Blu-ray means incredible full-HD images, breathtaking sound and 5x the data capacity of DVDs. Now Blu-ray means something else too: an entirely new movie-viewing experience, made possible by Final Standard Profile, which adds features never seen before, like four Picture-in-Picture modes including Enhanced Commentary (from directors and actors), Backstage Pass, Peek Behind the Animation and Audio Mixing.
Combining a PHL Reference Chroma Processor with advanced P4HD (Pixel Precision Progressive Processing) imaging technology, the Panasonic DMP-BD30K Blu-Ray DVD Player utilizes UniPhier to reproduce crisp, natural colors. In addition, the DMP-BD30′s HDMI output is Deep Color compatible, with 4,096 steps of gradation for even smoother, finer-quality images so you can experience movies just the way they were meant to be experienced. The convenient SD card slot on the DMP-BD30 allows easy viewing of hi-def videos and photos on your HDTV. Videos shot with a Panasonic HD camcorder are output in their original 1920×1080 resolution, while still images taken with a Panasonic Lumix digital camera are up-converted and output in 1920×1080 resolution.
Technical Details
* Final Standard Profile Blu-ray Player (BD-ROM Profile1 version 1.1)
* 1080p output: 24p/60p via HDMI v1.3 with Deep Color
* Up-conversion of standard DVDs to 1080p Playback
* Dolby True HD Decoder, DTS/DTS-HD High Resolution/Master Audio Decoder
* Pixel Precision Progressive Progressing for HD
Customer feedback:
1. Being a relative novice to hi-def video, as well as format neutral, it’s hard to review this type of product without dragging compared products in, but I’ll try. I can say right off that Panasonic has taken the sting out of the higher price of Blu-Ray players with a good offering of features you won’t find in the, um, more reasonably priced choice. Not the least of which is performance. After a bit of research, I went with Panasonic due to positive reviews and how I feel about the Panasonic name, which has been associated largely with video, unlike other manufacturers who try to spread themselves across a wider variety of products. It was a good call on my part, as things turned out.
2. Being a previous Sony BDP-S300 owner, I found some important advantages with the Panasonic. It may not be that important overall, but the Panasonic loads in about half of the time that the Sony player does. It has a sleek look with a drop down panel that exposes the disc slot. The Panasonic plays all the current audio formats such as Dolby Digital TotalHD which many of the older player do not. Of course, you need a current receiver to play these newer formats.

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