Sunday, 15 March 2009

Bravia 5.1 HD Home Theatre Micro System Ultra Compact, S-AIR Air Station CompatibleSony Intro HT-IS100

Sony have announced their new HT-IS100 Bravia Theatre Micro System which
serves to distinguish itself on account of its extremely compact
speakers, each measuring 'roughly the size of a gold ball'
(incidentally, the very same micro speakers included with Sony's HT10),
whilst offering all you'd expect from a Sony home theatre system such as
5.1 channel sound, three 1080p HDMI inputs, Digital Cinema Auto
Calibration (DCAC) and, naturally, Bravia Sync.Offering 5.1 channel
sound with 450W RMS of power and a subwoofer with integrated 32-bit
S-Master digital amplifier, Sony's new HT-IS100 Bravia Home Theatre
Micro System sports Sony's Digital Cinema Auto Calibration (DCAC) -
which serves to simplify setting up your surround sound system with the
push of a button by automatically adjusting speaker frequency, distance
and level - as well as a Dialogue Audio Enhancer with night mode and
updated Portable Audio Enhancer feature which 'improves the clarity and
depth of digital audio devices connected to the system by adding
information to the audio signal that had been removed during
compression'.As far as expandability is concerned, Sony's HT-IS100
Bravia Theatre Micro System has a raft of options available including a
Digital Media Port adding control, networking and connectivity options
for music playback through various accessories, an iPod cradle, a
Network Walkman cradle, a PC client capabilities and a Bluetooth adapter
(each being sold separately).Sony's HT-IS100 Bravia Theatre Micro System
is set to become available from July from Sony Style stores and will
retail for around $700 though, unfortunately, at the time of writing,
the only decent imagery to be released concerning the HT-IS100 is the
above image which, whilst undoubtedly serving to lend scale to the
HT-IS100’s micro speakers, offers little insight as to the actual
units appearance. Perhaps we'll get additional imagery later, featuring
a watermelon, probably.

Sony

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