Thursday, September 22, 2011

Samsung PN51D550C1F HDTV Review

Samsung PN51D550C1F
You don’t need to spend a lot of money for a 3D HDTV, even if you want a big, 50-plus-inch model. Samsung’s PN51D550C1F is a 51-inch plasma HDTV that supports 3D, looks pretty great, offers a very effective power-saving mode, and costs just $1,299.99 (list). This set isn’t perfect, though. While it has 3D support, it doesn’t integrate Netflix or any other video-streaming services. In fact, you get no Web apps, though there is local network access through DLNA. In the bargain, you also get less-than-stellar shadow detail when compared with other plasma screens. But then again, there’s the price, which is tough to beat. This set improves on last year’s Samsung PN50C590G4F ($1,399.99, 3 stars) adding 3D support, upping the slick design factor, and offering much better power consumption stats, but it takes a hit on black levels.
Design
If you didn’t know the PN51D550C1F was an inexpensive plasma screen, you could easily assume it to be mid-range LED-backlit LCD HDTV that cost several hundred dollars more. The 2.2-inch screen is very thin for a plasma display, and its bezel is a glossy black surface edged by transparent acrylic, giving it some style and flair. The bottom of the bezel shows a Samsung logo in the middle and a power light and touch-sensitive controls on the lower left corner. On the back of the screen, two HDMI and two USB ports are mounted to the side, with the remaining two HDMI ports, two sets of component video inputs, optical audio input and outputs, Ethernet port, coaxial cable input, PC video input, and Ex-Link port (for motorized mounts) face back.

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Samsung PN51D550C1F : Angle
Samsung PN51D550C1F : Front
Samsung PN51D550C1F : Profile
Samsung PN51D550C1F : Side Ports
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The curved 9.5-inch remote looks like a streamlined version of the blocky remotes that came with Samsung’s 2010 HDTV models. The button layouts are nearly identical, with the number pad on the top, with channel and volume controls, a direction pad, and playback controls below. The biggest difference besides the curved profile of the remote is the direction pad, which has become a circle with four directional curves compared to last year’s rectangular buttons. The remote isn’t backlit, but the different button areas feel unique enough that you can easily use the remote without looking at it.
Besides 3D support, the PN51D550C1F doesn’t have many features. The panel incorporates a 600Hz “Subfield Motion” system to reduce motion blur and can display both locally connected media through USB and locally networked media through DLNA. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have any online content features, Web apps, or widgets, so if you’re not planning to stream media locally, there’s no reason to run an Ethernet cable to the back of the set.

