Samsung DVD-1080P9 1080p Upconverting DVD Player

Features :
- 1080p Up-conversion
- HDMI-CEC compatible
- Multi-format playback: DVD, DVD +/- R, DVD +/- RW, CD, C-R/RW, MP3, WMA, JPEG, DivX, MPEG4
- Progressive Scan
- Dolby Digital
Product Description
See your existing DVD collection as you never have before. With Full HD 1080p Upscaling you get sharper, clearer pictures than you have ever experienced with DVD. Playback Media: DVD, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, CD, CD-R, CD-RW Playback Formats: MP3, WMA, JPEG, MPEG-4, DivX Progressive Scan HD Upconversion: 720p, 1080i, 1080p USB 2.0 HDMI Output Component Video Output Composite Video Output Coaxial Digital Audio Outputs Dimensions: (WHD) 16.9 x 1.9 x 8.11 In…. More >>
Price : $62.00 –
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I have no problems with a 42″ Samsung LCD HDTV and a Panasonic Blu-Ray DVD Player purchased a year ago from Amazon. So I purchased a 32″ LN32B540 TV and then this Upconverting DVD plater from Amazon for the bedroom. I chose the Samsung player hoping to take advantage of the Anynet+HDMI feature and make it easier for my wife to watch DVDs(Less buttons to push). Found that the 32″ Samsung LCD TVs do not show the Anynet function. Although I learned through the AVS Forum that users have been able to activate Anynet on my set by using the service menu, providing the codes. After fruitless contacts with Samsung service, I was warned that the feature was not available and told that “if I tried to use the service menu, my warranty would be voided!” Additionally when I tried to follow the manual’s instructions for hooking up my VCR player, but only to view VHS tapes, not record, as I successfully did on my 46″ set,in that case, Samsung support, after some research, relunctantly admitted the manual was incorrect, and the 32″ set would not accept the VHS signals. Very poor responses and attitude of Samsung support, considering their generally excellent product line.
Rating: 2 / 5
We have a Samsung 1080p HDTV so this player was a natural fit. The picture is awesome and the sound is great, but we are a really lo-tech family. The part I have found I don’t like is the relationship established between the player and tv. It seems like if you watching tv and look at the dvd player wrong, the tv will switch to dvd. It really doesn’t take much to switch to dvd. Then to watch tv again, it has to break the relationship (not instantly). Maybe I’m just one of those idiots that doesn’t read the owner’s manual!
Rating: 4 / 5
Well, this DVD player got good reviews, so I was disappointed. Maybe it has all the flashy things for the techies, but I’m not interested in that. I just want a humble DVD player that does its job simply and with little fanfare.
It does perform its most basic job–playing DVDs–flawlessly. But as for other “features,” I have some burning questions. For instance, why in God’s name is there that terrible high pitched “music” when it is cueing up? It hurts my ears! And speaking of cueing up, why does it take so long to cue up in the first place? I keep wondering if something has gone wrong, and then finally the movie appears. And why in God’s name do English subtitles come up every time I turn it off mid-movie and then come back to it? And why doesn’t it hold its place when I’m watching the extras, e.g. the commentary?
Perhaps all of these questions could be answered and the problems solved if I read the manual. I did try reading the manual to solve the problem of it not holding its place when I shut it off mid-extra, and there is something about “bookmarking” written there, but I tried it and was not able to figure it out and make it work.
If I knew these things about this DVD player before I bought it, I would have chosen another one. Be forewarned.
Rating: 3 / 5
This is as good of a product as I expected from Samsung. Love the integration with the software on my Series 6 46″ Samsung LCD.A good value.
Rating: 4 / 5
I don’t know where to begin. I was disappointed with this product from day one, and now after 6 months its in the landfill. First, the buttons on the remote would have to be pressed 1,2 or 3 times before the device would respond. Second, sometime it would refuse to turn itself on or open up and I’d have to unplug it for a minute before it would work again. But it was the third thing that did it in when while watching a movie a neon green snow storm took over the image and persisted without end. Maybe the thing can be of some good to someone who is mining old electronics for gold.
Rating: 1 / 5