Sony Walkman S540 Demo Video

Omar from Sony Europe provides us with a demo video of the Sony S540 MP3 player . According to Omar, the S540 provides a 42-hours battery life for audio playback or 6.5-hours for video playback. It also has built-in stereo speakers and an FM radio. Video after the jump. [ Engadget ]

Check Out Denon’s Current Range of Blu-ray Disc Players

The Denon DVD-1800BD is Denon’s cutting-edge and economical Blu-ray player. It is Bonus View (profile 1.1) compliant with HDMI 1.3a and component video outputs, bit-streaming, a front panel SD card memory slot for MP3 and JPEG playback, and full Divx and Windows Media™ Audio playback support. As compared to the fancier Denon players, what you do not get with the Denon DVD-1800BD is custom integration options and no 5.1/7.1 analog outputs to exploit the improved lossless audio tracks. The uni

iRiver E30 Spotted (updated)

We reported that iRiver E30 will be available soon. Now, we have some gallery images for the real one! It is said that iRiver E30 supports APE, and FLAC lossless audio with SRS WOW HD audio enhancement. Its battery life is up to 52 hours of audio playback. Update It is announced in China. Overall, its specification is similar to E50. Price is unknown yet. Specification: 1.8″ 262k color 176 x 220 TFT display Supports MP3, WMA, WAV, APE, FLAC audio Supports SMV (M-JPEG) video

iRiver E30 Spotted

We reported that iRiver E30 will be available soon. Now, we have some gallery images for the real one! It is said that iRiver E30 supports APE, and FLAC lossless audio with SRS WOW HD audio enhancement. Its battery life is up to 52 hours of audio playback. More images after the jump [ Even more images at iMP3 ] Related posts: Atree Red Eye J2 Unveiled Korean Atree recently introduced the new MP3 player, Red... Window G21 4GB for $44 China-based Window

In Depth: The clever sound tech behind Sony’s new headphones

Unwanted noise might have been a blight of audio playback back in pre-digital days, but today few people expect that their enjoyment of audio will be marred by hiss and crackle. This doesn't mean that the nuisance of unwanted noise is long gone, though; far from it. As our electronic equipment has become ever more portable, we've found ourselves subjected to a different but no less annoying form of noise. From the rattle of a train and the rumble of jet engines to the chatter of our fellow p

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