent features indeed but magkanu kya yan? bke 100k? maybe more?
Gee yoU aRe yoU!

Offline JAQY888

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #6 on: May 31, 2008 at 08:17 AM »
excellent features indeed but magkanu kya yan? bke 100k? maybe more?

Yup. as indicated above (spoiler), this player has a hefty price tag. this will surely cost more should this land in our shores  :-\
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Offline steelcrazy

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #7 on: May 31, 2008 at 09:32 PM »
Yup. as indicated above (spoiler), this player has a hefty price tag. this will surely cost more should this land in our shores  :-\
Mas ok sana yan if this unit is already capable of saving files directly from bluray disc so when we want to watch movies again sa HD na agad ang source thus hiram hiram nlng tyu tyu ang mga BD collections natin.
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Offline audiojunkie

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #8 on: May 31, 2008 at 09:46 PM »
kala ko kaya ng bulsa ko.....  >:(  >:(  >:( kaya palang butasin bulsa ko....  ;D  :D
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Offline steelcrazy

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #9 on: May 31, 2008 at 09:54 PM »
kala ko kaya ng bulsa ko.....  >:(  >:(  >:( kaya palang butasin bulsa ko....  ;D  :D
he he butas talaga bulsa natin pag pinangarap natin toh ngaun.
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Offline JAQY888

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Re: PANASONIC DMR-BW500 BD Player
« Reply #10 on: Jun 02, 2008 at 05:56 PM »
kala ko kaya ng bulsa ko.....  >:(  >:(  >:( kaya palang butasin bulsa ko....  ;D  :D

hahahah. O nga, masayadong mahal pa ito ngayon ... butas talaga bulsa natin !!!!  :o
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