View our Product Guide
Electronic House Newsletter   View sample
 
Popular Stories
View Home of the Year '09.
Recent Comments
Jerry (11/21, 06:18 PM)
Tony (11/21, 10:40 AM)
sunlcd (11/21, 10:21 AM)
sunlcd (11/21, 10:20 AM)
ugg cardy boots (11/21, 09:58 AM)
Recent Slideshow Galleries
9 Green (and Great!) TVs Paris Theme Illuminates Home Theater 20 Great Looking Racks DIYer Spends 3 Years Researching Theater 6 Products to Watch for in November The Holiday Gift Guide 2009 20 Leading Flat-Panel TVs 10 Manliest Man Caves The Best Blu-ray Releases of November 7 More Wiring Nightmares Inside Halloween Park’s Haunted House 16 Scary DVDs We’re Waiting for on Blu-ray 17 Scary Blu-rays for Halloween Careful Planning Keeps 12K-Square-Foot Home Running Smoothly N.Y. Yankees Pitchers Dig Home Theater Drastic Theater Reconfiguration Includes Hiding Bay Window
Info and Answers Feature
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
Standby power wastes energy and money, but there are easy ways to save.

Themed Home Theaters
View Designing a Death Star Theater
Designing a Death Star Home Theater
Three separate rooms, one starfield, and a life-sized Han Solo are just a few of the things that help two super "Star Wars" fans get their geek on in this theater.

Site Sections
Services
AV Components
Hands On: Kaleidescape Mini System
The Kaleidescape Mini System is unique thanks to its form factor and storage space, which expands up to 1.5 terabytes.
Kaleidescape Mini System

With a 500-GB hard drive, the Kaleidescape Mini System can hold 75 DVDs or 825 CDs. It has the same user interface, quick content loading and detailed metadata as its big brothers.

Also Filed in AV Components

June 15, 2009 | by Jason Unger

Kaleidescape’s Mini System, one of the company’s latest DVD media servers, is meant to be a starter system for consumers looking for an all-in-one solution.

The system, which imports DVDs and CDs for play without the disc, features Kaleidescape’s slick user interface in a case about the size of a cable box.

I recently checked out the new Mini System, which Kaleidescape shipped to me filled with content from the first season of “Mad Men” to kids’ programming to recordings by Tony Bennett.

System Setup, Features

Setup of the system was simple, requiring only plugging in the power and HDMI cables. The system features:

  • Ethernet connectivity
  • RS-232 control
  • HDMI, Component, composite and S-Video outputs
  • Digital coax, optical and analog stereo audio outputs

If you’ve ever used a Kaleidescape system, or seen one in action, you know about the user interface, quick content loading and detailed metadata. The Mini System has all of that.

Unique Shape, Storage Space

The big difference in the Mini is its form factor and storage space. While it’s rackmountable, it fit perfectly in my home entertainment unit.

The built-in 500-GB hard drive stores up to 75 DVDs or 825 CDs, with expansion spots up to 1.5 terabytes. If you’re like me, with more than 200 DVDs, you’d use this system as an individual zone or expand the storage to hold all your content.

The Mini System, which also plays DVDs straight from the disc, comes with a remote control — Kaleidescape’s first unit to have one in the box.

Content Upscaled to 1080p

The player, as you’d expect, outputs at 1080p. But that’s where my only gripe with the unit lies; since it’s based on DVD technology, all of the content is upscaled to 1080p.

The system offers some native 1080p content built in, and the company’s announced Blue-Laser player promises to playback Blu-ray discs, but not import them. With Blu-ray’s use of Managed Copy, the future of importing true high-definition discs is unknown.

Overall, I loved having a single-component Kaleidescape system to check out. It’s easy to use and setting it up was as simple as plugging in a DVD player. If your customers are HD snobs (like me), the fact that its importing is limited to DVD-quality may be an issue, but if you’re using it in a bedroom or secondary room, it may not matter.

Kaleidescape Mini System
MSRP: $7,995



Article Topics
Article Tags
Popular Tags
Social Bookmark   less


Comments (24) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by Violet  on  10/21/09  at  03:55 AM

Yes it is a perfect solution for movie collectioners or just people who like to watch a lot. From this article it is obvious that it is worth buying. But it seems to me the price is too high. It is difficult to believe that it is real. I believe the added value is too high. Usually when te product is new the producers put a very high price. But it is not always that they win. I’ve read a book about the mobile phone development (found it at the rapidshare <a > http://pdf.rapid4me.com </a> ). First they were extremely expensive but then they got cheaper and cheaper. And it was the right move of the producers. That is why I guess i’ll wait till the prices lower.

Posted by Violet  on  10/21/09  at  03:54 AM

Yes it is a perfect solution for movie collectioners or just people who like to watch a lot. From this article it is obvious that it is worth buying. But it seems to me the price is too high. It is difficult to believe that it is real. I believe the added value is too high. Usually when te product is new the producers put a very high price. But it is not always that they win. I’ve read a book about the mobile phone development (found it at the rapidshare http://pdf.rapid4me.com ). First they were extremely expensive but then they got cheaper and cheaper. And it was the right move of the producers. That is why I guess i’ll wait till the prices lower.

Posted by hampers  on  09/01/09  at  10:11 PM

For the serious buyers, this may seem a perfect find because the features make one say okay in spite the cost. Loved the over-all sleek design and its being mini. A good gift to give now that Christmas is just around the corner.
hampers.

Posted by Jessie James  on  07/25/09  at  09:55 AM

All very well, but can I connect my 12 TerraByte server to this ‘all in one’ unit and will it find my dvd-ripped vob files straight away? or are there blocks to stop you using a non Kalid.. server?

Why the hell would I want to pay $20k for a server I CAN pay $5k for?

I am not a movie star nor rock star nor stupid!

JJ

Posted by Zero  on  07/19/09  at  07:22 AM

I like Kaleidescape system because it is indeed an all-in-one solution. I’ve heard about this system but I haven’t seen one in action yet. Maybe someday I can get a hold of this system, too.

zero


+ View all comments on for this article



Post a Comment

Name:

Email:


View comment guidelines

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please answer the question below:

Type the first letter of the word "stereo":





Learn more about products and solutions from tech companies.
Electronic House magazine's 2009 Best Homes of the Year special.
Electronic House reviews the coolest products of the year.
Visit the Electronic House Ideas store & get more out of your home!

Stay up-to-date with home electronics. Get your print subscription today.
Weekly email offers tips, info and product news.
Subscribe today!
Get the content that's important to you.
More about RSS.
Electronic House is now available in a digital edition. Learn more.
About us Advertise Magazine Newsletters Digital issues EH Publishing Privacy policy Contact us
 Copyright © 2006 EH Publishing. All rights reserved.
EH Network: CE Pro TecHome Builder ChannelPro ProSoundWeb Church Production Electronic House Expo Worship Facilities Expo