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Toshiba Debuts ‘Near-HD’ DVD

By Joseph Palenchar -- TWICE, August 18, 2008

Wanye, N.J. — Toshiba is positioning its first DVD player with eXtended Detail Enhancement (XDE) technology as delivering "near-HD" picture quality from standard-definition DVDs and bridging the price and performance gap between current up-scaling DVD players and Blu-ray players.

The XD-E500, available at retail on Aug. 18 for a $149 suggested retail, is targeted to consumers who are heavily invested in DVD collections, aren’t ready to step up to a high-definition player priced at a minimum $400, and would appreciate an up-scaling DVD player "with an added layer of enhancement" that brings picture quality "closer to HD," said Louis Masses, product planning director of Toshiba’s digital A/V group. XDE technology, however, "is not meant to replace, kill or compete with Blu-ray," he said.

The introduction is backed by a print- and Web-based ad campaign urging consumers to "breathe new life into your DVDs."

The single-disc XD-E500 incorporates up-scaling technology similar to that in Toshiba’s $69 player and other up-scaling devices, but XDE adds three user-selectable enhancement modes: sharp, color and contrast. Sharp mode improves edge detail by analyzing an entire image, then adding edge enhancements only in places where the image needs it, not across the entire image, Masses said. Color mode also analyzes the picture and makes green and blue adjustments where needed to deliver more realistic greens and blues without looking artificial and "without a tremendous impact on other colors," he said. It also improves flesh tones. Contrast mode lightens up dark areas in high-contrast scenes without washing out the light areas. With it, consumers see more detail in the darker areas of a scene, Masses explained.

Consumers turn on each mode individually, but only a maximum of two modes can run simultaneously: sharp and color, or sharp and contrast.

In its literature, Toshiba points out that "while XDE, like many DVD players, up-converts DVDs up to 1080p to match the resolution of your HDTV, it goes a step further — thanks to XDE’s special picture-enhancement capabilities. XDE delivers a crisper, more vivid picture quality from your DVDs."

The player defaults to 1080p output from its HDMI port, but owners of older flat-panel TVs can select 720p or 1080i output to match their displays. Output of 24 fps is also available.

The XDE technology was designed specifically for use in DVD players and is focused on maximizing DVD quality, Masses noted. He declined to comment on whether Toshiba would offer additional XDE DVD players or enter the Blu-ray market.

To stimulate sell-through, Toshiba plans a September launch of a print and online ad campaign running through early January. The campaign includes consumer magazines such as Entertainment Weekly, local newspapers in the top 14 markets with a circulation of 7.3 million, and online sites, including NBCOlympics.com. Toshiba will also launch a Web site, www. Toshibaxde.com, to educate consumers.

For the campaign, Toshiba will be "more on-line than in the past," said assistant VP Maria Repole.

For the point of sales, Toshiba is offering shelf talkers and a demo disk that explains the technology’s benefits and features scenes that salespeople can select to demonstrate each mode, Masses said. The disc doesn’t include a side-by-side comparison because the company doesn’t want to "fake" a comparison, Masses said.

Other features of the XD-E500 include HDMI CEC, DivX video playback, playback of MP3- and WMA-encoded CDs, and JPEG playback.

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Submitted by: Paul Goldberg
2008-19-8 09:37:00 EDT
Location: Maryland
Occupation: -

If Toshiba made a Blu-ray player that had the enhanced DVD features they might have a winner on their hands. The P3 and several other Blu-ray palyers do an excellent job in up converting and e4nhancing DVDs. Also the price of Blu-ray players is dropping and probably during the holiday season they will be near $200. Toshiba again has shot itself in the foot by being too stubborn to support Blu-ray.



Submitted by: Ed Chen
2008-18-8 23:20:00 EDT
Location:
Occupation:

How would this compare with the up-scaling DVD players sold by oppodigital.com. I have the DV-980H and it does work quite well.



Submitted by: S Sutherland
2008-18-8 14:28:00 EDT
Location: Toronto
Occupation: Designer

Jaffrey - there is one Blu-Ray player which does upscale extremely well, but you might not have seen it as I believe it was only in production for 6 months. It's the Samsung BD-UP5000... if you get a chance to see this player performing while hooked to a quality panel, you'll be truly astonished. I'm not sure why Samsung discontinued it since they have no other upscaling player (blu-Ray or otherwise) anywhere close to it's picture quality. The bonus was that this model, in addition to BD and DVD, also includes the capability to play HD-DVD (and there are great deals on remaining movies in this format). The downside is that although the upscaling on the BD-UP5000 is superbe, with unbelievable detail recreation, it did have a tendancy like many Samsung products to crush deeper greys, pulling them to black (I guess to enhance overall contrast) resulting in lost detail in very dark scenes.

When the new Toshiba arrives, it will be interesting to compare the handling of this type of material coupled to a display which also doesn't crush dark scenes; since in many cases, the panels themselves are the greatest contributor to detail loss in darker picture areas.



Submitted by: Discrete Infrared
2008-18-8 09:45:00 EDT
Location: USA
Occupation: Engineer

Toshi*a - you don't even have discrete IR codes and you come up with crap.



Submitted by: Cassius Netzley
2008-18-8 09:43:00 EDT
Location: Indianapols IN
Occupation: Medical Info Sys Analyst

Clearly, none of the folks who have commented have used a PS3 with the newest firmware updates applied as a blu-ray or dvd up-converter.

