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Sony BDP-S350 Blu-ray Player
More Blu for Your Budget The BDP-S350 is Sony’s follow-up to the popular BDP-S300. One of the most inexpensive standalone players on the market, the BDP-S350 includes some great new features that the BDP-S300 design didn’t have. Sony overhauled its form factor, with a case that’s nearly half the size of the company’s earlier players. The player also employs a sleek new interface that uses Sony’s popular Xross Media Bar. While player prices have not headed farther south yet, the bang-for-the-buck factor is going up, as players at the lower end of the market add more essential features. Sony’s $400 player is BD-Live ready (firmware update pending), Bonus View PiP capable, and includes bitstream support for the next-gen lossless audio formats from Dolby and DTS.
Design
A small display on the right side gives you the basic track and title information during playback. There’s also an indicator light for 24p playback. Right above the disc tray is a white light, which I found a bit intrusive in my bat-cave theater. Thankfully, Sony includes full dimmer control and lets you completely turn off the front panel lighting during playback. Quite a few designs lack this feature, and I’m glad to see Sony include it. The back panel is pretty sparse. It lacks the wealth of connections you typically find on modest to high-end players. The player supports the standard video fare, including HDMI and component connections. But remember, high-definition signals are limited to the HDMI and component outputs. In addition to the HDMI output for high-resolution audio, the BDP-S350 includes TosLink and coaxial digital outputs. Sony limited the analog side to two-channel only. The back panel supports a LAN connection, which lets the player receive firmware updates via a home network.
Sony plans to implement a future update that will upgrade this player to BD-Live compatibility. The BDP-S350 does not have the necessary 1 gigabyte of onboard memory to meet the BD-Live spec. The player includes a USB flash media slot, and you’ll need to purchase flash storage separately to use this function down the line. (You can find flash drives for less than $10.) The included remote is slightly reminiscent of the PlayStation 3 Bluetooth BD player remote in layout, and I liked the ergonomics overall. The remote will also control a TV, with simple controls such as Input, Station, and Volume. The buttons are on the small side, but once I got familiar with the layout, I didn’t find it difficult to navigate—even in the dark.
Setup and Features
While the Xross Media Bar itself is intuitive and simple to use, I didn’t like some of the lingo the Setup menus use. I wish manufacturers would settle on a common terminology for audio/video setup options. Even I, a seasoned tech geek, had to scratch my head a few times wondering what some of the settings meant. I expected them to be nearly identical to the PS3’s settings since the two players use the same setup listings, but I apparently expected too much.
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