| Sony BDUX10S SATA Blu-ray Disc-ROM Drive (Internal) | 
| Brand: Sony Category: CE
List Price: $149.99 Buy New: $119.00 You Save: $30.99 (21%)
New (27) Used (4) from $92.00
Rating: 27 reviews Sales Rank: 2490
Format: Cd Platform: Windows Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Operating System: Windows Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 4.8 x 8.7 nv:Cache Size: 4 MB Transfer Rate: 9MB/s BD Read Speed: 2X DVD Read Speed: 8X DVD Access Time: 170 ms CD Read Speed: 24x CD Access Time: 160 ms Length: 7" Width: 5.25" Height: 1.63" Weight: 1.74 lbs. Load Type: Tray Interface Type: SATA Enclosure Type: Internal Supported Read Formats: CD-DA Supported Read Formats: CD-ROM Supported Read Formats: CD-ROM XA Supported Read Formats: CD-Text Supported Read Formats: CD-Video Supported Read Formats: DVD+R/RW Supported Read Formats: DVD-R/RW Warranty: 1 year limited
MPN: BDUX10S Model: BDUX10S UPC: 027242731790 EAN: 0027242731790 ASIN: B000YJ2QC2
Release Date: February 11, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, sealed, ready to ship within 24 hrs with free tracking, NO shipment to HI, AK, APO / FPO ...
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| Features:
| • | Plays/reads Blu-ray, DVD, and CD's | | • | No writing capabilities |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Marketing description is not available.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 22 more reviews...
Works great, solid quality January 8, 2009 C. Parker (Seattle, WA) When it comes to internal drives and expansion cards, each user's experience can vary widely depending on the system they are working with. I received this item as a gift and installed it on a quad-core desktop with 3gb RAM and an Nvidia 9800GTX video card running Vista ultimate. Initial installation was easy, plug the device in (sata and power cables), boot up, windows installed the drivers in a few minutes. Once you install the included Power DVD software, you are set to go. One beef - a firmware update is available for the drive (has been since spring of 2008, why isnt it pre-installed??). Its probably not critical as the drive worked fine without it, but once I installed the firmware update the drive was not recognized by the computer. Had to switch the SATA cables to get it to work again. Image quality is great, and its also fast at reading the discs - but that depends on a bunch of factors including your processor and video card. If you want TRUE 1080p you need to be sure that you are using a HDCP/1080p compatible video card, cable (HDMI, VGA, or DVI) and screen. If you want Dolby or DTS surround sound, your audio card needs to support it, or at least have a digital pass-through to your receiver (toslink optical output or coax digital output). In summary if you have a high power system that meets all of the blu-ray specs (processing power, high end video card that supports 1080p, high quality 1080p tv/monitor, surround-capable sound card and receiver), this is a great and inexpensive way to get into the Blu-ray game.
Solid brand-name Blu-Ray (BD-ROM) drive, painful setup December 26, 2008 Jeremy Deats 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Installing the drive was a snap, SONY includes all needed cables and even an replacement faceplate which I had to use in order to get this player in my Gateway desktop case. The bundled software is Cyberlink PowerDVD BR Edition. This was a bit disappointing. I was expecting SONY branded software to supply the Blu-Ray playback (their menu system found on the PS3 on their stand alone Blu-Ray disc players is very intuitive). The PowerDVD software cost me about 3 hours troubleshooting. On launch the software detected and downloaded the latest patch, but even after it was installed I would try to play a Blu-Ray movie and I would get an error message "Fail to enable HDPC" right after the FBI warning. This problem turned out to be Blu-Ray copy protection preventing the disc from playing with my hardware. Blu-Ray copy protection is picky about the output source (i.e. video card) and if you have a dual display card or if you're connecting your monitor over DVI (even DVI-I & DVI-D) instead of HDMI the drivers may trigger the Blu-Ray copy protection to block the playback. The solution is to download the latest video drivers for your card, firmware and make sure the PowerDVD application is updated. If you're connecting to your monitor through DVI, make sure your DVI cable is DVI-D or DVI-I and not analog only DVI. After updating to the latest ATI Catalysis drivers everything began working great. Make sure your video card and CPU meet/exceed the minimum requirements before buying.
