Portable DVD Players: Nakamichi Lumos
[Archived in Entry]
[Go Play AV: Portable Audio, Video, Media and Game Players] If you’ve been looking for a portable DVD player that’s a little more stylish than the usual fare, you may want to head down to your local Nakimichi distributor to check out the company’s new 7-inch Lumos with its “jewel polished, sensuous black frame.” We have to admit that this slot-loading model does look rather sensuous, and is all the more appealing when you find out that it supports both DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW discs, MP3 and photo CDs, and even images and movies straight from your digital camera, thanks to the built-in SD slot.
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[Blogdigests.com] Blog Digests | Tags: home entertainment: We have to admit that this slot-loading model does look rather sensuous, and is all the more appealing when you find out that it supports both DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW discs, MP3 and photo CDs, and even images and movies straight from your digital camera, thanks to the built-in SD slot.
[Davecentral.net] Nakamichis stylin Lumos portable DVD player - davecentral Planet ...: If youve been looking for a portable DVD player thatsa little more stylish than the .new 7-inch Lumos with its “jewel polished, sensuous black frame.
[Beanrocket.com] Bean Rocket Feed: Engadget: Despite recent comments by a Foxconn spokesperson that Apple had already investigated and found no problems with the Chinese factory that has come to be known as "iPod City," BusinessWeek is reporting that the probe is still in fact underway, with an Apple representative reiterating that the company takes "allegations of noncompliance very seriously." According to spokesperson Steve Dowling, Apple is in the midst of a "thorough audit" of the Hon Hai-owned plant, which had recently admitted to breaking labor laws concerning overtime, but which continues to deny other allegations contained in the original Daily Mail exposé. Specifically, Dowling says that the auditors are looking into "employee working and living conditions," conducting interviews with workers and their managers (separately, we hope), and generally making sure that the factory lives up to a supplier code of conduct that supposedly "sets the bar higher than accepted industry standards." This is all very good news indeed, but now Apple faces yet another hurdle in the form of a jaded public highly skeptical of corporate-speak, meaning that whether the investigation turns up violations or not, the company may still have a hard time convincing folks to accept the auditors' final verdict.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, DVD+Players, DVD Player News
Posted at July 02, 2006 03:37 AM