Samsung PN51D550C1F Specifications

Screen Size
51 inches
Type
Plasma, HDTV
Supported Refresh Rates
60Hz, 600Hz
Video Inputs
Component, DVI, HDMI, USB
More
Performance
We use DisplayMate software and a chromameter to test the picture quality of HDTVs, and, for the most part, the set proved admirable in our trials. Its color levels were satisfyingly accurate and its peak white levels had 205.5 cd/m2 luminance, while its peak black levels dipped as low as 0.05 cd/m2 for a respectable contrast ratio of 4,110:1. Black levels were slightly disappointing for a plasma; while 0.05 cd/m2 is decent, plasmas like last year’s Panasonic TC-P42GT25 ($1,699.99, 3.5 stars) reached 0.03 cd/m2 and our LED-backlit Editors’ Choice LG Infinia 47LW5600 ($1,699.99 list, 4.5 stars) got as low as 0.01 cd/m2, the lowest black levels we can measure without reading total darkness. This not-so-great black level isn’t a dealbreaker, but it can muddle details in shadows when watching dark scenes. However, both models are more expensive than the PN51D550C1F, and for its price, the set’s test results are good.
I tested the screen’s 3D capabilities with Dreamworks’ How to Train Your Dragon 3D on Blu-ray. The 3D looked generally good, but I occasionally noticed some crosstalk, especially in scenes with considerable motion between distant backgrounds and close foreground objects (like the flying scenes). The screen has a few options for adjusting the 3D effect, but the “3D Perspective” setting only disoriented me when I moved it off of the default, and other settings were disabled with a direct 3D video feed and not a 2D-to-3D conversion. A very welcome 3D-to-2D conversion limits the screen to just one perspective, effectively making it a 2D film. This is useful if you have a 3D-only promotional Blu-ray disc (like the How to Train Your Dragon release included with the set), a 3D Blu-ray player, and no menu options on the Blu-ray side to disable 3D.
The PN51D550C1F currently comes with two pair of “starter” active shutter 3D glasses are part of a promotion held by Samsung. If the HDTV is bought at certain retailers, it will come with two sets of Samsung’s SSG-3100GB 3D glasses. Samsung offers additional 3D glasses for users who would like more than two people at a time to watch 3D movies on their HDTVs. The available glasses range from bulky $50 models with replaceable batteries to streamlined and light $150 models with rechargeable batteries. For a family of four, expect to spend $100 more to outfit everyone with 3D glasses, or $600 to outfit everyone with Samsung’s high-end 3D glasses. Passive 3D screens, like the LG Infinia 47LW5600, can use any polarized-lens 3D glasses, which can be much cheaper than even the low-end active shutter glasses.
If you watch the PN51D550C1F with the screen at full brightness and everything turned up and optimized, it’s appropriately power-hungry, a common issue for plasmas. However, an EnergyStar-branded Standard mode cuts the power consumption down to near-LED LCD levels without dimming the screen to the point that it’s unwatchable. Using the Top Gun Blu-ray Disc to test the HDTV’s power consumption, we found the screen devours an average of 281 watts. However, with the Standard energy saving mode activated, that figure drops to approximately 120 watts, an excellent result for any HDTV and remarkable for a plasma screen. While it does darken the screen (and further contributes to the mediocre-shadow-detail problem), the picture is still very watchable and is great for casual TV viewing. It still doesn’t come close to the energy efficiency offered by many LED-backlit LCD HDTVs, however.
Considering its relatively low price tag, the Samsung PN51D550C1F is an affordable way to get a large 3D screen in your home. Its picture looks generally good, the set’s 3D is effective, and the power-saving mode cuts its energy consumption to less than half. However, its black levels are mediocre for a plasma screen, and without any Web apps or other network functions beyond accessing local media, you’ll really need a solid Blu-ray player or a media extender if you want to access Netflix, YouTube, Hulu Plus, or any other service readily available on other HDTVs. Considering you get 51 inches for $1,300, and can stock up on enough 3D glasses to furnish four people at a time for just $100, the lack of Web services is an acceptable loss. If you don’t mind losing a few inches of screen size, though, the LG Infinia 47LW5600 offers a better picture, Web apps, and passive 3D (which lets you use much cheaper 3D glasses that aren’t dependent on batteries) for $300 more.

Samsung PN51D550C1F


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Dell S500wi Projector Review

Dell S500wi
Interactive projectors are becoming increasingly common, but the Dell S500wi ($1599 direct) stands out for being one of the few that combines interactivity with an ultra short throw. Built in interactivity lets you interact with the image without needing a separate, and expensive, interactive whiteboard. The ultra short throw lets you project a big image from just a few inches from the screen, making it easy to avoid shadows. The combination makes the S500wi particularly attractive.
The S500wi isn’t the first interactive ultra-short-throw projector we’ve reviewed. That honor went to the Editors’ Choice Epson BrightLink 450Wi ($2,199, 4.5 stars). However it’s the first one built around a DLP chip, which makes it the first to take advantage of TI’s version of interactive technology.

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Dell S500wi : Back
Dell S500wi : Top
Dell S500wi : Remote
Dell S500wi : Front
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Beyond that, it offers a fairly common set of features for a data projector today, with WXGA (1,280 by 800) resolution and a 3,200-lumen brightness rating. The combination is a good potential fit for a small to medium-size conference room or classroom.
The Basics
The projector measures 7.5 by 12.9 by 16.6 inches (HWD) and weighs 15.6 pounds, which is a clear indication that it’s meant primarily for permanent installation. Because the interactive feature doesn’t need calibration, however, you can also put the projector on a cart, easily move it from room to room, and still be able to set it up quickly when you need it.

