Panasonic announced its second-generation DVD-Video recorder, which will be available in stores this October. The unique recorder allows consumers to digitally record high quality, MPEG-2 video on DVD-RAM or DVD-R. DVD-R can be played back in most DVD players. The DMR-E20 will have a manufacturerís suggested retail price of $1,499.95. (The companyís first DVD-Video recorder, model DMR-E10, introduced last year, carried an MSRP of $3,999.95.)The DMR-E20 was engineered to take full advantage of the DVD-RAM formatís capabilities, such as simultaneous playback and recording. DVD-RAM provides a single format for computer and video-based applications. With its vast storage capacity, incredible speed, random access memory, exceptional picture and sound quality, and writing/erasing/rewriting capability, DVD-RAM is highly adaptive to the expanding digital media environment. ìThe DMR-E20 provides a whole new way to enjoy the world of digital entertainment,î said Rudy Vitti, National Marketing Manager for Panasonic Consumer Electronics Companyís Entertainment Group. ìIt not only offers consumers recordability and rewritability, but itís also a practical and flexible way to manage multiple DVD applications.î As the popularity and applications of the DVD format expand, thereís increasing consumer demand for the ability to record high resolution, digital video, and high quality audio onto DVD. The DVD Forum-approved DVD-RAM recording standard answers this challenge, and provides a recordable format thatís compatible with both PCs and a wide variety of digital entertainment products.The DMR-E20 can also record video onto a DVD-R, which can then be played back in a conventional DVD video player.As an optical media format, DVD-RAM enjoys huge advantages over tape media, including random access and rewritability. Recording is activated instantaneously because the user doesnít have to first search for blank space on the disc. Finding and viewing recorded material is fast and easy because thereís no need to search, fast forward, or rewind. The DMR-E20 has a super-fast data transfer rate of 22.16 Mbps, thereby making simultaneous recording and playback possible - a first in the industry.The DMR-E20ís innovative Time Slipô playback function lets users view the recorded portion of an ongoing program from the beginning, while continuing to record the live program in progress. With a VCR, the user would have to wait until the whole program has been recorded in order to view it in its entirety, or else view the ending of the program first and then the beginning. Of course, users can also record a live program while watching any other program thatís been previously recorded on a disc.Finding and viewing recorded material is fast and easy with the unitís Direct Navigator function. Users can instantly access recorded material from an on-screen menu that lists recording dates, times, channels and (user-entered) titles. Moving the cursor and clicking on a listed recording will begin playing a preview of the selection behind the menu. Playback or deletion of the program can begin immediately upon selection. Up to 99 programs can be handled by this system. The Playlist function lets the user perform simple non-linear video editing - such as rearranging the order of scenes, skipping over unwanted scenes, or copying selections - and create custom playlists of favorite scenes on a disc. Users can record up to 12 hours of video on the new, two-sided, 9.4GB DVD-RAM discs. Discs can be played back on a DVD-RAM compatible DVD player - such as Panasonicís DVD-RP91 or DVD-H2000 - or on a PC or laptop computer equipped with DVD-RAM playback capability. Users can also edit their videos on a multimedia computer with video editing/production software. In addition to recording new video content, the DMR-E20 also allows consumers to transfer their favorite VHS tape recordings to space-saving discs. Personal movie libraries and family videos can be archived, preserved, and easily cataloged and accessed. The DVD-Video recorder offers another important advantage - it actually enhances old videos. Thanks to the DMR-E20ís noise reduction processes, input time-base corrector, 3D Y/C separation and 3D DNR, the transferred video is capable of having better picture quality than the analog original. When connected to home theatre components, the DMR-E20 enables consumers to enjoy playback of multiple digital entertainment formats, including DVD-Video, and audio and video CDs. Panasonic will also market DVD-R discs, to be available in stores at the same time as the DMR-E20. Panasonic brand DVD-RAM media is currently available.The DMR-E20 will be available in both black and silver. Panasonic also offers companion DVD-RAM playback products, including the DVD-RP91 DVD-Video and DVD-Audio player, the VDR-M10 DVD-RAM camcorder, and a new DVD-RAM playback-capable portable player to be introduced later this year.For more information about Panasonic Consumer Electronics Company, visit www.panasonic.com/electronics.
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