All Reviews > Hardware > Storage > DVD/Optical drives > External DVD drives
December 25, 2008
Product Code: BDPS350
Any way you look at it, the Sony BDP-S350 is an excellent Blu-ray player. It's well designed and easy to use. It supports high-end Blu-ray features such as BD-Live. And it produces good-looking images.
The judges in our Test Centre evaluation graded the Sony BDP-S350 with a mixture of Good and Very Good scores, with the Very Goods seeing a slight edge.
See also: Group test: top 5 Blu-ray Disc drives
See also: It's going to be a blue Christmas for Blu-ray
When the Sony BDP-S350 upconverted DVDs to 1080p, we thought it provided better colour than the Sony PlayStation 3 did. We weren't quite so impressed with how it handled colours from Blu-ray discs, feeling they were duller compared with what we saw from the PS3 in The Searchers and Mission: Impossible III, and just a tad off in Cars.
We thought the Sony BDP-S350 gave better gray and black detail in Good Night and Good Luck, where there was no colour at all.
But another judge disagreed, saying that Good Night lost some of the detail in the blacks, and that the reds and greens were a bit off in Cars. Even so, we have to say that the images were pleasing overall; if you don't have another player side-by-side with it as we had, you're unlikely to notice these things.
This is the cheapest player we've seen with BD-Live, which lets you access supplemental content on some discs via the internet. Like all BD-Live players, the Sony BDP-S350 has USB and ethernet ports. But in this case the ports are limited to their BD-Live capabilities (and firmware updating via ethernet) - no Netflix or multimedia capabilities, here.
The USB port is mounted on the back, a bit of an inconvenience considering you have to bring your own USB drive to use the BD-Live functions. Another boon: the Sony BDP-S350 can decode high-resolution Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio soundtracks. That means you can enjoy the benefits of those soundtracks, even if your amplifier doesn't support the formats.
Visit Digital World for the latest home entertainment and digital audio news and reviews
Admittedly we have never liked the Crossbar menu found on current Sony TVs and PlayStations. We find it pretty, but difficult to work with due to the limited amount of options it puts on the screen at one time. But we like the one here, probably because Blu-ray players have inherently simpler menus than TVs or game consoles do. The menu also includes useful explanations as to what the features are for. The remote control is well designed, and it felt comfortable in my hand, although it is neither programmable nor backlit.
Sony's original Blu-ray player, the BDP-S1, was poky at loading and navigating discs. The Sony BDP-S350, now a third-generation player for Sony, is a far cry from that model. The deck is reasonably responsive to commands from the remote; in our tests, it loaded a Blu-ray disc in a respectable 63 seconds. We noted a slight lag when pausing, and a longer one when skipping chapters.
Sony BDP-S350 scored:
8.9 out of 10
Excellent image and sound quality, superb value for money.
Will not decode DTS 5.1
Excellent picture quality, Ordinary Dvds are upscaled to 1080p and look just as good.
Firmware is out of date but can be updated easily via ethernet connection, or if you register on the sony site you can download and burn your own upgrade disc.
|
£177 | |
|
£180 | |
|
£189 | |
| Prices, delivery and availability at 3 retailers | ||
Submit to:Digg
Slashdot
Del.icio.us
Reddit
Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?
% of PC Advisor readers agree with you
Which parts of the desktop PC/laptop experience can't you get on your smartphone?
Follow the conversation at @SmartphoneFocus
web browsing, search facilities, voip, email, word processing everything RT @Graham_D_C
Mainly email but getting better at spreadsheets etc, RT @IDGdan
Question of the day!
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?