Version: 2008
January 20, 2010 1:48 PM PST

Viewsonic puts 1080p in your pocket

by Donald Bell
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Photo of the Viewsonic MovieBook VPD550T portable video player.

The Viewsonic MovieBook VPD550T is a high-end, HD portable video player with an ultralow price.

(Credit: Viewsonic)

Viewsonic isn't one of the first names that spring to mind when we think of portable media players, but that may change after its MovieBook VPD550T drops this April. Complete with a 5-inch LCD touch screen (800x480-pixel resolution), 8GB of internal memory, microSD expansion, and an HDMI output capable of 1080p resolution, Viewsonic is coming out with guns blazing on this one.

But the best feature by far is the $199 price tag. Well, the price is the best feature for me at least, since I'm a bit of a cheapskate. If you're a connoisseur of video formats (both legally acquired and otherwise), you may be more excited by the 550T's support for DAT, MPG, MPEG, VOB, MP4, MOV, AVI, DVD Video, ASF, WMV, MKV, TS, and RM/RMVB.

In spite of its cine-centric name, the MovieBook excels equally as a portable audio player, supporting MP3, WMA, WAV, AAC ,OGG, FLAC, APE, AC3, and DTS audio formats. Ebooks, photos, and voice recordings are also given a fair shake.

For battery life, Viewsonic rates the MovieBook at 20 hours of audio and 4 hours of video. Those numbers aren't great compared with the 34 hours of audio and 8 hours of video playback we pulled from the iPod Touch, but pretty decent when you account for the larger screen and all the video codecs under the hood.

While many iPod competitors are trying desperately to transform their portable media players into Wi-Fi-wielding iPod Touch rivals (I'm looking at you, Archos and Cowon), it's nice to see a company stick to the basics of high-quality media playback.

If you're short on cash and you can live without 1080p output and a few less video formats, Viewsonic also has a VPD513 with 720p output ($189) and a 4-inch VPD403 ($139) due out in late March or early April.

Donald Bell is CNET Reviews' senior editor for MP3 players and portable audio, and one half of the MP3 Insider blog and weekly podcast. He also likes getting his hands dirty with digital audio tools for musicians and DJs.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (15 Comments)
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by dk jones January 20, 2010 4:42 PM PST
Sounds like they've covered a lot of the available codecs but, I think that no Wi-Fi means no Youtube and it seems YouTube is important to a lot of people. As is Hulu, so this means no Flash support either?
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by BenComments January 20, 2010 6:48 PM PST
Add a phone and a GPS and it would be a worthy device. But as it is, I don't see the need for it. If you have an Iphone or something like the Nokia N900, then this device is pointless. I can't think of a need for it. Why would you walk around with a second movie device in your pocket? Does it even have a camera for pictures and to record video? For me, this is a good device, only around 4-5 years late.
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by January 21, 2010 6:29 AM PST
video playback isn't all that good on the iPhone
by trig20 January 21, 2010 1:33 AM PST
rebranded Ramos T11TE
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by sammael171 January 21, 2010 4:53 AM PST
Nice device and a terrific value. But I'm waiting for something with an HD display and an ATSC tuner built in.
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by jwrupe January 21, 2010 7:46 AM PST
I wonder about sound quality. It has FLAC so how does it compare to similar priced devices like the Cowon?
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by ecurules January 21, 2010 8:17 AM PST
the player looks great but I would like them to eventually introduce a model with WifI and a good browser (mobile firefox if it ever comes out) and possibly multi touch,
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by AssessmentGuru January 21, 2010 8:51 AM PST
Nice gadget but no wifi is a deal breaker. I'd trade the 1080 (we're talking a five inch screen here you're not going to notice any difference) for wifi and a browser.
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by jjolsen January 21, 2010 8:57 AM PST
How many poor suckers are going to buy this expecting to get 1080p resolution out of the little 5" screen? There's not enough emphasis on the fact that it's 1080p OUTPUT capable.
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by viper396 January 21, 2010 10:44 AM PST
So the 1080p HDMI logo on the front (and probable on the box) isn't enough? How much emphasis would be enough before it just gets ridiculous? If someone actually thinks that 1080p resolution is acheived with the built in display they simply didn't pay attention or didn't have enough common sense to review the product in the store. Devices like this are for a niche market. Seems to me a buyer actually looking at this, or any similiar product, should have enough sense to investigate the products true capabilities before making a purchase.
by hslakaal January 21, 2010 9:18 AM PST
the HDMI output would be the most useful part of this device, cuz c'mon, the 5 inch screen is pathetic in watching 1080p
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by crazycarl1999 January 21, 2010 9:55 AM PST
8GB memory on something with HD video capability? Are these people trying to play a joke?!? I guess most people don't care, but if I have an HD capable device, I'm going to want to use that HD output and I'm going to need a hell of a lot more then 8GB, I'm going to need at least 100GB. Thanks, I'll pass.
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by crazycarl1999 January 21, 2010 10:19 AM PST
If they put a 160 GB hard drive in this thing I'd buy it the day it comes out.
by crazycarl1999 January 21, 2010 9:56 AM PST
8GB memory on something with HD video capability? Are these people trying to play a joke?!? I guess most people don't care, but if I have an HD capable device, I'm going to want to use that HD output and I'm going to need a hell of a lot more then 8GB, I'm going to need at least 100GB. Thanks, I'll pass.
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by trig20 January 21, 2010 11:01 AM PST
if they retained the specs of Ramos T11TE, it has mini sd support, it also has USB otg. you can connect flash drives etc directly. I even charges my ipod touch 2g lol
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MP3 Insider is a blog and weekly podcast created by CNET's MP3 technology experts, Donald Bell and Jasmine France. Each week, Jasmine and Donald discuss the latest digital music (and video) news, hardware, software, and media services, and address reader calls and e-mail. Send us e-mail at mp3insider@cnet.com or call us at 1-800-720-CNET (2638) and be a part of the show.

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Donald Bell Donald Bell is an electronic musician, a veteran record store employee, and a fearless hardware hacker. He's also CNET's Senior Editor for MP3 and digital audio.
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