| Brand Name: | Sony |
| Color Name: | Blue |
| Built In Decoders: | Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby Digital, DTS decoders |
| Item Display Height: | 3.10 inches |
| Brand Name: | Sony |
| Color Name: | Blue |
| Built In Decoders: | Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby Digital, DTS decoders |
| Item Display Height: | 3.10 inches |
Product Details
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x.v.Color
Thanks to the adoption of a newly approved international color standard called xvYCC (an option in the HDMI v1.3 spec and which Sony participated in helping to create), the color space has been greatly expanded. 1.8 times as many natural colors as existing HDTV signals will now be faithfully reproduced. (x.v.Color capability is available on select BRAVIA televisions, Blu-ray Disc players and the PlayStation3 computer entertainment system.)
24p True Cinema Video Output
Many movies are filmed at 24 frames per second (fps) and prime time TV programs are videotaped at 24p. Seizing an opportunity, some studios are taking a purist approach and encoding high definition video content such as Blu-ray Disc in 24p. The BDP-S300 wisely takes advantage of this by including 24p output capability. The benefits are smoother and more natural-looking images that make watching television an experience to remember. (24p video input capability is available on select BRAVIA televisions.)
BRAVIA Theater Sync
Go beyond simple audio and video transmission with the "one-touch play" remote control feature that allows you to easily manage select BRAVIA televisions and Sony HDMI audio and video components with a single remote. (Available on select BRAVIA theater home A/V systems and components.)
| Blu-ray'sHD resolution offers a vastly better picture than SD resolution availabel from regular DVD |
Blu-ray Disc provides picture quality beyond anything available, with full capability 1080p/24 resolution in Blu-ray and Up to 40Mbps bit encoding - 5X current DVD. The theater quality "uncompressed" audio supports 8 channels of Liner PCM, Up to 32 streams of audio, interactive capability, seamless menus, integrated games, hi-def bonus and educational features. Java will allow for more dynamic, more sophisticated interactivity.
Expand your workd with Sony products using Blu-ray Disc technology. It;s the heart of an outstanding line of Sony products with Blu-ray Disc technology that extends beyond the boundaries of high-definition and opens the new vistas for creativity, enjoyment, and interaction.
Discover unsurpassed picture quality and uncompressed audio on supporting media that goes beyond any other format you've seen. Immerse yourself in the unrivaled detail that lets you experiencemore in every movie, every game.
Movies
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| Find a huge selection of great movies available now on Blu-ray Disc |
Blu-ray Disc was created to match the accelerating growth in digital consumer electronics and computer technology. The platform supports the convergence of film, music, gaming and other computer entertainment in a single standard. Sony Computer Entertainment's adoption of Blu-ray Disc ROM technology in the next-generation PlayStation 3 system was announced at the 2005 Electronic Entertainment Expo.
Capacity Without Compromise
Everything that DVD can do, Blu-ray Disc does and more. Blue laser technology enables up to 50 GB of storage -- five times the capacity of DVD. That’s room for nine hours of HD. Or 23 hours of SD. Or tens of thousands of songs. Unbelievable data storage.
Versatiltiy Beyond the Ordinary
From movies to music to games to PC software and file backup, Blu-ray Disc is your solution! The system embraces pre-recorded titles (BD-ROM), discs that you can record yourself (BD-R) and discs you can re-record over and over again (BD-RE). So we can anticipate not only BD players for your living room, but also BD recorders, BD-based game consoles, BD drives for your personal computer and even BD camcorders using compact 8 cm (3") discs!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Bad, but is the PS3 better?,
By
This review is from: Sony BDP-S300/SM Blu-ray Disc Player Spiderman 3 Limited Edition (Electronics)
I received the BDP-S300 for Christmas and my college aged son received a PS3. After a long time watching and researching, I had decided that I would go with a PS3 as my blu-ray player, so getting a standalone player was a bit of a surprise. I've now had plenty of time to compare the S300 and PS3 side by side (I have a 720p projector with no HDMI/DVI...only component, so all of my comments are based on using component cables on PS3 and on S300).
