· Audio/Video
· Business
· Car AV
· Desktops
· Digital Cameras
· Gaming
· Handhelds
· Internet
· Mobile Phones
· Notebooks
· Other
· Peripherals
· Portable AV
· Product of the Week
· Rapid Reviews
· Robotics
· Saturday Statistics
· Site News
· Size Matters
· Software
· Storage
· The CRASH
· Toys
Theme from THEMES.crossworlds.ru

Topic: Sanyo
The new items published under this topic are as follows.
Sanyo and Nokia announced they'd be forming a new company that will focus on the creation of CDMA handsets throughout the world. It's unclear what we should expect at this point as far as actual product offerings go, but given they're saying the new company will be headquartered in Japan and the US, it's safe to guess they'll be releasing handsets in both markets. Nokia's English press release is here, and Sanyo's is here (hint: they're the same press release). According to this image over at Keitai Watch, Nokia holds the #3 spot for CDMA handsets, and Sanyo the #6 spot -- the combined market shares of the two companies puts them at the same level as Samsung, with 20.6% of the market share.
Sanyo's new washing machine converts air to ozone, and uses it to clean your clothes. Apparently this is the first time such technology is used in consumer-level washing machines.
Sanyo's new Xacti DMX-HD1 camera maintains the same form factor as previous Xacti cameras, but kicks the resolutions up to 720p. There's a bit of an added bonus for 5G iPod owners: videos recorded in "Web-HQ" can be transferred to and played from your iPod. Furthermore, the camera can record at 60 frames per second, which I believe is pretty rare for a consumer-level camera. Hubba hubba.
Take a look at these pictures of one of the newest phones to hit the market. On Sale since November 25, 2005
Zuh? Sanyo, one of primary names behind HD-DVD, has announced they're joining the Blu-Ray Disc Associaton.
They said that it "has nothing to do with the question of unifying the HD DVD and Blu-Ray standards," but it sounds to me like they don't want all their eggs in one basket. For a comparatively small company like Sanyo, I think it's the right decision.
Sanyo has made it possible to throw away your micro-cassettes by introducing the world's first HDD voice recorder. It also features an SD card slot and can store images from digital cameras.
Here's Sanyo's new in-car navigation system, the "HD Gorilla." It seems to have a nice collection of features; 30GB hard drive, integrated TV tuner and FM transmitter, and what seems to be the new standard for navigation, 3D maps with realistic textures. It even rips CDs into everyone's favorite compression format, ATRAC, at 8x.
There's no mention of MP3 playback from DVD-R (though it can do CD), nor is there any mention of PC-side synchronization (like Sony's XYZ series).




