Archive | Tech reviews

An archive of the blog's technology reviews. There's also an archive and an A-Z index of all reviews.


June 4, 2008

iTunes UK: pricing on movies for sale and to rent

Posted on June 4, 2008 | Post a comment |

The iTunes film rental service

Ooh look. The UK iTunes store has just got round to releasing movies that you can either buy or rent then play on your computer, iPod, iPhone or Apple TV. Pricing is £3.49 to rent a new release, £2.49 for an old release; to buy a new release costs £10.99, while an old release costs £6.99. All prices include VAT.

File size for a 2h20 movie is about 1.6GB so best not to try this if you have capped broadband. Not sure if you can watch something while it's still being downloaded in iTunes, but if you have an Apple TV – which is starting to become even more attractive by the minute, particularly since at least some of the movies (eg Into The Wild) will be in high def on it if you pay £1 extra – you should be able to start watching within a couple of minutes of purchase. 

As far as I can work out, you've 48 hours to watch a rented movie once you've started playing it – and 30 days to start playing it in – and you can watch it as many times as you like in that 48 hours. But if you don't make it through to the end of the movie in that time, you'll still have the option of carrying on to the end of the movie – or deleting it.

That concludes the commercial break.

Not sure how keen I am on the pricing - cheaper to buy the DVD almost. And there's not a lot of great stuff in there yet, unless you count the older movies like Batman Begins and The Matrix. But indie stuff like The Darjeeling Limited is due any moment now, and as we learnt from the Music Store, what's in there when it opens is always a lot, lot less than a few months down the line.

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March 17, 2008

Review: Philips DVP 5960

Posted on March 17, 2008 | 5 comments |

The Philips DVP 5960

There's a saying that “technology begets technology”.

I know this because I made it up a minute ago.

I used to have a 21“ 4:3 TV that I bought ex-rental from Rumbelows for £50. Then, six months later, I bought a DVD player from Woolworths for the princely sum of £150 (oh the extravagance). Being a purist, I insisted on watching movies on it in letterbox format rather than 4:3.

It looked rubbish. So I had to go out and buy myself a 28” widescreen set from Matsui (aka Dixons own brand). As I said, technology begets technology.

This lasted me all of nine years before keeling over and dying in January. So I bought myself a replacement - an HD-capable Sony Bravia 26“ LCD tele. This has a really nice picture when dealing with digital sources connected using an HDMI cable (eg my Apple TV, particularly now I've set it to 1080i 50Hz rather than 720); it has a reasonably fuzzy/crap picture with analogue sources (ie anything that uses a SCART cable such as a standard DVD player or a Sky box).

My DVD player keeled over and died on Friday: Davina McCall and the T1000 are to blame. I managed to fix it once, through the manly use of screwdrivers and ”shaking it a bit“, but that little Alba DVD player wasn't coming back from the dead for a second time. Bang goes £17.99 worth of electronics from Sainsbury's straight into the pink ”small household electrical appliances“ recycling bin at Makro on the Greenwich Peninsula.

We therefore had a few choices

  1. Go without a DVD player.
  2. Buy an equally cheap DVD player from Sainsbury's or Argos.
  3. Buy a colossally expensive Blu-ray player
  4. Buy a colossally expensive HD-DVD player
  5. Buy a £50 DVD player with HD-upres capabilities

Which would you have picked?

  1. What are you? Amish?
  2. A reasonable conclusion that would condemn you to another year of slightly fuzzy DVD playback
  3. Interesting call, rich early adopter. They'll be £100 cheaper in a year and the disks are still nearly £30 each. I can wait
  4. Ha ha ha! I've got a Betamax I can sell you if you want
  5. Correct. Technology begets technology and if you have an HD set, you need a DVD player that can upgrade the DVD picture to HD quality.

So we headed off to Argos and bought ourselves a Philips DVP 5960 and HDMI cable for £7 (see what I meant about Curry's overpricing?). Here's our experience so far

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February 28, 2008

Review: iTunes - the Life on Mars download experience

Posted on February 28, 2008 | Post a comment |

So downloads are all the rage now. Big Finish, which makes those Doctor Who audio plays, has set up a downloads service (they still haven't got back to me about those missing extras, BTW, so I'm going to assume you don't get the CD extras with the downloads, making them even less attractive).

The BBC, after doing ever so nicely with its iPlayer, has leapt onto the Apple bandwagon as well by putting various shows onto iTunes, including Ashes to Ashes, Life on Mars, Torchwood and more. I've had little interest in the iTunes TV service until now - cos it's mostly been shows that are rubbish or aimed at kids. But with Stu_N suggesting I was wearing rose-tinted glasses in my recall of Life on Mars, I decided to give iTunes a try and download the first series.

