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The Motley Fool June 25, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
The Next Big Thing in TV Tech Internet apps are coming to your home theater. |
Home Theater June 24, 2009 |
Blu-ray Gets Online Database If you're a hardcore film buff, you're probably used to looking up information online during or after a movie, when the curiosity bug bites. Thanks to a new BD-Live feature, you won't have to use a computer to do it. |
Home Theater June 24, 2009 |
Smaller DTVs May See Renewed Focus The outlook for DTVs includes a renewed focus on smaller sets and higher sales for sets with double or quadruple frame rates, which reduce image lag in LCD displays. |
Home Theater June 19, 2009 |
Down-Res to Plug BD's Analog Hole In a few years, new Blu-ray players will be required to down-res high-def images fed via component video, effectively turning older high-definition TVs into standard-definition TVs. |
BusinessWeek June 18, 2009 Ronald Grover |
TiVo Wants to Be the Google of Television. How? By helping viewers search for programs and by selling ads and ratings data to advertisers. A still-potent brand name and 140 patents should help. |
Home Theater June 18, 2009 |
DTV Weak? Try Double Rescan Has your television reception survived the DTV transition not quite fully intact? Here are a few tips from the Federal Communications Commission, including one we haven't heard before. |
Home Theater June 17, 2009 |
Managed Copy Will Be Mandatory in Blu-ray Managed Copy, until now an option in the Blu-ray disc format, will become a requirement next year. |
Home Theater June 16, 2009 Mark Fleischmann |
FCC Gets 900,000 DTV Panic Calls The Federal Communications Commission has fielded more than 900,000 calls since analog television broadcasting was shut down on Friday June 12. |
Home Theater June 15, 2009 |
1080p Wasted on Most Viewers Many viewers are sitting too far from their HDTVs to enjoy the full resolution of a 1080p display, according to a poll by the good folks at Gizmodo. |
AskMen.com |
No More TV For Millions More than 2 million households are in danger of seeing their major broadcast TV channels disappear into a fuzz of static when analog service ends Friday, according to surveys. |
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