Out of the box, the S300 locked up on the first disk I played (Blu-ray Ratatouille), went through the impossibly esoteric update using CD (worked first time) and have had no lockup or strange issues since. The startup time on the S300 is just plain silly. PS3 boots up faster and is ready to go quicker than S300. PS3 loads disks just like lightning and is ready to play movie right away. The issue here appears to be processor power and Java. Discs with Java just plain choke the S300. As an example, on "Surf's Up" Disc, the PS3 immediately shows a surfboard that progressively turns from blue to brown while disc "loads"...takes about 5 to 10 seconds and then the movie is ready to play. On s300 when you insert the disk, you get an S300 "loading" message for about 30 seconds, then the surfboard appears and changes from blue to brown, as on the PS3, then another delay, and then ready to play. Seems like discs are designed to play on a powerful java engine...shows a cute moving java icon, while movie loads in the background and then movie starts. Unfortunately, it takes forever on the S300 to "load" the cute moving icon and then the moving icon gets displayed in a "herky, jerky" fashion and then the movie loads. You don't realize how it is supposed to work until you see it on a PS3. Disks with little or no Java load very quickly on the S300 and are ready to play. Java definitely seems to be the root of the long load times on the S300. OK, so the S300 it terrible for turning on and then terrible again for loading if disc has Java content. How about movies? In my setup (720p over component), the S300 has absolutely stunning picture quality. The PS3 picture quality is stunning as well (both WAY better than any 720p broadcast) and the audio on both is exceptional, but somehow the picture always "seemed" a bit better on the S300. I'm almost positive this is a component output issue on the PS3, I've read tons of reviews and am convinced that using HDMI, you'd probably see no difference at all in video quality. I have played many blu-rays on the S300 with no problem and continue to be amazed on the well transferred movies (yes there do seem to be some poorly transferred blu-ray movies)at just how good the picture is. I only have a receiver that can decode DTS and Dobly Digital, so the lack of HDMI 1.3 and inability of both the PS3 and the S300 to either decode or put out the bitstream for TrueHD is not a big deal to me, but that's just me. So, what's the bottom line for me? The PS3 heads back to school next week with my son and I'm going to keep my S300. I just like the simple user interface (yes I know I could get a $25 DVD remote for the PS3) and the idea that I won't have a bunch of new controllers (already have 4 XBOX360 controllers laying around in the theater) and a bunch of new games (wait, is this a PS3 game or a 360 game). I personally like the picture a hair better on the S300 in my particular setup (your setup will be different). One final argument FOR the PS3 as a blu-ray player is that the PS3 has had some amazing funtional updates since it was introduced, it has both built-in ethernet and wifi and updates are simple and easy. The S300 will be gone (discontinued in 6 months) and who knows how long updates will be available. The PS3 will be around for at least a couple of years and updates come often. It's not an easy choice, but if I didn't already have a 360 I would definitely go with a PS3 over an S300. you get a ton more horsepower for the money. If you think you will EVER want to play a PS3 game, don't even think about it...get the PS3. If you want simple and familiar user interface the S300 might be for you. Last thought, since I don't have HDMI, I can't receive the benefit of upconverting, Blu-rays are sent out on component at 720p, but standard DVDs are limited (by movie studio copy protection) to 480p over component. I've read that on both S300 and PS3, non-copy protected movies would be output at 720p or 1080i over component
31 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
BDP-S300 - the most disappointing consumer electronics product I've ever seen from Sony,
This review is from: Sony BDP-S300/SM Blu-ray Disc Player Spiderman 3 Limited Edition (Electronics)
I have had the BDP-S300 product for about 6 months now. While it produces a great picture, I am very disappointed with the whole "user experience" associated with this device. It takes FOREVER to turn on -- press the power button, wait 30 seconds for the "title screen" to appear on the screen -- and another 15 seconds for any buttons (including open/close) to work. Once you put in a disc, it takes another 40 seconds until anything from the disc can be played. And heaven help you if you try to play Pirates of the Caribbean -- about half the time I put in this disc, the player freezes up during the loading process (at least I stopped waiting after 5 minutes).
I have been a big Sony fan (almost all my A/V equipment is Sony) -- but this is the worst product I have ever seen them try to sell.
23 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The BDP S300 is unstable???,
By
This review is from: Sony BDP-S300/SM Blu-ray Disc Player Spiderman 3 Limited Edition (Electronics)
I purchased the BDP S300 back in July and with the firmware upgrades (currently up to version 3.3 ) provided by Sony the player has successfully played all the Blu-ray disk that I have acquired without any problems. I have never had an event when I placed a Blu-ray disk in the player and it did not play. I have over 60 Blu-ray disks and all have played without a problem. The video on my 60" LCoS Sony HD is excellent. The only issue I have with some of the Blu-ray disks is when they are produced by a neutral HD producers they are generated for the lower bit-rate of the HDDVD disk whereas if produced exclusively for for the Blu-ray disk action or highly detailed scenes can be done at a higher bit rate. Yes startup is a bit slow sometimes but that is usually between 1 and 1.5 minutes. The only issue I have with the player is that Sony did not provide the audio bitstream over the HDMI port for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD so my Onkyo TX-SR705 can process these new audio CODECs. The audio however is still very good. I also have not had any problems playing the standard DVD that I have in my collection, they all where upgraded to 1080 without any problem and look very good on the 60" Sony HD.
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