New Kaleidescape Players Support Blu-ray

By Jeremy J. Glowacki, May 11, 2010

Since its first product launch in 2003, Kaleidescape Inc. has been known for three things: its innovative user interface, eye-catching industrial design, and its lengthy legal battle over DVD copy protection rules related to its premium-priced home media servers.

Kaleid Upgrade 
The Kaleidescape M500 and M300


Today’s official introduction of Kaleidescape’s newest media player indicates that one thing has been updated, one remains comfortably the same, and another is totally changed.

 

While the user interfaces on the company’s new products have been improved, its industrial design remains tied to the timeless style of its existing line, yet the way the products help store content has been changed in a way that the company believes better protects it from copy protection litigation.

Built on the company’s proprietary M-Class architecture, Kaleidescape’s new M500 and M300 Players have been designed to deliver a new and improved on-screen user interface and Blu-ray support. The M500 Player copies Blu-ray Discs, DVDs, and CDs onto a server. The imported content can then be played back instantly by M500 and M300 Players, creating the world’s first multi-zone movie server for Blu-ray, the company says.

"The key to both the current and upcoming products, Kaleidescape says, is that while an actual disc will need to be in the M500 and M300 players or loader, it does not to have to "spin" in the tray to start a movie"
To address the concerns of the studios, Kaleidescape requires the disc to be present when playing Blu-ray content from the server. Today this means the Blu-ray Disc must be in the tray of an M500 Player. To enable the full Kaleidescape experience for Blu-ray, however, the company also is developing a disc loader, which will keep a large number of discs present within the Kaleidescape system. It will also provide bulk import and make it easy to find and retrieve a disc. The key to both the current and upcoming products, Kaleidescape says, is that while an actual disc will need to be in the M500 and M300 players or loader, it does not to have to "spin" in the tray to start a movie.

“We have invested a great amount of time and resources in developing the M-Class architecture, which is our platform for future innovation,” said Michael Malcolm, Kaleidescape’s founder, chairman and CEO. “We now have the tools to improve our world-renowned user experience and offer an even greater variety of content.”

Further enhancing the Kaleidescape experience, the company's award-winning onscreen user interface has been substantially improved with M-Class players. The Kaleidescape Movie Guide, the largest and most comprehensive of its type with more than 135,000 titles, has been expanded to include over 3,300 Blu-ray Disc titles. The company’s patent-pending video bookmarks enable advanced features, including instantaneous start of a feature or concert, easy access to favorite scenes or songs, and control triggers to automatically adjust screen masking, lighting and curtains during playback.

The Kaleidescape M500 and M300 Players, when coupled with a Kaleidescape server, play back Blu-ray content and include support for 1080p video with 24 frames per second and bitstream pass-through of Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

Kaleidescape is accepting orders for M500 and M300 Players, and shipments will begin May 18. U.S. MSRP is $3,995 for the M500 Player and $2,495 for the M300 Player. Both players are compatible with existing Kaleidescape products. The disc loader is expected to be available in the first half of next year.

Visit www.kaleidescape.com for more information.

5 Comments

  • avatar

    No, not lame. Only doing the best they can with the given tools and legal restrictions.
    In my country it is officially illegal to rip a DVD, let alone a BluRay. German law...
    Funny nobody mentions this - it's the delivery format that gives us all this burden. A disc, optically read out while rotating. It was ok in the days of the CD but isn't anymore, approximately 25 years later!

    What consumers now really want is media delivered on a thumb stick without moving/noisy parts and instant access to any track/chapter on it.
    Think of a USB stick with your favourite movie or concert on it. A "media cupboard" (c) by CTH ;-) accessible from all over the place by current network technology. This is what we installers are trying to achieve - legally or with lots of hassle.
    I expect this to happen with USB3.0 in the pipeline which is giving us enough bandwidth to read 1080p DC.
    Be prepared for "movies on a stick" and stop lamenting about the current situation.

  • avatar

    Use a iMerge Movie server....

  • avatar

    Use a Sony Blu-Ray 400 disk DVD changer with a Control4 A/V control system and you're got a neat system - reasonably (although not cheap) priced. 400 BD DVDs in the changer are enough for most installations. Easily controlled with only a few seconds to select and begin start up.

  • avatar

    Yes... less features and overpriced but also LEGAL and it works. When will the industry accept the fact that we want content our way and they only push the average user to illegal or at least immoral means to get it. Are there not any techonologies to encrypt a digital copy or password protect it? Doen't the need for a physical disk in the drive defeat the purpose of a media server? Wake up already and realize you cannot continue the old paradigm! If you fail to come up with a legal system you only encourage the very activities you fear...

  • avatar

    Lame.....For that amount of money you can buy a custom WHS for 10 drives and client computers (Mac Mini's) for 4 locations. The client machines will have more features than the m500 and m300 and the WHS server will have more storage than the server.
    On top of that you do not even need the disc once it has been ripped.
    Kaleidescape is over priced and under featured.

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