Dell S500wi Specifications

Engine Type
DLP
Type
Business
More
For permanent installations, you’ll typically want to mount the projector on the wall above the area you’re using for a screen, so it projects down. This positioning has the advantage of tending to hide any shadows.Your arm reaching out to the screen, for example, will tend to.be in a position to hide the shadow from the arm.
Setup is standard fare for an interactive projector, with a suitably wide choice of connection options for data and video. The S500wi offers an HDMI port for either a computer or video source, two VGA inputs for computers or component video, a pass-through VGA port for a monitor, both composite video and S-Video inputs, and support for a WiFi connection. It can also read jpg and ptg files from a USB memory key and accept data through a USB or LAN connection.
Big Picture from Inches Away
The big attraction for any ultra-short-throw projector is its ability to throw big images from short distances. For my tests, I measured a 63-inch wide image (75 inches diagonal at 1,280 by 800) with the front of the projector just 5 inches from the screen.
That’s a little less amazing that it might seem only because the lens is near the back of the projector, pointing towards a mirror that reflects the image back to the screen. The mirror was about 19 inches from the screen in my tests. More generally Dell’s stated range for the projection distance, as measured from the mirror, is 19.2 to 25.8 inches from the screen for a diagonal image size of 77 to 100 inches.
Interactivity and 3D
The interactivity worked in my tests as promised to let me draw, highlight, and otherwise interact with the image. In case you don’t have one already, Dell provides an interactive program, as well as one interactive pen, or wand, but the projector should work with any interactive software.
TI’s interactive technology works by projecting a grid on the image that’s invisible to the human eye, but visible to the pen. The grid works much like lines of latitude and longitude on a map, so the pen can report what it’s pointing at in terms of the grid. One advantage of this approach is that it eliminates the need to calibrate the pen. Another is that the pen only has to see the screen rather than touch it, so you can use literally any surface as a screen. You can even use things like cinderblock, which might harm a stylus, or a freshly painted wall, which might be harmed by a stylus. The feature also frees you up to move around the room. In my tests the pen worked from more than 30 feet away, although controlling it with any precision is pretty much impossible from more than a few feet.
The 3D also worked as promised, although the promise is limited in this case. For my tests, I connected it to a Blu-ray player by way of an Optoma 3D-XL ($400 street, 4 stars). By itself, the projector will work only with a computer with a Quadbuffered, Open GL 3D-compatible graphics card. It won’t work directly with a Blu-ray player or the 3D from your cable provider or the equivalent. However you can’t count this against the projector, since these limitations apply to all current inexpensive projectors with 3D, including, for example, the Optoma TW610ST ($1,000 street, 4 stars).
Image Quality and Other Issues
The S500wi scored well on image quality for data images, sailing through our standardDisplayMate tests without any problems worth mention.
Image quality for video was far less watchable, which is a common issue for data projectors, including the 450Wi. Even more than most data projectors, however, the S500wi had a problem with shadow detail, losing detail in dark areas even in scenes that most projectors don’t have any problems with, and turning large areas of the screen into solid black in scenes that tend to cause the problem. I’d call the projector useable for short clips, but nothing more than that.
I also saw a significant rainbow effect with video, with light areas in the image turning into little red-green-blue rainbows when I shifted my gaze or an object moved on screen. The rainbow effect is a potential issue for any single-chip DLP projector, but some projectors tend to show it more easily than others. The S500wi showed very little rainbow effect with data screens, so it shouldn’t cause any problems even for people who are sensitive to the effect, as I am. With video, however, the rainbows show often enough so anyone who’s sensitive to the effect will likely find it annoying for anything by short clips.
One final plus for the projector is its built-in stereo audio system. The 5-watt speakers put out enough volume to fill a large conference room or classroom, and they offer far better sound quality than most projectors.
Ultimately, the S500wi offers an impressive list of features at a surprisingly low price. The features—ultra short throw, interactivity, high-quality data images, 3D support, and even a quality sound system—make it a highly attractive choice. The price, meanwhile, makes it particularly easy to recommend.

Dell S500wi

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Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint) Review

Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint)
The Motorola Photon 4G ($199.99) is Sprint’s super-duper, top-of-the-linephone. It can even double as a nettop PC in a pinch. The Photon is one of the most powerful Android handsets you can buy today, and a shining example of what a smartphone in 2011 should be. It’s a no-brainer for our Editors’ Choice.
Motorola Photon 4G Physical Features and Call Quality
With its optional desktop dock, the Photon is a lot like Motorola’s groundbreaking Atrix 4G ($199, 4 stars) for AT&T, except it’s better. And just like the Atrix, it’s a large (2.6-by-5.0-by-0.5 inch, 5.6-ounce) candybar-style phone—there’s no physical keyboard. The body is mostly soft-touch black plastic, and it feels solid. Shiny chrome accents and beveled edges give the phone a bit of a jewel-like appearance, and the big 4.3-inch, 960-by-540-pixel touch-screen display is bright and clear. Volume and Camera buttons on the phone’s right side are oddly grooved and slightly rough, to make them easier to grip.