Continue reading "Review: iTunes - the Life on Mars download experience"

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February 18, 2008

Review: Big Finish downloads service

Posted on February 18, 2008 | Post a comment |

Fingers crossed, I'll be giving both Bride of Peladon and Catalyst a listen this week, which might mean I review them as soon as... next week.

However, I thought I'd draw your attention to a couple of things first. Number one is that Big Finish now has a podcast. It's a little bit cringeworthy, but it's worth listening to since you do get advance information and behind-the-scenes explanation. Most notable in that is the first podcast, in which Nick Briggs explains the rationale behind the pricing structure of the downloads service. Did you realise, for example, that the US pricing of downloads is about $7.99? If you can follow Nick's reasoning for that in comparison to the £12.99 charge for the UK (which appears to amount to “they've been paying over the odds for ages now, so now it's the UK's turn”), you're a smarter person than I.

It's also got a blog (of sorts. Guys, have you heard of comments? Permalinks?) which occasionally turfs up a bit of news, too.

I’m also producing the next run of Doctor Who Companion Chronicles, which has been a fantastic experience. I’ve chosen the companions and the writers and come up with eight (yes eight - you heard it here first) stories that I hope will please others as much as they please me. Oooh, I wish I could reveal more. I wish I could tell you who is flying into the country in May to return as a character that was such a pivotal part of my childhood but, sadly, for now you have to guess. Likewise I can’t reveal which one star from the last series is coming back this year.

Let the guessing on that one begin.

Over the weekend, I decided to give the downloads service a try, just to let you all know what it's like. Here were my experiences...

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January 22, 2008

Review: Sony Bravia 26" and EyeTV 3.0

Posted on January 22, 2008 | 2 comments |

Sony Bravia

The New Year brings with it many things, and technology updates - once the Christmas bills have been paid off - is one of them. As it happens, I've updated two things: my TV and Bastard, my PVR. I haven't updated to Sky+ because while I'm just about okay with paying £99 for a new box, I draw the line at paying £60 to have some bloke turn up with it and plug it into an aerial socket.

Anyway, I, in common with a sizeable percentage of SE London, judging by

  1. the number of nice people down at the recycling centre bringing in old TVs and giant cardboard boxes marked “Sony Bravia”
  2. the number of not-so-nice people who have left old TVs and giant cardboard boxes marked “Sony Bravia” lining most of the pavements in the neighbourhood

have bought a Sony Bravia. The reasons for this are threefold. Firstly, my clapped out 28“ Matsui CRT widescreen TV that I bought in 1999 was starting to do an odd thing to the picture. Mathematicians call it an affine transformation, Mac users call it the ”Dock Genie“ effect - everyone else, particularly in SE London, just calls it ”f*cked“.

Secondly, Sainsbury's have been selling 26” Sony Bravias for £349. They don't deliver, so that saves them from WEEE - the gits - but it does make it all a bit cheaper. Everyone else appears to have been going for 40“, but we wanted something smaller than before and less power hungry, so 26” works out well.

Thirdly, the adverts have claymation bunnies in them.

Continue reading "Review: Sony Bravia 26" and EyeTV 3.0"

October 1, 2007

Locate TV goes into public beta

Posted on October 1, 2007 | 4 comments |

The PR woman has been belting on at me for ages to give this a mention, and seeing as today, it's now available to the public rather than just we brave beta testers, I thought I'd finally relent and talk about Locate TV.

It's supposed to be like Google for tele, movies and actors. You type in the name of a film, TV show or actor, and it tells you what the actor's been in, when the next showing of the programme or movie is online or on television (you can tell it where you live and what TV services you have access to) or whether it's available on DVD. You can then embed a little widget in your blog that gives other people access to the equivalent information for their region, etc.

At the moment, it has two problems, apart from a not inconsiderable slowness, IMHO:

  1. The widgets are fugly. Ugh.
  2. It doesn't do a good job of aggregating data into an easily consumable format - true of Google as well, I suppose, but not helpful when you have to keep going back and forth between search results to make sure you've covered all eventualities.

If you do a search for Doctor Who, for example, it gives you 30 results. The first three are

Doctor Who (2005) - TV Series
NEXT ON: Saturday 6th October 12:00pm - UKTV Gold
Time-travelling adventures, following the exploits of the Doctor, aided by his trusty sidekick
Doctor Who - TV Series
Sci-fi adventures with the eccentric Time Lord
Doctor Who - TV Series
A mysterious traveler can visit any point in space and time.

Could have done with them stuck together, I reckon, although the spelling of traveler in the third one suggests an American source, even though it just lists DVDs.

