Thu, 23 Dec 2010
About a week ago, I bought me a new
toy. This being the result of me earning an extra euro pretending to
be a holy man, and wanting to spend some of that money on something
fun.
The speakers that come with the device aren't very good (they're way
too small), but that's nothing that can't be fixed by (eventually)
replacing them. Actually, I already did just that for the front-left and
front-right ones -- I still had some old ones from my previous
installation.
The silly bit about the whole thing, though, was that initially, I
hadn't noticed that you need to configure most equipment to make it emit
5.1 sound, too; just selecting 5.1 sound in the DVD menu usually isn't
enough. Thus, I had been enjoying the added range (what with the
subwoofer), but it dawned on me eventually that the surround didn't seem
to be working properly. Silly me.
Well, nothing that a simple reconfiguration couldn't fix. I've now
been going to my (steadily growing) DVD collection to have a bit more
fun and appreciation in listening to the same movie with a rather more
full sound track. Quite nice.
Having said all that, there's still a few minor things about the
installation that I dislike:
- It isn't just an amplifier; it's an amplifier with builtin FM
radio. In itself, that's great; but for some reason, there's no button
on the remote to immediately switch to the FM radio (there is one for
each of the other inputs). Choosing the FM radio requires me to select
it using the 'input select' button, which goes through all the inputs
one by one. That's a bit cumbersome, compared to the other options.
- The device comes with a dock for an iPhone or an iPod. I don't own
such a device (and I wouldn't want one, either), but I do own
another device, made by samsung, with similar functionality to
an iPod. Yet I can't connect that. Now that's just wrong.
- More importantly than the two above, samsung decided to predefine a
set of groups of connections that go together. E.g., there's four HDMI
connections, three optical ones, and a few analog connections as well.
These have all been pre-assigned to a particular functionality, from
which it is not possible to deviate. E.g., you can configure the device
to have "BD/DVD" come from HDMI1, optical 2, or an analog input, but not
from anything else. Similarly, you can configure the "satellite" input
to come from HDMI2, optical 2, or analog, but not from anything else.
I'd much rather have a setup where you can assign names to ports, and
where you have the ability to disable ports that aren't in use, so that
you could have, I dunno, a 'DVD1' and 'DVD2' (if you have two such
devices), rather than having to remember that 'sat' is actually
'dvd2'.
Other than that, it's a pretty good thing.
/en/life/film
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