Mildly recommending to friends as a best bang for the buck December 26, 2008 Ed G (San Jose, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The whole purpose of buying these drives is to watch blu-ray movies. With players now as low as $200, and even $150 when on sale, I would recommend getting a player instead. Here's why: I got the player for a low $79 on black friday. Even with this deal, it's not quite the steal it seems to be. At that price you get the drive and the bundled software. I popped in Transformers blu-ray. There was so much aliasing when running Cyberlink BD. The text and graphics were not as crisp as expected. The problem was the bundled software. You need to upgrade to Cyberlink ultra to get the full graphics as expected from blu-ray. That's another $100. So $79+$100=179. Get a player instead if your purpose is to just watch movies (not read data).
Great player - but with a ton of software updates! December 11, 2008 El Sparquito (VA) After a searching and weeding through a bunch of forums and product reviews, I settled on this player (drive) vs. the LG/LiteOn/Pioneer/etc. It was just bundled with decent software, cables, and has the Blu Ray originator, "Sony," brand name. I just finished watching Narnia (Caspian) and the Sony drive worked FLAWLESSLY. My base desktop media center is a Gateway GT5224. Here are the specs: Windows XP SP2 Pentium D 2.8GHz (4MB cache) - not overclocked! Yes, it runs smoothly! 2GB DDR2 SDRAM memory - added 1GB aftermarket XFX GeForce 8800 GT Alpha Dog Edition Extreme (256MB) video card -sweet! 300GB of free drive space - added 2nd 320GB internal hard drive I am running 1080P (native resolution on my TV) through DVI->HDMI to my Samsung 56" DLP. OK, now for the install pains... I connected the Sony BD drive using the supplied SATA cables. Setup drivers using provided installation CD. Installed Cyberlink using same CD. Immediately, software recognized that an XP software patch was needed to continue. I ran the software patch after downloading it from Cyberlink's site. Reboot. XP recognized new hardware again. Finished self-installation. Reboot. Tried to run the BD and the top half of my screen was clear, but the bottom half looked like a "waterfall". Found new the latest nvidia driver for my card, "178.24 WHQL". Downloaded and ran it. Reboot. My screen size was now skewed wide. Oh, crap - check forums! Found it. Common problem with new driver & DVI-HDMI connection. Using nvidia settings, set screen resolution to 480P, resized screen, and then switched back to 1080P. BINGO! Screen back to normal. Ran Sony BD drive and played Narnia. Cue teary eyes. It was so beautiful! My biggest fear was that my CPU (processor) wouldn't be up to the task, since all I've been reading has lead me to believe the BD drives were CPU intensive not GPU intensive. My video card simply kicks serious butt! Either my case is an anomaly, or Intel is spreading rumors to force people to upgrade their CPUs. Conspiracy??? hehehe Anyway, it looks great, no frame drops whatsoever, and I am one true believer in Blu Ray. I'll never go back to DVDs again! Hope this helps! God bless & Merry Christmas!
Great hardware, broken software - can't play new web-enabled Bluray discs December 8, 2008 Brian Ma (San Diego, CA USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The Bluray player installs great and works right away. Plays OLD Bluray discs just fine - beautiful HD and sound! The critical problem is the software which is required to play discs - it simply will not play many NEW Bluray discs! Out of 3 Bluray discs, it could only play 1 of them! This is a notorious problem that makes your player practically useless without a manual workaround: [..] [...] Ironically, this software problem even exists for the HD DVD version of this software too. The issue is with any disc that contains web-enhanced content (common among NEW Bluray discs). Cyberlink, which makes the PowerDVD software, programmed it so poorly that it actually CRASHES when most certain Bluray discs are inserted. Heroes, Dawn of the Dead, Spiderman, and countless others ran into this problem back in early 2007 because they included new web-enhanced content. When PowerDVD tries to retrieve this content, it simply crashes. You cannot watch any of the movie other than navigate the title menu. PowerDVD also has an automatic update feature for patches. This also fails. Cyberlink simply pretends this problem doesn't exist, so you have to email their support to get a patch - they actually make you promise not to share it! Update: After a lot of pressure, they've finally made the patch public. [...] You'll need Internet Explorer to access this. In summary, the hardware player is excellent. However, it requires you to use PowerDVD to decode Bluray, and that software simply fails. I've been able to play 1 out of 3 Bluray discs so far before complaining to Cyberlink. Sony needs to provide a different Bluray software, or stop locking Bluray discs so only Cyberlink can play them.
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