CNET editors' review
- CNET editors' rating: stars Good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 06/26/2002
- Updated on: 01/11/2010
High-maintenance unit
The DVD953's attractive, silver face is largely empty on the left and has just the correct number of controls on the right, including a dimpled circle pad to operate the menu. In contrast, the tiny remote feels chintzy and poorly designed. Its closely spaced, nonbacklit keys resemble one another too much to allow easy navigation by feel, and buttons for eject and forward-/reverse-scan are missing.
As noted, a couple of oddities mar the 953's interface. To scan, you must hold down the Skip button, which is a real pain since the controls respond slowly and tend to engage chapter skip by mistake. Inexplicably, when we held down the Stop button for a few seconds while testing whether the player would eject, the 953 switched from progressive-scan to interlaced mode! The stripped-down system menus look simple, but their lack of comprehensible icons or explanatory text will confuse inexperienced users.
Features, useful and otherwise
Philips gave the DVD953 a modest feature set by today's standards. The deck handles MP3 and High Definition Compatible Digital playback and includes a Dolby Digital analog 5.1-channel output. The last feature is hardly useful since almost all 5.1-channel receivers have digital inputs, and the 953 cannot play Super Audio CD or DVD-Audio (DVD-A) discs.
Loading an MP3 CD causes a playlist to appear onscreen with the first 14 characters of each song's filename. Playback order is easy to program, although the 953 can't play an MP3 CD in random order. This Philips handled all of our MP3 CDs, as well as finalized DVD-Rs and DVD+Rs, but it wouldn't accept either of the rewritable DVD formats.
The 953's connections consist of outputs for 5.1-channel analog audio, optical digital audio, A/V and S-Video, and component video. You won't find a coaxial digital output, so there's one less hookup option for your A/V receiver. Also, you can't output both S-Video and component video simultaneously; instead, there's a little selector switch to activate either. Continue reading
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