So being able to record HD from a cable provider onto the DVR in this unit and also being able to record those programs onto HD-DVD discs and retain the 1080i video and Dolby Digital audio would obviously make me very happy. I can, of course, use the S-Video or composite output and the analogue audio outputs and record onto a DVD using a DVD burner, but doing so obviously means 480i video and stereo analogue sound. There is no way for me to record my cable HD broadcasts onto disc and retain the 1080i resolution and Dolby Digital audio. I have little doubt that this unit will work for over-the-air HD broadcasts, but what about cable and satellite? So far, with my cable provider, the only way I can record HD is using the PVR that they sell. The real question to me is all about being able to record HD broadcasts. While complete details and specs would be needed before making a buying decision (like can it burn to double layer DVD-9s? Can it only burn HD-DVD-R or can it also burn HD-DVD-RW? Double layer? Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD bitstream output? DTS-HD internal decoding? PRICE? etc.) this is an interesting product. A formal review may or may not follow in the future. Unless otherwise indicated, this is a preview article for the featured product.
Pricing and availability are still in flux, but based on the competition this player/recorder should really be ready in time for Christmas. The player/recorder also has an internal 160GB hard drive and can store up to ~40 hours of HD material.
Obviously, the RD-RX7 is a formidable HD DVD player as well, so you won't need to pick up a dedicated unit just to play back your HD DVDs. The player outputs up to 1080p/24/60 out its HDMI port and HDMI 1.3 with Deep Color is supported along with all the latest audio formats like Dolby TrueHD. With that said, why exactly do we need a new HD DVD format again? Just kidding - life would be so boring without an industry-wide format war. These special DVDs will not be playable on regular DVD players, so remember that if you think you're going to be able to record something and hand it over to someone else when you are done with it. You can thank MPEG-4 and some fancier laser technology for that. The unit can upconvert MPEG-2 standard DVDs to its HDMI output and transcodes MPEG-2 to AVCHD MPEG-4 on the fly.Ĭonsidering that the HD DVD media nets around 6 hours of video on a single-layer HD DVD-R disc, this isn't too bad at all. The way it does this is through a proprietary format that squeezes 2 hours of "HD" material onto that regular DVD. What makes it truly unique is that it has a special mode allowing users to record HD video to standard 4GB DVD-R/RW/RAMs. The recorder features the ability to write to HD DVD recordables as well as DVD-Rs. If you thought the format was was confusing, consumers are in for a surprise when Toshiba releases its new HD DVD recorder dubbed the RD-RX7.