xxxxxxxxxx
Eigo FactoryDigital World TokyoTokyo ZakkaTokyo FriendfinderWork in Japan
CEATEC: Hitachi TVs reprocess HD video on the fly

061003_Hitachi_HDTV.jpg

Hitachi will soon ship two large plasma televisions equipped with internal hard drives and a chip that can reprocess high-definition video at a lower bit rate in real time, allowing users to double the amount of video they can record.

The W50P-XR10000 and W60P-XR10000 plasma TVs have screens that measure 50in and 60in across the diagonal, respectively. They are both equipped with a 250GB internal hard drive that can store 23 hours of HD content in standard recording mode. Both models were on display this week at Hitachi’s booth at Ceatec.

For users who want to store more than 23 hours of content, the W50 and W60 offer two additional recording modes that rely on a ViXS Systems Inc. chip to reprocess the video stream at a lower bit rate, effectively doubling the hard drive’s capacity to 50 hours or 65 hours, depending on the recording mode selected.

The W50P and W60P are priced at ¥550,000 (US$4,658) and ¥950,000, respectively. Both TVs will go on sale in Japan during the fourth quarter of this year.

The W50 and W60 join other televisions in Hitachi’s product line that offer internal hard drives for recording video content. On sale in Japan since May, these models include the W37L-HR9000 and W32L-HR9000, which sport 32in and 37in LCD screens, respectively. The W37L is priced at around ¥300,000, while the W32L costs about ¥250,000.

Sumner Lemon


Tuesday, October 03, 2006 at 05:15 PM
Author: Mark Hiratsuka
Home theater | Displays | EventsPermalink
Tagged with:

Support DWT and share the love:

del.icio.us Favicon Digg Favicon Email Favicon Facebook Favicon Fark Favicon Google Favicon LinkedIn Favicon Live Favicon N4G Favicon Print Favicon Reddit Favicon Slashdot Favicon Spurl Favicon StumbleUpon Favicon Technorati Favicon TwitThis Favicon YahooMyWeb Favicon

Or try our acclaimed members-only dating site:


C'mon - let's hear it...

Spammers beware: Any links in comments to commercial websites will be treated as paid advertising and will be charged at rate of $10 per link per day. Invoices will be sent to the idiots who hire you for so-called SEO jobs. All you good people will always keep it real, of course - thanks!