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NeuNeo HVD2085 1080p Upconverting DVD Player
I must admit I, and I assume you, had never heard of this company before this review. The boss (Maureen Jenson) had been talking with them and had a review sample sent to our studio. I didn't find that part out until later. As far as I knew, this product quietly and unceremoniously just showed up. Its plain, unlabeled brown box was so nondescript that it lay unnoticed for several days. Had we not been clearing space to make room for the six RPTVs from the Face Off we had just finished (see our February 2005 issue), who knows how long it may have sat there. I opened the box to check out what it was, and my eye caught what your eye surely caught when you read the headline above: 1080p. As I investigated further, this DVD player only got cooler.
You want this… don't you?
What does this all mean? Well, if you are one of the lucky few who owns one of the two 1080p TVs presently available that actually accepts 1080p (both made by Hewlett-Packard), you can supply them with their native resolution (and they look much better when you do). For those with slightly older TVs, the HVD2085 also scales to 720p and 1080i. If you have a slightly older HDTV that has a DVI input that doesn't have HDCP, then you can use this player to scale your DVDs with just a simple HDMI-to-DVI cable or adapter. If you have an even older HDTV with no digital inputs, this player will output all resolutions on it's component output as well, (without any lame copy-protection crap). It is, quite literally, an upconverting DVD player for everyone. If you're not impressed by all that, you have no soul.
But does it work?
Performance with 480i isn't great. The gamma is a little messed up, so it crushes blacks. Really, though, who cares? Why would you buy an upconverting DVD player for 480i? With 480p and up, the gamma is fine, though it still doesn't pass PLUGE. All that means is it will be a little harder to set your brightness control correctly. Frequency response with 480i and 480p is about average. It rolls off some, but no more than most DVD players. Again, this isn't all that relevant. Flip the resolution switch (OK, button), and everything changes. Here are your resolution choices: 480i, 480p, VGA, 576p, SVGA, 720p, XGA, SXGA, 1080i, 1080p. All that's missing is 1,280-by-768. The VGA output maxes out at 1,280 by 1,024 and doesn't provide the actual HDTV resolutions. All the resolutions are available from both the component and HDMI outputs. Smartly, if you select a resolution that your TV can't accept, pressing the HD button on the remote will cycle back to lower resolutions, even in the setup screens. In an A/B comparison with the V, Inc. Bravo D2 at 720p, the NeuNeo seems to be ever so slightly less detailed, but it's so close, it's difficult to say. The NeuNeo has a much cleaner image with less noise. The colors are a little subdued, but not badly.
To a screeching halt…
I couldn't get the audio to work over HDMI, so stick with coax or optical. Depending on when you buy it, you may need to update its firmware to play 1080p via HDMI. As long as you have a CD burner in your computer and know how to use it, this process is brainlessly simple. As I mentioned earlier, quite possibly the coolest feature on the HVD2085 is the Easy Play feature. This bypasses all the normal crap (including the FBI warnings) that choke down the normal insert-to-play disc times. The HVD2085 finds the movie on the disc and starts playing it. I can't promise this will work with every disc, but it worked with every disc I tried. It is probably the HVD2085's least flashy feature, yet the one you'll appreciate the most. You probably won't be able to find the HVD2085 in a store. At the moment, you can find it at Neodigits.com
Almost Awesome
• 1080p on HDMI and component! • No region coding • No HDCP
Article Continues: At A Glance & Ratings »
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