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Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint) : Angle
Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint) : Horizontal
Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint) : Left
Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint) : Back
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Motorola Photon 4G Specifications

Service Provider
Sprint
Operating System
Android OS
Screen Size
4.3 inches
Screen Details
960-by-540 LCD capacitive touch screen
Camera
Yes
Network
GSM, CDMA, UMTS
Bands
850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100
High-Speed Data
GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA, EVDO Rev A
Processor Speed
1 GHz
More
An excellent voice phone, I got significantly better 3G and 4G reception with the Photon than with the competing Sprint HTC EVO 3D ($199, 3 stars). The earpiece gets quite loud, and voices are clear. There’s a lot of side tone, the reflection of your own voice in your ear that prevents you from yelling. The speakerphone is loud enough to use outdoors. Transmissions sounded pretty good; when there was a lot of background noise they got a bit wobbly, though. The Photon connected effortlessly to our Aliph Jawbone Era Bluetooth headset ($129, 4.5 stars) and activated its accurate Nuance-powered voice dialing. Battery life, at 8 hours and 20 minutes of 3G talk time, was very good.
The Photon connects to Sprint’s 3G CDMA and 4G WiMAX networks, as well as to Wi-Fi and to HSPA 14.4 high-speed networks worldwide. The phone comes with a SIM card that can roam on foreign networks at high rates, but as with all Sprint world phones, its SIM card slot is unlocked, so you can use a less-expensive local SIM if you choose. You can use the Photon as both a wired modem and a Wi-Fi hotspot for up to eight devices, with the right service plan.
Motorola Photon 4G Android and App Experience
Running Android 2.3.4 with both Motorola and Sprint extensions, the Photon is built around a 1GHz Nvidia Tegra 2 processor. Benchmarks ran neck-and-neck with other modern dual-core phones such as Sprint’s HTC EVO 3D and Motorola’s own Droid 3 ($199, 3 stars) for Verizon. Notably, the EVO 3D’s 1.2GHz speed advantage didn’t give it much of a boost on benchmarks; the Photon beat the EVO on the Sunspider and Browsermark Web browsing benchmarks, as well as on the AnTuTu system benchmark. (The EVO scored higher on the NenaMark graphics benchmark and the Vellamo browsing benchmark.) And even though Motorola pours on the same goopy animations that dragged down the Droid 3′s performance, the Photon feels noticeably more sprightly; perhaps the Tegra 2 chipset is just better at handling the UI than the Droid 3′s TI OMAP 4430 is.
The coolest software here turns the Photon into a desktop PC. Drop the phone into the $129 desktop dock, which comes with three USB ports and an HDMI video out, attach it to a screen, mouse, and keyboard, and pow: the Photon boots up into “Webtop” mode, which is a bare-bones Linux OS running Android in an emulated window as well as a full-screen copy of Firefox 4.0.1 with Flash.
I found Webtop to work more smoothly on the Photon than on the Atrix, probably because of the newer version of Firefox. (Webtop’s Firefox benchmarked slightly faster than the built-in Android browser, too.) I surfed the Web, watched some Flash videos, played Angry Birds, and wrote a letter in Google Docs. While I could play music in the background, videos stored on the Photon were pixelated in Webtop mode; to get the best video quality, I had to stop Webtop and kick the phone into dedicated HDMI video-playback mode.

Motorola Photon 4G

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Review

Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Last year’s Editors’ Choice Panasonic Lumix DSC-TS2 compact camera was a powerhouse, offering great image and build quality, and HD video capture—and this rugged shooter was waterproof up to 33 feet. Panasonic continues the trend with this year’s 12.1-megapixel Panasonic Lumix DSC-TS3, which keeps the same $399.95 list price, but adds an even tougher build that’s waterproof up to 40 feet, along with better video options, GPS, and a digital compass. Panasonic also throws in a barometer and altimeter for adventurous types who want to know elevation and atmospheric pressure information for each photo they snap. Despite producing images that are on the soft side, the Panasonic TS3 is a tough cookie that can withstand the elements. It’s tough build and innovative features make it our latest Editors’ Choice rugged point-and-shoot digital camera.
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Design
The body of the TS3 comes in four metallic hues (silver, red, orange, and blue) and isn’t exactly minimalist. It actually looks tough: There are plenty of bumpers and exposed screws that help ensure that the camera can take a beating. The 7-ounce, 2.5-by-4.1-by-1-inch (HWD) body is waterproof up to up to 40 feet, freeze-proof to as low as 14⁰F, can withstand drops up to 6.6 feet (2 meters), and is dust-proof. The TS3 is as tough as compact cameras get.
Like most rugged cameras, the 4.6x optical zoom lens (28-128mm, 35mm equivalent, f/3.3-f/5.9) never extends past the camera’s body. The TS3 uses what’s known as folded optics: the zooming lens moves sideways inside the camera and a mirror bends its view perpendicular to the body. Adding more glass and bending light can affect image quality, which could explain the soft images the camera produces. The also-rugged and waterproof Canon PowerShot D10 ($329.99, 4 stars) doesn’t use folded optics, but its trade-off is a much larger body. Like with the D10, the T3′s lens is protected by a ruggedized window that you’ll have to regularly wipe down to clean fingerprints. The Olympus Stylus Tough 8010 ($399.99, 2.5 stars) fixes this problem by adding a sliding shield that protects it from fingerprints.

