Finally the long wait for Sony's first dedicated Blu-ray player is over and initial appearances suggest that our patience has paid off.
Cosmetically, at least, the BDP-S1E is far removed from the Blu-ray-spinning PS3. It's huge and it's sturdy, brushed aluminium shell looks strong enough to withstand a nuclear attack. There is, of course, a practical reason for this and Sony's claims of a reduction in vibrations and noisy mechanics prove to be well founded.
Though perhaps the biggest piece of kit to sit in your AV rack (amplifier aside), the BDP-S1E is far from ugly. The silver bulk is given a much-needed touch of class, thanks to the blue-tinted glass panel on its fascia, meaning that you'll want to have it on show rather than stowed out of sight.
What goes on under the hood, however, is more of a mixed bag. Starting with the good stuff, the BDP-S1E offers the 1080p 24 True Cinema mode that impressed us so much in last month's issue on Pioneer's BDP-LX70. For the uninitiated, the '24' refers to the
24 frames per second speed of film when encoded to DVD, meaning that pictures are effectively output in the purest form possible. Upscaling for your existing DVD collection is of the 1080p variety and the socket line-up around the back features pretty much everything we could hope for bar one, but more on that in a minute. There's the all-important HDMI output, composite video outputs, S-video and component, but why anyone would want to use the latter two is a mystery to us.
Now to the bad news, which is something we've encountered on Blu-ray players in the past - the player does not comply with BD profile 1.1. In short, this means that the type of BD Java material that it can play is somewhat limited.
Interactive features like the Liars' Dice game found on the excellent Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest disc, for example, simply won't work. Which brings us rather neatly to the aforementioned absentee in the socket lineup - an Ethernet port.
Without one, system upgrades will have to be made by downloading the required software and burning it onto a DVD. And, of course, you won't be able to utilise the BD Live feature once it starts to become more popular on discs.