HDMI 'True' 1080p picture with 29-35 mbit/s stream with lossless true-hd and dts-ma 7.1 or 7.2 options for audio can not be matched by dvd players such as this one. There is absolutely no substitute for data.

Even FIOS from Verizon only outputs HD sources at 18-19 mbit/s . Comcast HD is more along the lines of 12-14 mbit/s (depending on the QAM alottment). Over the Air (OTA , think rabbit ears) only yields 1080i (but still beautiful and free)

If you think blu-ray is a passing technology, wake up. They are coming into'ing tech to produce 50-100 layer blu-rays..meaning terabyte capacities within the future.

Streaming depends upon fiber being strung across the US to mimick EU and Asian countries in their internet backbones. We need 100/10 mbit type connections to exploit the 'true' HD out there that is being captured (think batman:dark knight imax cameras)

Even blu-ray is a compressed HD feed... just something to think about.

Please, before dismissing, try a PS3 w/ a Samsung, Sharp or Sony set w/ Blu-ray Planet Earth or Apocalypto and hook up a AVR unit an 7.1 or 7.2 audio and tell me there isn't a true cinematic experience at your fingertips within you own home.

Hello blu-ray (and good tech to compliment the player) and a farewell wave to movie theaters (aside from IMAX)

Inform yourself, www.avsforum.com

Notice what player (when they had no limits on money) this group of video experts use for their demo setup?

h**p://www.soundandvisionmag.com/installations/2916/criterion-remastered.html

Blu-ray is NOT the next laser disc. The audio alone speaks volumes over downloadable/streaming/broadcast content.



Submitted by: David Mule
2008-18-8 09:31:00 EDT
Location: usa
Occupation:

This will be awesome! If it actually works that is.
Gotta say new movies (National treasure 2 for example) look good upprocessed, if this take takes it beyond what the best dvd player can do now it will sell in a very big way. And not just for movies for TV shows and other older DVDs that don''t look that good on the new HDTVs.

I own a bluray player and it does look nice, well better than nice, but I don''t use it as often as my dvdplayer becasue it doesn''t do any where near the job upprocessing and it is slow starting up. Other problem with bluray is not every new movie will play and sometime the menu is a pain to navigate. these issues will probably be fixed when I get a new player but feel I''ve been burned by this one already and don''t plan to buy another bluray player until the prices drop to the basement.

This new DVD player on the other hand has me excited, not becasue it will be as good as bluray, or nearly, but becasue it will breath new life in my expansive dvd collection. I''ve been collecting DVDs since 1998, it would be nice to have some of the DVDs I bough 10 yeas ago look as better today then back then. Essentially getting more use out of something I invested a lot of money in for a relatively cheap price.



Submitted by: Paul Henry
2008-18-8 09:28:00 EDT
Location: South Amboy, NJ
Occupation: Software Engineer

I don't think people realize how unlikely it is for streaming movies to make any real progress right now. There are *large* areas of the US where broadband access is not available (I'm in the tri-state area and I know of areas that don't get broadband... so its not only the midwest). Also, ISPs are already overextending their systems. They offer unlimited access yet if everyone actually started using that access, they can't support it. The issue with streaming is that you'd greatly increase how many people are actually actively using the connection, thereby destroying quality of the connection. In response to iTunes offering movies, ISPs already started talking about going to a pay for use system. Now with Netflix and the possibility of streaming media taking over DVDs, its almost a given they'll go for that. When the subject came up, the talk was averaging out to about $2 or $3 for movies on iTunes, which isn't even near HD quality. A majority of people will *not* switch from HD to streaming. Plus, with streaming you don't own a copy of the movie. You'll be required to watch it on your computer or your approved tv set (if you don't have a new tv at this time, chances are it won't be approved in fear of pirating). So, streaming takes away place-shifting, time-shifting, adds cost, and removes quality. All it adds is the benefit of not having to wait for the mail or go pick it up yourself, nor do you have to store it.

Streaming is *not* taking over DVDs anytime soon.



Submitted by: Steve
2008-18-8 08:37:00 EDT
Location: USA
Occupation: Hardworker

I think mostly this is going to be something that the cheap person that wants 1080 at it's best will buy. I do not think that this is something that the true movie goer will even bother with. I know I am going with the first post. Waiting for that streaming video so that I do not have to worry about mailing or dropping off that movie.



Submitted by: CanDoCrew
2008-18-8 08:24:00 EDT
Location: USA
Occupation: Marshmallow Architecture

Murphy Law, you're missing the point. Your Blue-Ray player is also 'throw-away' technology. Many people just need something to improve the look of their DVDs so they can avoid what is going to be a short-lived technology in BD, and skip over to streaming formats and media... be honest here, discs in general are going extinct, why hop onto the 'new disc' format when you can make the old one last until the entire segment dies away?



Submitted by: Jaffrey Ali
2008-18-8 08:23:00 EDT
Location: Washington DC
Occupation: Software Product Management

The problem with Blu Ray players is that they take a long time to start up (often 30 seconds or more) and takes a long time to start playing the movie. Once the player starts up and I insert the disk it can take up to a minute to start up.

Also, I am yet to find a Blu Ray player that upconverts well. I believe they do that on purpose. I would highly recommend anyone who buys a Blu Ray player to buy it for it's Blu Ray features only. As DVD Players they are very poor - often worse than even $50 DVD players. Unless you get the uber expensive Denon player.

Overall, depending on how good this product turns out to be, Toshiba may have a winner yet! The goal will be for Toshiba to get this technology licensed to as many hardware vendors as possible.




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