| Denon DVD-A1UDCI Universal Blu-ray Player Preview |
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| Home Theater Video Players Blu-ray Players | |
| Written by Michael Palmer | |
| Monday, 06 December 2010 | |
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Branded as "the world's first 'universal' Blu-ray Disc player", the DVD-A1UDCI from Denon is the company's flagship digital video and audio player. In this sky's-the-limit price range, Denon smartly aims this product not only at videophiles who demand video perfection from sources like Blu-ray and DVD, but also audiophiles with DVD-Audio, SACD, CD, WMA and MP3 collections.
Denon's DVD-A1UDCI has a built-in Ethernet Port for connection to a home network, but unlike many less expensive players, it can only able to access BD-Live content from Blu-ray discs or Denon firmware updates, which leaves a wealth of internet streaming services like Vudu, Netflix, and Pandora off the table. Also, while the DVD-A1UDCI is a Profile 2.0 player, to download BD-Live content, you'll need to purchase an optional SD card. Like it's cheaper-by-two-grand 100th anniversary cousin, the BDP-A100, Denon's DVD-A1UDCI features Advanced S.V.H. (Supreess Vibration Hybrid) disc drive mechanism that provides a stable platform for discs ensuring error-free playback without mudding effects or vibrations. As stated above, it also plays just about every format available in terms of video and audio. Blu-ray Discs, DVDs, DVD-Audio, CDs, SACDs, JPEG CDs, AVCHD video files, and DivX discs are all no problem. Cinema lovers will drool over the DVD-A1UDCI's Silcon Optix Realta HQV video processor upconverts and deinterlances film and video sources from your standard definition DVDs pixel-by-pixel to created clean, smooth, distortion free images in your choice of resolution outputs (480i/p, 720p, or 1080i/p). The real treat is dual HDMI 1.3a outputs for feeding multiple display sources; and AV Pure Direct Mode allows owners to assign one HDMI to video and one to audio. Denon has also included a Y/Pr/Pb component out and the pretty-much-useless S-Video and Composite out. Perhaps there will be someone who purchases a Blu-ray Disc Player for mostly its audio capabilities? All I know this would be a waste of serious coin to use either of the included SD outputs.
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