So still a bit wobbly, but could be useful with a bit more smartness in the aggregation logic and a better web designer.

Click to see LocateTV results for Airwolf. Always up to date, always relevant to you.

UPDATE: Stu tells me that a similar - and possibly better - service is available from Bleb. Thanks Stu!

July 4, 2007

Review: Turbo.264

Posted on July 4, 2007 | Post a comment |

Elgato Turbo H.264

It might seem at first, humble reader, from this delightful blog that I am a “thought leader” and “opinion former” of the highest order. In actual fact, I am very easily led.

Case in point: the Elgato turbo.264. I read reviews of it in MacFormat and Macworld and thought to myself “I need one of those!”

The reason for this is simple: Bastard, my PVR, takes forever to export stuff into a format that my iPod or Apple TV can cope with. I record The F-Word, it lasts an hour, and Bastard takes two or three hours to export it at a reasonable video quality. I don't especially want to be leaving my Mac on all night - not very environmentally friendly is it? - so anything that speeds the process up and reduces electricity consumption has to be good.

The Turbo.264 is what I need, apparently. At least, that's what I've been told.

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June 20, 2007

Review: Apple TV 1.2

Posted on June 20, 2007 | 3 comments |

Most people won't care, but Apple today updated its Apple TV device to include YouTube support

YouTube

It also updated it with a couple of other useful extras at the same time. You can now select the appropriate iTunes Store for your country to make sure the “iTunes Top TV episodes” and “iTunes movies” options don't appear unless you're in the US because you can't buy bloody anything from the iTunes Store unless you're in the US.

Apple TV store

You can also sort things by date, which is helpful if you don't name your files properly or the cocking useless Apple TV sorts things out of order.

Date sorted Apple TV

How about a “play stuff that's recorded in some format I might actually have” option, Apple?

May 5, 2007

Review: Miglia TVMax+

Posted on May 5, 2007 | Post a comment |

It'll be going up on the Macworld site soon or appearing in the print mag later, but here's my look at the Miglia TVMax+. Ssh, don't tell anyone. But feel free to ask questions, in case you need clarifications: they're quite technical at Macworld.

Continue reading "Review: Miglia TVMax+"

April 19, 2007

EyeTV now works with Apple TV

Posted on April 19, 2007 | Post a comment |

Bastard, my PVR, works with a program called EyeTV, which is actually rather good. As you may know, I also have an Apple TV, which is growing on me a bit and my wife's starting to like, too, but is still going to be a bit rubbish for most people.

So, joy of joy, Elgato, which makes the EyeTV software, updated it last night to make it AppleTV friendly. Look!

Toolbar

Select a recording, click on the Apple TV button, and EyeTV exports it in the top quality resolution demanded by the Apple TV. You can also set recordings to automatically export to the Apple TV when they've finished.

Export

Note, it's an either/or thing with the Apple TV and the iPod: either you go for something that will play on the iPod and the Apple TV but not at top resolution, or you make it an Apple TV-only export. Curses.

Equally curse-worthy is the fact that EyeTV uses QuickTime (aka “TakingItsOwnSweetTime”) to do the exports. I recorded The Apprentice: You're Fired last night. That's a 1GB file. I started exporting it at 9.03. It's now 10.21 and the blessed thing is only three-quarters of the way through, despite being a half-hour show. It's also 460MB in size already.

Compare that with iSquint, which takes about 45 minutes to do a 60 minute programme, even at full res, and you'll understand the problem. That only does iPod-quality mind, so I've just purchased Visual Hub from the same people. That does full Apple TV resolution, too. I'll let you know how that works out once I've played with it.

As you may also know, I've been sent a Miglia TVMax+ to play with. That records in the iPod/Apple TV's native format, meaning no nasty conversion is necessary. At the moment, it doesn't play nicely with EyeTV (or more accurately, EyeTV doesn't play nicely with it) and comes with some rubbish software of its own. But it does do what it says on the tin, as they say, even if I accidentally used the wrong settings the first time, and couldn't get an episode of America's Next Top Model we'd recorded from the Sky box onto the Apple TV because it was too high a resolution.

More on that when I've played with it some more.

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Asides

  • Tue 18 Nov: Does it count in the CSI: Miami drinking game if David Caruso and Emily Procter are apparently in the same scene together, but they never speak to each other and you never see both their faces at the same time?
  • Sat 15 Nov: The Ascent of Money "sponsored by Cayman Islands". Huh. What's going on there then?
  • Sun 02 Nov: Do you think it's deliberate that Sam's mom in the US version of Life on Mars is called Rose Tyler?
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