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Panasonic Lumix TS3 : Angle
Panasonic Lumix TS3 : Top
Panasonic Lumix TS3 : Right
Panasonic Lumix TS3 : Battery & Card Slot
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The 2.7-inch LCD isn’t massive, and it contains the standard 230K dots. I’ve yet to see a rugged camera offer a higher-resolution display. This screen, though, shows significant motion blur, so moving images leave streaks when you’re framing your shots.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Specifications

Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Type
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Compact
Megapixels
12.1 MP
Media Format
Secure Digital Extended Capacity
35-mm Equivalent (Wide)
28 mm
35-mm Equivalent (Telephoto)
128 mm
Optical Zoom
4.6 x
LCD size
2.7 inches
Video Resolution
Yes
More
Panasonic’s user interface is simple to use, with multiple routes to access popular features. You can make adjustments through the regular menu, quick menu, or the typical dedicated buttons for video recording, timer, flash, etc.
Outdoor Features
Like the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX5V ($349.99, 4 stars) and the Casio Exilim EX-H20G ($349.99, 4 stars), the TS3 packs both a GPS and a digital compass. When you geotag a photo, in addition to its location, you can see the direction in which it was taken (with a free program like Picasa or Google Earth you can view your photos on a map). To track your location, the camera needs to have a clear line of sight to satellites, so you can’t geotag photos indoors or underwater. The Exilim EX-H20G is the only camera to provide a workaround; it pairs the GPS and compass with a pedometer and accelerometer so it can calculate where you are based on your last known location from the GPS.
Panasonic added two features I’ve never seen in a camera before: an altimeter and a barometer. You can use the altimeter to see your height relative to sea level or compare the height between two locations. The barometer displays the atmospheric pressure (measured in hectopascals) for your current location and time, the last 24 hours, or even in 90 minute intervals. All this information is actually shown on the camera’s LCD. In Playback mode, I was able to view the barometer and altimeter information for my captured images.
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 Performance
The TS3 is blindingly fast: powering up and shooting took an average of just 2.3 seconds. And once it gets going, the TS3 snaps individual photos with just 0.5 seconds of shutter lag, and wait time between shots averages just 1.2 seconds. You’ll be hard pressed to find a compact camera that’s faster, rugged or not.
In the PCMag labs we use Imatest to objectively measure image quality. The TS3 offered a soft, center-weighted average of just 1,347 lines per picture height. A comparably priced non-waterproof camera like the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX700 ($399.95, 4 stars) or the Canon PowerShot S95 ($399.99, 4 stars) offer sharper images, with center-weighted averages of 1,817 and 1,858 respectively. In shots outside the lab, images from the TS3 looked crisp, but not eye-poppingly sharp. Despite the TS3′s soft pictures, the camera offers solid noise performance. It was able to keep noise levels below Imatest’s 1.5-percent acceptability threshold up to and including ISO 1600. This means good low-light-sans-flash shooting results.
Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 One of the best compact cameras for recording video, the TS3 provides the option to record 720p30 video (at 6 megabits per second) in a file format that’s natively compatible with YouTube and Facebook. Or you can step up to a higher quality 1080p30, 17 megabits-per-second AVCHD format which is not natively compatible with YouTube and Facebook, but looks much better. Not only does video look fantastic (even when you shoot under water), but you won’t hear lens noise while zooming or refocusing while recording—that’s rare. Like photos, videos can also be geotagged.
You can also shoot pseudo-3D images with the TS3. The camera basically performs a trick that works well enough, but doesn’t produce results comparable with a true 3D camera with two lenses. In 3D mode, the camera directs you move from left to right, snapping 20 shots in the course of a few seconds. It then selects two images that are merged into one .MPO file, which is the industry standard for 3D.
Underneath a waterproof side compartment, you’ll find a micro-HDMI connection so you can plug the TS3 right into an HDTV to play back your pictures and video. The camera features an SDXC slot, which is also backward compatible with SDHC and SD cards. The camera uses a proprietary USB port, so if you don’t have an SDXC/SDHC card reader, you’ll have to tote the proprietary cable to transfer your images and video.
The $400 Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3 isn’t cheap, but for the price, you get plenty of bells and whistles. Images could be sharper, but if you’re the outdoorsy type who’s looking for a tough compact camera with excellent video and location-based features, the TS3 delivers.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-TS3

