At the top of the range of JVC's latest Home Theatre-in-a-Box packages, the TH-S9 features omni-directional floor standing speakers, plus a DVD player with PAL progressive scan and an SD/MMC card slot.
All JVC Australia reviews
NEC Australia announced on Thursday its new range of home cinema displays at the CEDIA expo on the Gold Coast, which includes six new LCDs and a high-definition 50-inch plasma.
At the CEDIA 2007 Expo on the Gold Coast last week, home theatre systems distributor Mareor demonstrated projector screens that aim to bring the cinematic experience into the home.
As you're drooling over the latest sexy plasma or LCD TV, don't forget that you'll need surround sound audio to get a full home cinema experience.
How do you set up a home entertainment system in odd shaped rooms?
Trips to the cinema: laughably old-fashioned or still a good night out? We put the home against the multiplex in this week's episode.
Our quick guide helps you identify the key features that matter most when shopping for a projector.
Whether you want to buy a home-theatre in a box or go the components route, you'll need to decide which way is best for you right from the start.
If you're feeling surrounded by questions instead of ambient sound, you've come to the right place. We have suggestions on how to shop for everything surround, from receivers to speakers to full home-theatre systems.
Hi, sorry to ask what must be a stupid question, but what does a receiver actually do? We're looking at buying the Pioneer 7th gen 42" plasma, and need to buy the accompanying equipment. We just didn't expect to spend almost the same amount on a receiver! Is it worth the investment? I had thought the speakers were the most important in making the most out of a home entertainment system?
Appreciate any help or guidance you can offer.
There's more to Windows Vista than file structure and graphics engines.
Eliminate some of those pesky cables from your surround-sound set up with these "wireless" home cinema systems.
Make your old Mac feel new again.
You've finally taken the plunge and invested in a large screen TV, but found out pretty much straight away that the sound is thin and not deserving of the term "home theatre". So where to next?
Did you love Laserdisc? Were you bonkers over Betamax? Do you cry yourself to sleep because BeOS never hit the big time? Fret no more -- superdork Captain Tech is here to travel back in time and save the format losers that should have triumphed.
CES 2008 has wrapped for another year, and so CNET.com.au looks over the tech and the products we will be using in the years to come.
Create macros and control your cinema and audio visual equipment at home.
Burn your video files on CDs or DVDs.
Organize and browse videos, view images and DVDs, and play audio CDs and MP3s.
Convert and burn AVI, DivX, WMV, and MPEG videos to DVD disc.
Archive, manage, and watch your entire movie collection.