Testseek.se har samlat 12 tester av Neuros MPEG-4 Recorder 2 och det genomsnittliga betyget är 68%. Scrolla ned och se alla testerna för Neuros MPEG-4 Recorder 2.
(68%)
12 Tester
Genomsnittligt betyg av experter som har testat produkten.
The Neuros MPEG-4 Video Recorder 2 is a device that lets you record from any video source directly to a Flash memory card, and the files can then be played on an iPod, PlayStation Portable, or most any portable A/V player. The Neuros device is a small...
Sammanfattning: As any power user of handhelds or smartphones (and in this case PSPs and iPods as well) will know, its been possible for ages to convert video clips to play properly on the mobile device. Its not rocket science, but it is a right royal hassle. To go ...
Sammanfattning: How cool would it be to put your storage card into a recording unit, record your TV program, then put the card into your IPAQ and play your recording on your IPAQ? Well I was asked to review a product that did just this, and I jumped at the chance and ...
Sammanfattning: Variety is the spice of life — clichéd but oh so true, especially when it comes to TV. No one wants to watch reruns of 24 on the tube 24/7. Thats just boring, even if the show does kick butt and Jack Bauer is one tough hombre. Fortunately, cable, s...
Newly added support for iPod and PSP including AAC audio file support, Easily upgradeable firmware, Small and convenient, Now has timerbased recording option
Limited to support for composite video (mediocre video quality), Cluttered and poorly laid out remote control, Cluttered display and nonintuitive menus, No signal passthru, Still no way to attach a hard disk (but CF microdrives now work)
Although Id like to see improvements in the interfaces (screen and remote control), the product performs as advertised and is available at a fair and reasonable price. Its small and convenient and its ability to record directly to a storage card with...
Stylish, real-time encoding for iPod and Sony PlayStation Portable; allows scheduled recordings; faster than encoding software; makes legal copies of DVDs; no computer needed.
Encode quality passable but not great; clumsy interface; iPod encoding requires Compact Flash or Memory Stick Duo card and memory-card reader for transferring media to your Mac.
The Neuros MPEG 4 Recorder 2 is useful if you’re looking for the fastest, easiest way to make legal iPod or PSP-compatible recordings from DVDs or most other video sources. However, you can get better and more-customizable results by using software...
A relatively inexpensive standalone video recorder that instantly creates iPod-compatible 320x240 video files from an attached video device. Includes scheduled recording functionality, a 24-button Infrared remote control, video cables and a power supply.
Users must supply their own flash cards (Compact Flash or Memory Stick) for recordings, plus a device to transfer the cards’ contents to their computers and iTunes. Videos aren’t up to iTunes Music Store levels of quality, especially when...
Video recording has come a long way since the VCR - now that there’s TiVo (and numerous competing PC and Mac capture solutions), would you want to go back to a VCR-like solution? If the answer is yes, or you’re operating on a limited budg...
Sammanfattning: Apple and the television networks would like you to pay $2 an episode to watch TV shows on your iPod. Sony and Hollywood expect you to pay $20 each for movies you can watch on your PSP. Neuros anticipates you’ll spend $150 for their MPEG-4 Video Record...
Sammanfattning: If you have a Sony PSP, you probably already know that it is designed for video as well as gaming. There are plenty of movies available on UMD, but what if you want to carry around a few TV shows, your favorite DVD, or something you shot with your camc...
Sammanfattning: <b>Spec:</b> 256 MB, 1 year warranty, FM, Hard drive, Stereo, MP3, WMA, WAV, Ogg Vorbis, 60 GB, Rechargeable Player battery<br> <b>Good:</b> Excellent sound quality; solid LCD; easy menu navigation; FM transmitting and recording; impressive recording capabilities; USB 2.0; Ogg Vorbis support.<br> <b>Bad:</b> Big and heavy; awkward flash-memory and hard drive backpacks; poor battery life; spotty music-ID feature; doesnt support protected WMAs.<br> <b>Bottomline:</b> With its 256MB and 60GB backpacks, the Neuros II wants to be your one and only MP3 player, but instead its big and bulky, and its saddled with spotty features.<br>