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Samsung LN46D630 Review

Samsung LN46D630
A 46-inch LCD HDTV with a 1,920 by 1,080 resolution, the Samsung LN46D630 ($995.99 list) offers Samsung’s HyperReal engine, which powers its dynamic contrast ratio, Wide Color Enhancer and more. Other features within the LN46D630 include support for wireless adapters, image blur reduction, the ability to display media from USB devices and more.
Design and Features
This LCD TV sports a familiar square design with a glossy black finish, but its bottom half flaunts a wooden finish underneath the controls. The LN46D630 features two down-firing, full range speakers with SRS TheaterSound and Dolby Digital Plus. Just underneath those speakers is a clear plastic stand that can swivel in both directions. Inputs include four HDMI ports, two USB Inputs, two component Inputs, PC audio and video Inputs, Ethernet support and more.

Samsung LN46D630

On the inside, the Wide Color Enhancer deploys a complex algorithm to correct and enhance the green, blue, red, yellow, cyan and magenta hues. The Auto Motion Plus feature tunes the panel and backlight to reduce image blur. In addition these performance features, the LN46D630 sports several connectivity options such as AllShare, which allows DLNA devices to display media through the HDTV over a wireless connection.
Users can also control all of their HDMICEC-compatible devices through a single remote control. Thanks to an EcoSensor and other features, the LN46D630 is an Energy Star-compliant device.

Samsung LN46D630 Specifications

Screen Size
46 inches
Type
LCD TV, HDTV, LED
Supported Refresh Rates
60Hz
Video Inputs
Component, Composite, HDMI, USB
Networking Options
Ethernet
Speakers Included
Yes
Stand Supplied?
Yes
Height
26.5 inches
Width
43.8 inchesa
Depth
3.2 inches
Weight
41.2 lb

Samsung LN46D630

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Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Review

Kodak EasyShare Sport C123
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 At just $79.99 (direct), the 12-megapixel Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 is about as inexpensive a digital camera as you can find. It comes inside a shrink-wrapped package, lending it the appearance of something you’d place next to the action figures or Skittles in a Target or Walmart. But it is a true digital camera—just not a very advanced one. It’s waterproof to 10 feet, dustproof, and generally well-guarded against the elements, and for the casual vacationer looking for the absolute simplest experience possible, it will deliver. It’s also a great camera for kids to play around with. But the Sport has a fixed focus (no zoom) for still shots, offers no image stabilization, and shoots only low-resolution video. Excellent photos and video from this camera will likely be an exception rather than the norm.
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Design
The EasyShare Sport comes in three colors—my test unit was what Kodak calls red, but it’s almost orange. (Your other options are gray or blue.) It’s fairly hefty for a pocket camera, the glossy plastic, chunky rectangle measures 2.6 by 3.6 by 1.2 inches (HWD), but does have a cute, sporty look. On the front of the camera are the lens, the flash and a slightly protruding grip with a rubber strip that makes the otherwise slippery camera a little easier to hold. On top are the Shutter, Power, Mode (for switching between still images and video) and flash toggle buttons. On the bottom is the compartment for the two standard AA batteries that power the camera, along with the SD card slot and the micro-USB port. That compartment is a bit difficult to access, but it keeps what’s inside dry.

