
CD Players & Music Servers
Cambridge Audio
Still the source of choice for audiophiles around the world, compact disc players offer superb sound quality. Cambridge Audio manufactures some of the best compact disc players available.
Harman Kardon
High performance is the very definition of a Harman Kardon® CD player, and our engineers have designed them to deliver maximum resolution for use with the latest in digital Audio.
Integra
Integrity, the namesake of the integra brand, is defined as "a rigid adherence to a code or standard of values." that’s exactly what you get with Integra's CD players. The best parts, technology and engineering come together to bring you an unparalleled music listening experience.
Cambridge Audio
The Cambridge Audio 640H music server features proprietary AudioFile technology which delivers hi-fi quality audio and advanced functionality from a feature packed, internet compatible unit.
Elan Home Systems
VIA!dj is a digital audio storage and music management system with a 160 gigabyte hard drive that gives you instant access to all your music from any VIA! Touch Panel or television in the home.
Olive
www.olive.us/products/olive4hd/overview.htm
Store up to 20,000 high-resolution HD tracks in 24-bit. With more than 250 times the resolution of CDs, you'll hear the HD difference immediately. Experience it right out of the box — the Olive 4HD includes over an hour of music with 12 of the best Chesky Records' HD Tracks for Free!
Elan VIA! Migo
www.elanhomesystems.com/entertainment_sources.a
Listen to all your iPod music and watch all your iPod video anywhere in the house – without the ear-buds! This innovative docking station transforms the world's most popular portable media player into a multi-room home entertainment source, offering complete control and seamless integration with ELAN multi-room systems.
Universal Remote PSX-2
www.hfvm.com.au/index.php?page=shop.product
The popularity of the Apple iPod is such that almost every home entertainment system now has an A/V iPod dock.The most popular docks provide a TV on-screen GUI (Graphical User Interface) that mimics precisely the iPod screens. But because the iPod is based on a limited number of buttons and a small screen, one must constantly navigate up and down through a series of nested menus, and must remember a “mental map” of where special features are accessed.This is tedious and frustrating and the only way around it was an expensive media server instead of an iPod dock. Until today...









