16 May
Posted by admin as DVD Recorders
Tag : encoding photo, media server, library more, 2 terabyte, dvds with, cover art
| ![]() Company : List Price : $1,895.00 Amazon Price : Used Price : Average customer review : |
Features
Product Description
TeraTelly, winner of the 2006 Storage Visions award, provides 1.2 Terabytes of digital media storage so you can build a huge digital media library within a single stylish, quiet chassis. TeraTelly is the ultimate in digital media power that lets you organize, share and enjoy your ever-expanding library of saved DVDs, CDs, digital photos, recorded TV programs, home videos and downloaded Internet videos anywhere in your home. Best of all, you can save or play a DVD and watch it the way it was meant to be seen ... high definition 720p component video. TeraTelly can even upscale DVDs or recorded video to full HD resolution. And TeraTelly is a Media Server designed for your living room or home theater which means it fits into most home entertainment environments and you can access all the Telly's features from the comfort of your couch. Play a DVD or save up to 250 DVDs* in the Video Library so you can watch them anytime, as many times as you want. Store your entire music collection (up to 20,400 hours* of music) in the Music Library using the lossless audio encoding (FLAC) format for pristine reproduction of your music CDs. Combined with the digital audio output its the way to store your entire music collection. Burn your favorite music playlists onto CDs. Store up to 1,500,000 digital photos* in the Photo Library and show them in your Home Theater, on your TV or share them over the Internet. Pause live TV or record up to 1200 hours* of TV programs. Burn recorded TV on DVDs. Get up-to-the-minute information about weather, your personal financial portfolio and local movie listings ... even Surf the Web. Access and manage entire media libraries and schedule TV recording from Telly's own Web site, from home or the office. *The values listed are for comparison purposes only. The actual numbers depend on the mix of saved DVDs, CDs, digital photos and recorded TV programs stored on the hard drives.