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Kodak EasyShare Sport : Angle
Kodak EasyShare Sport : Back
Kodak EasyShare Sport : Top
Kodak EasyShare Sport : Right
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The back of the camera sports black, rubbery buttons for the Sport’s most common features. There are two zoom controls (though the camera only features digital zoom), Menu, Playback and Delete buttons, and a directional pad for navigating the camera’s menus. There’s also a big, red Share button, that you can use to earmark pictures and videos for sharing on various social networks—Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and more. When you connect the camera to your computer, it will automatically upload the photos and videos to their respective destinations. If you’ve got a Kodak Pulse ($129.95, 4 stars) picture frame, you can email photos directly to the frame as well.
The display on the back of the Sport is what you’d expect on an $80 camera. It’s a smallish 2.4-inch LCD, made up of 112,000 dots—it’s much lower-resolution than most pocket digital cameras, but most of those are at least $50 more expensive. The Kodak EasyShare Mini ($99.99, 3.5 stars), a better camera overall than the Sport, packs its LCD with a standard 230,000 dots. For basic purposes, though, like framing and reviewing your photos, the Sport’s low-res LCD gets the job done.

Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Specifications

Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Type
Compact
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Megapixels
12.1 MP
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Media Format
Secure Digital High Capacity
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 LCD size
2.4 inches
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Video Resolution
No
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The lens on this shooter isn’t its strong point. It’s a fixed-focus, 1.3 meters-infinity lens, so you’ll need subjects to be at least 4.2 feet away before they’ll be in focus. The lens also has no optical image stabilization, which means that in any situation with sub-optimal lighting, you’ll either need a tripod, the flash, or a taste for very blurry photos. The slightest motion, on either your part or your subject’s, leaves considerable blur in your photos. As long as light is good, it’s not really a problem, but in anything other than broad daylight getting sharp images is a challenge.
The user interface, as with all of Kodak’s EasyShare models, is extremely simple. There are two menus: one is called Capture and contains a few settings for your shots, and the other is called Setup and allows you to adjust variables like date, time, and sharing settings. There’s very little manual control on the Sport, but adjusting ISO and shutter speed seems a bit excessive on a camera with a fixed-focus lens. There are a number of scene modes you can use for shooting portraits or twilight moments, but that’s about as granular as it gets.
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 Performance
My first test of the EasyShare Sport was to determine its ruggedness. I tossed it around my desk, dunked it in a cup of water, and beat it up in various other ways. Through it all, the Sport kept right on shooting. This camera should serve you well in the pool, at the beach, or in unreliable hands.
The Sport is surprisingly fast for such an inexpensive camera: it can turn on and capture a shot in 1.95 seconds, and the time between shots averaged 1.90 seconds. Both of those numbers are accelerated by the fact that there’s no autofocus, so the only thing the Sport has to do is open and close the shutter. Of course, half the photos I took during the speed test were out of focus and blurry thanks to the lack of autofocus and image stabilization. It’s much slower at things like scrolling through menus—there was a definite beat between me pressing the button and the cursor moving—especially when playing back images, which frequently took several seconds to load when I pressed the Play button.
Running the EasyShare Sport through our usual gamut of Imatest trials seems unnecessary, as it’s clearly not a camera for someone who cares about performance numbers. Really, there are three factors that will affect your images on this camera. If the light is good, your images will likely be good too. If your subject is far away, it will probably look okay, but remember, there’s no optical zoom, so we’re not talking really far—anything closer than four or five feet is going to be blurry. With the Sport, the flash is your friend. Photos won’t have the natural look comes with naturally lit photos, but using the flash is the only way to get usable pictures in imperfect lighting.
Video recording is lackluster:The EasyShare Sport shoots only VGA-resolution (640-by-480) video, which won’t exactly wow you. The camera can autofocus during video recording, but only when it has detected faces and is following them around. Videos are recorded as .MPG files, which can be natively uploaded to most social networking sites.
Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 For $80, the Kodak EasyShare Sport C123 is a fine camera, and I can see the purpose it serves: it’s fun for the kids to take in the pool, or on a beach vacation. Compared with other compact digital cameras, it doesn’t come close to measuring up, but it doesn’t have to. If you want a more-well-rounded waterproof camera, try the admittedly more-expensive Kodak Playsport Zx5($179.99, 4 stars) or the Canon PowerShot D10 ($329.99, 4 stars). If you’re on a strict budget, though, and you just want a camera to goof around with on vacation, it’ll serve you fine.\

Kodak EasyShare Sport C123

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Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile) Review

Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile)
Virgin Mobile, one of Sprint’s less expensive, prepaid brands, can always use better cell phones. The eco-friendly Samsung Restore (3 stars) was a pretty good texting phone in its Sprint incarnation, and it carries most, but not all of its virtues over to Virgin Mobile. For $79.99 and reasonable monthly fees, you get a capable, QWERTY-equipped messaging device. However, this version of the Restore didn’t perform quite as well as the Sprint model did.
Design, Call Quality, and Apps
First, a quick recap: the Samsung Restore measures 4.6 by 2.1 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and weighs 3.7 ounces. Given the roomy QWERTY keyboard and slider form factor, that’s pretty compact, although it feels a bit large in the hand. It looks good, though. On the plus side, the Restore is one of Sprint’s greener phones; it’s made of 83-percent recyclable materials, excluding the battery, but loses Sprint’s usual recycled packaging. As a result, this version doesn’t qualify for our GreenTech Approved award. The 2.4-inch screen offers 240-by-320-pixel resolution, which is standard for this type of phone. The Restore’s slider mechanism feels solid, and the four-row QWERTY keyboard is a gem, with well-spaced, flat, rubber keys that have just the right amount of give.

 Samsung Restore View SlideshowSee all (4) slides

Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile): Front
Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile): Keyboard
Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile): Angle
Samsung Restore (Virgin Mobile): Angle
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The Restore is a dual-band, 3G EV-DO Rev. A (850/1900 MHz) device with no Wi-Fi. Voice quality was fine; callers sounded roughly the same as they did on the Sprint version, and no one had trouble understanding me. Reception was a little on the low side; the Restore dropped a few calls during battery tests, and 3G signal was hard to find. I live in an admittedly marginal Sprint coverage area, but other Sprint phones I review don’t usually have these issues. Calls sounded fine through an Aliph Jawbone Era Bluetooth headset ($129, 4 stars), and the voice dialing worked perfectly over Bluetooth without training. The speakerphone punched above its weight, with plenty of volume and a useful dedicated key to the left of the Send button. Battery life was good at 5 hours and 39 minutes of talk time.
The main menu features 12 icons arranged in a grid pattern. The sluggish Access NetFront 3.5.1 browser is fine for WAP pages. But loading the desktop CNN site took about four minutes, and the results looked horrendous. The Social Networking icon contains shortcuts to the Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter WAP sites, not dedicated apps. The Restore is GPS-enabled, and runs Virgin Mobile Navigator and Google Maps. VM Navigator costs $1 per day or $5 per month extra, while Google Maps is a free download. Virgin Mobile’s usual e-mail and IM clients are also available.

Samsung Restore Specifications

Service Provider
Virgin
Screen Size
2.4 inches
Screen Details
240-by-320-pixel, 262K-color TFT LCD screen
Camera
Yes
Network
CDMA
Bands
850, 1900
High-Speed Data
1xRTT, EVDO Rev A
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Plans, Multimedia, and Conclusions
Virgin Mobile offers three service plans: $35 per month with 300 minutes, a $45 per month with 1200 minutes, and a $55 month option with unlimited voice calls. All three plans come with unlimited text, e-mail, data, and Web access, and the phone runs on Sprint’s network. These are good deals that will save you some money compared with Sprint’s regular plans, though Sprint throws in voice-enabled navigation for free with its unlimited offerings. But here’s the puzzling thing: a real smartphone like the excellent, much more powerful LG Optimus V ($149, 4 stars) costs exactly the same per month. Granted, it’s $70 more up front, but that’s a very small difference when factored over several years. Which phone would you rather have?
On the multimedia side, there’s 85MB of free user memory for ringtones and apps, but the media player won’t fire up without a microSD card installed. The slot is located underneath the battery cover and on the side; my 32GB SanDisk card worked fine. Music tracks sounded fine throughSamsung Modus HM6450 stereo Bluetooth headphones ($99, 4 stars).
The 2-megapixel camera has no flash or auto-focus. Test photos were mediocre; in good lighting, they looked fine, but shadowy areas descended into inky blackness. Shutter speeds were below average; I lost several shots to motion blur. One shot didn’t save, which was odd, since the handset auto-saves each photo; it’s not something you choose manually. Recorded videos were of the useless, thumbnail-sized, 176-by-144-pixel variety; they averaged about 15 frames per second, and were even smaller than the Sprint Restore’s already marginal 320-by-240-pixel videos.
The Samsung Restore is still a decent texting phone, even in Virgin Mobile guise. But the video recording problems and photo-snapping bug are new issues that didn’t affect the Sprint version. As a result, we have to rate it down into the “fair” category. I’d rather put my money on the LG Rumor Touch ($99.99, 4 stars), our current Editors’ Choice for a Virgin Mobile feature phone. It offers better music and video playback, plus a more expansive touch screen on the front panel, in addition to the slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Finally, since the monthly fees are the same, give some serious thought to that LG Optimus V Android idea.

Samsung Restore

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