Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Onkyo CD-D1: mini HiFi with iPod and Wireless PC Connectivity

For those with an iPod, lots of MP3s and yet a finer taste in audio, here's Onkyo's latest bookshelf system, the CR-D1, which comes with an iPod dock and a module to stream music from your PC to the system wirelessly. The system pumps out the goods via a 60W x 2 VL Digital amp with a Wolfson DAC and has the regular CD player, FM tuner, optical and RCA outputs, subwoofer and headphone outputs. Out exactly one month from now for around Rs. 40,000 if you neglect the duty and other taxes.

Sony's new HDD-based NetJuke Hi-Fis

I remember the times when we would all go gaga over integrated stereo systems with gimmicks such as 'DJ sound effects' and the like. The audience for such extremely consumer audio systems may have reduced slightly as more and more people become aware of the benefits of component systems, but it’s still a huge market and any innovation in that space is sure to catch the consumers attention. Take for example, the new NetJuke line of Hi-Fis from Sony. These do your regular CD playback, MD playback and pretty fancy lights, but they also integrate a hard drive into which you can rip music from your CDs into MP3 or ATRAC on the HDD, so you don’t have to be too old school with the discs. They also support AnyMusic, so you can download tracks directly from the online service if you’re in Japan.

The NetJukes also come with a 4.3-inch color display, an optional WiFi adapter that connects via USB and around a massive 3,50,000 pre-loaded CD infos from Gracenote CDDB. The NAS-M90HD with a 250GB drive will sell for around Rs. 37,500, the NAS-M70HD with an 80GB drive will sell for around Rs. Rs. 30,000 and the MiniDisc-deprived NAS-D50HD will go for around Rs. 24,500. Ah, what I wouldn’t have done to get my hands on one of these if I was in school right now.