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LG BD300 Blu Ray Player

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I received it about 3 weeks ago, and I truly love it. The glossy black unit has a thin and elegant, understated look that should not clash with other equipment.

Setup is simple and for me required 3 cables — the power cable, the HDMI cable, and an ethernet (CAT-6) cable to my network. This unit will not work with wireless networks, as far as I know, because the streaming video quality would suffer on a large screen TV. You should also have a USB thumb drive of 1GB or over capacity for the system to download enhanced DVD content from the internet. Plug the thumb drive into the front panel (there is a hard to see door with a latch that will flick down with a fingernail) after the unit does its self-test and upgrades its firmware.

LG BD300 Blu Ray

LG BD300 Blu Ray

Blu ray picture quality seems quite good. As a medium, the improvement in picture from a DVD is quite pronounced. Even fast action sequences are crisp and smooth, with no artifacts on any disc I’ve played. The improvement in audio sound is more subtle — on most action movies, I haven’t noticed it. I will await some opera or concert blu rays to make a judgment.

However, I compared regular DVD pictures to my Denon DVD player that cost about 3 times the price of the BD300, and the blacks were a little more defined on the Denon than the LG. On the whole, it plays DVDs that I use for comparison (The 5th Element, Kingdom of Heaven, Sin City) in an acceptable way, and the picture is quite crisp.

This blu ray picture loads pretty fast — about 20-40 seconds, so that is a real improvement over the earlier blu ray generation, and the remote is satisfactory if difficult to read in low light. This would be the only complaint in my book.

When you turn on the unit, and it’s hooked into your ethernet network (no wireless), it automatically uprgrades its firmware and software first — once again, this was seamless and only took a couple of minutes.

Now, what makes this unit so special is the NetFlix features, which having set up your account online, you activate on the unit from a 4-character code which you input into your Netflix Account via your PC. You must select “instant view” movies from your Netflix Account on the PC before they will show up as available on the BD300. Activating blu ray discs on your Netflix account will cost you an addition $1 per month.

Having everything set up, you can select the streaming to search for your Netflix Instant View features. You select the feature, and then it gives you a choice of starting them where you left off (if you were interrupted) or from the beginning. You can also rate the feature from your BD300 or remove it from your Netflix Queue. The quality of video you will see appears in the new firmware on a fuel gauge that at its highest setting displays “HD” for high definition video. About 10% of the programming appears to be HD so far, with television series leading the way. The quality I receive over my DSL Cat-6 gigabit switched network about 10% of the time is about the same as blu ray — very high indeed. All streamed movies seem to be stereo audio only, and no subtitles are available. About 75% on the gauge is the equivalent of good DVD picture and I get that about 60% of the time. One is not concious of any tradeoffs in picture quality. A half-gauge is acceptable for all anime and many movies where there is not a lot of fast action or dark scenes, but you notice a loss of detail in those circumstances. The background can be a little blocky, but the picture will look about like regular definition TV viewed on a high-def device. Less than half-gauget has a very blocky background and darks are pixelated and un-defined. If I get less than half-gauge, I stop the movie and hit replay, and then we see if the connection speed increases. If it does, I stick with the movie. If not, I wait until another time.

You will really enjoy a Netflix subscription much, much more with this unit.
December 23 Addendum — after around seven weeks, we are loving this more and more. The regular firmware/software updates online have made this better and better. There is a fuel gauge display now on quality, and we are receiving some movies in true HD quality (I can’t say for sure the limit is on the movies so offered or on the network speed), but the true HD streaming of Netflix Instant movies is awesome. I also forgot to note that it has an effective shifting screensaver that will prevent burn-in on succeptible plasma displays. It just keeps getting better and better. Thank you, LG, and especially thank you, Netflix.

If You decide you want to take a closer look at this product LG BD300 Network Blu-ray Disc Player and see for yourself.

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How To Choose a Blu Ray Player

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How To Choose A Blu Ray Player
As recently as 12mths ago, the old age problem of which will come out on top Blu-Ray or HD DVD, well I think we all know the answer to that one, yes you guessed it “Blu-Ray”, but that leaves us with a challenge, of how to choose a blu ray player, what do we look for, in a piece of equipment that promises so much, yet unless we know someone who owns one, we are unable to view in its full entirity.

If you are anything like me, price is the main factor that “HELPS” me choose which piece of kit willpart me from my money, and I am sure you are similar tome.

As recently as 2007 you could have found yourself spending as much as $1500 for a standard machine, but we all knew that the price would drop, especially after the decion was made from the big “4″ movie companies, that they would no longer produce HD DVD on any new releases, and that decion came just days before a major convention was meet to decide which way the industry would go, needless to say the convention was cancelled as a result. This coupled with Toshiba pulling out of HD DVD manufacture, leaving the path forward for blu ray to exploit.

If you didn’t know most DVD players will do what they call up scale, this means that as the technology of standard DVD discs improve, so willthe video and audio outputs, but never to the level of a blu ray player and this primarily because of the amount of data that can be stored, upto 50gb on one disc, compared to 9gb on a standard DVD, if you combine this with a HDTV output, the results are truly amazing. Due to the expected popularity , the cost is now down to below $200 for the basic unit, you can of course pay more, if you require more features.

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