Onkyo has announced that despite switching to Blu-ray support in February after the demise of rival HD DVD, its first Blu-ray player will not be available until the holiday season of this year.
The player is designed to integrate with Onkyo’s high-end A/V receivers and will have full 1080p/24 support through HDMI 1.3a as well as audio decoding for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.
Before Toshiba pulled the plug on HD DVD, Onkyo revealed it had sold just over 2000 players. The company claimed to be an “enthusiastic” supporter of the format at the time.
Onkyo did not give an exact release date or pricing but that information should be available soon.
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Ian Dobsyn, from Manchester, returned home from a vacation in Portugal last week and found that he had been hit with a monumental £31,500 mobile bill from Yes Telecom.
The man had used his mobile broadband connection to download Sky’s “Prison Break” as well as some music and was shocked by the bill. “The figures looked like they had come down from the Moon,” said Dobsyn. “I just laughed. There had to be some mistake.”
After hiring a lawyer, the bill was brought down to £229, a number only slightly higher than his standard £150 monthly bill.
Danielle Mestraud, of Farleys Solicitors in Manchester, added that this episode should show customers to read the fine print before accessing television programming while abroad.
She added: “…service providers also have a responsibility. It would be better if subscribers were given a monthly maximum spend so they could be notified if they had breached it, rather than only finding out when the bill arrives. It would be prudent for the provider to contact the customer if their usage was unusually high.”
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O2 has noted that due to “extremely high levels of demand” for pre-orders of the upcoming iPhone 3G, their online shop has crashed and they are working to bring it back.
“We have made a limited allocation of iPhone 3G stock available for pre-order online, primarily for those customers that pre-registered their interest.”
“Due to extremely high levels of demand, the O2 online shop was temporarily unavailable this morning. We are working to restore the service back to full speed as quickly as possible.”
The carrier also added that customers who want to purchase the phone but cannot get it online should try to get to a retail store at 8 am on July 11th, the earliest time available.
“We’ve never seen any mobile device create the excitement and demand of the iPhone 3G,” said Ronan Dunne, CEO of O2 in the UK.
“We want to ensure that everyone who wants an iPhone 3G can get one so we’ll be working with Apple to continually replenish our supplies throughout the summer.”







