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Sony debuts Blu-ray player with built-in wireless networking support

By | March 5, 2009, 6:36pm PST

Summary: I know I’m not alone in not being able to figure out Sony’s strategy from one product offering to the next, and once again I’m scratching my head a bit. At the same time the company is unveiling new networked TVs with Ethernet connections (providing faster speeds but requiring a nearby Ethernet jack or some [...]

I know I’m not alone in not being able to figure out Sony’s strategy from one product offering to the next, and once again I’m scratching my head a bit. At the same time the company is unveiling new networked TVs with Ethernet connections (providing faster speeds but requiring a nearby Ethernet jack or some other workaround like a conversion cable or powerline Ethernet adapter), it’s announcing a new Blu-ray player that comes with built-in wireless connectivity.

New Blu-ray players need some kind of network connection in order to make available the interactive features with which BD-Live (Profile 2.0) discs come, but a number of new players are sporting Ethernet connections for that purpose. It’s unclear why Sony would offer a Blu-ray player with 802.11n Wi-Fi support, but not make it available on its networked HDTVs. The BDP-S560 even comes with networking-friendly features like Wi-Fi Protected Setup and DLNA support for communicating with compatible devices (though only for streaming digital photos on discs played on the BDP-S560 or via a camera or external drive hooked up via its USB port).

The BDP-S560 will be available this summer for $350, though if you don’t care about the network-related features you can save $50 with the BDP-S360, also available in the summer.

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Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist.

Disclosure

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist; currently, all work that Sean does is on a contractural basis. Sean has also written corporate communications documents for CA.

Sean does not accept gifts from companies he covers. All hardware products he writes about are purchased with his own funds or are review units covered under formal loan agreements and are returned after the review is complete.

Biography

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy started his tech writing career at ZDNet nearly a decade ago. He then spent several years as an editor at Computer Shopper magazine, most recently serving as online executive editor. He received a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. from the University of Southern California.
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After reading this article,
robertrduncan@... 9th Mar 2009
I'm starting to feel moist.
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Sony Sony Sony...
lawryll@... 5th Mar 2009
Sony's BlueRay is quickly becoming the poster-child of how NOT to launch a product. First the market was confused by multiple formats. Next we were all confused by the slow, expensive players and media. The final straw was the draconian DRM and hardware costs to even run this.

Now, a few years later we're still confused with the overpriced slow players and media. Features are seemingly random between Sony devices that should have been standardized a year ago. One minute it's wired. The next it's wireless.

All I know is streaming is quickly catching up and DVD's are still "good enough" for 95% of the people out there.

Who is running this circus at Sony? Probably a high-powered executive making millions to associate with their buddies and completely run a product into the ground.

Way to go Sony!
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These days, they spend more time and thought litigating grandmothers and college students via their evil RIAA and MPAA actions than they do on coordinating their product line and innovating. They are a bunch of out-of-touch dinosaurs.

Sony can just go bankrupt, for all I care. I'm not buying anything with a Sony label anymore.

www.boycott-riaa.com
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The price point makes any product with blue ray a poor investment.
There are several cheaper products that play 1080p from a HDD or usb drives.
And the capacity goes into the 1000GB not a mere 25GB on a blue ray disk.
Heck, you can even get the movies free using file sharing today.
You are realy paying a hefty ignorance tax when going blue ray.
Sony is probably positioning themselves to sell online content such as movies/on-demand TV aka AppleTV or Netflix.
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After reading this article,
robertrduncan@... 9th Mar 2009
I'm starting to feel moist.

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