Product Description
This fashion-inspired leather case provides full protection from everyday scratches and scuffs. The sleek, portable design lets you slip your iPod right into your pocket or purse.
Product Description
Slip your iPod right into your pocket without added bulk, and protect it from everyday scratches and scuffs.
Amazon.com Product Description
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The Belkin Leather Folio for iPod touch offers:
- Protection for your iPod touch from scratches and scuffs.
- Accessibility to all ports and controls.
- A luxurious soft leather with a fashionable look.
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A honeycomb design is embossed on the case. View larger. |
The Belkin Leather Folio for iPod touch provides full protection for your iPod touch from everyday scratches and scuffs. The case is made of soft, durable leather and sports a fashionable persimmon/bone color scheme. A soft-suede interior with a honeycomb design embossed on it gives the Leather Folio a distinctive and classy look.
The sides and the back of the iPod are covered by leather to prevent unsightly scratches on your beautiful iPod. The Leather Folio features a wallet-style flap design, and a leather flap covers the face when it is not being used. It is securely fastened with velcro so you needn't worry about it opening up in your purse. Open the flap and the iPod touch's beautiful glass screen is accessible for full navigation via the multi-touch controls. You never have to take your iPod out of the case as all controls and the dock connector remain fully accessible.
The sleek design of the Leather Folio lets you slip your iPod right into your pocket or purse without a lot of added bulk. The Belkin Leather Folio for iPod touch is backed by Belkin's Lifetime Warranty.
Customer Reviews:
Warning- Bait and Switch.......2007-11-21
DO NOT ORDER THIS PRODUCT for your ipod touch!!! When I ordered it, they had the actual Belkin leather folio case pictured (the number posted with this product IS the product number for Belkin's touch case), however what was shipped was a case for an ipod nano. I returned it thinking it was an honest mistake, and GOT THE SAME THING AGAIN!! Also, in the meantime this seller changed the picture associated with the product to match that of a case for an ipod nano.
Product Description
The Denon AVR-687 A/V Surround Receiver lets you customize the home theater experience you've always wanted. Front panel inputs Night Mode for not disturbing others Front A/B speaker terminals High-grade speaker terminals (All channels) Frequency synthesis tuning - 56-station AM/FM/XM preset memory tuning; auto preset Fully discrete 7-channel high power amplifiers -
* Front - 75W + 75W (8 ohms, 20Hz - 20KHz, 0.08% THD)
* Center - 75W (8 ohms, 20Hz - 20KHz, 0.08% THD)
* Surround - 75W + 75W (8 ohms, 20Hz - 20KHz, 0.08% THD)
* Surround Back - 75W + 75W (8 ohms, 20Hz - 20KHz, 0.08% THD)
Audio Inputs -
* Analog - CD, DVD/VDP, TV/DBS, Aux, VCR, CDR/Tape, V.Aux (front)
* Digital - Optical (x2), Coaxial (x2)
Audio Outputs -
* 1 Analog PRE OUT - Subwoofer
* 2 Analog REC OUT - VCR, CDR/Tape
Video Inputs -
* 3 Component in - DVD/VDP, TV/DBS, VCR
* 3 S-Video in - DVD/VDP, TV/DBS, VCR
* 4 Composite in - DVD/VDP, TV/DBS, VCR, V.Aux (front)
Video Outputs -
* 1 set of Component outputs - Monitor
* 2 S-Video outputs - VCR, monitor
* 2 Composite outputs - VCR, monitor
Unit Dimensions(WxHxD) - 17-3/32 x 5-25/32 x 16-9/64 (434 x 147 x 417 mm) Weight - 25 lbs, 2 oz. (11.4 Kg)
Amazon.com Product Description
Power up your home theater with the Denon AVR-687 surround sound receiver, which offers seven discrete amplifier channels (75 watts apiece, for 525 watts of total power). This includes for the surround back channel speakers to give you more clearly defined sound localization at the rear for 6.1-channel surround sources such as DTS-ES Discrete 6.1/Matrix 6.1/NEO:6 and Dolby Digital EX. The power amp circuits have been designed to reproduce exceptionally high sound quality with a wide frequency response from 10 Hz to 100 kHz. Denon's multi-room entertainment system feature lets you select different audio sources for listening in different rooms, and the AVR-687 offers two zones.
The AVR-687 is XM Radio ready (optional XM tuner required) and offers XM-HD surround sound. It's also compatible with Denon's ASD-1R control dock for iPods. It features a 56-station AM/FM/XM random preset memory tuning. For video connections, this receiver offers three sets of component video inputs that maintain a flat response up to 100 MHz to ensure sharp video quality, as well as three sets of S-Video switching and a front composite video input. It also offers a video up/down conversion function (composite to/from S-Video; composite to S-Video/component).
With Denon's Auto Setup feature, you can confirm speaker phase, assess the size of all your speakers, measure speaker-to-listener distances, and balance speaker levels. With the included DM-S205 microphone placed in your favorite listening position, Auto Setup uses a test tone generator and proprietary programming to precisely balance speaker levels and fine-tune the delay settings for each speaker. The result is optimized system performance for your specific home theater room.
You can customize the performance of this receiver to suit your home theater and enhance operating ease. Adjustments are easy to make via a dialog format on the fluorescent display on the front panel, and these customized settings are then stored, for each source input and surround mode, in a personal memory setting. Put yourself in the middle of your favorite concert hall and music environments with Denon's DSP acoustic environment simulation modes, which include jazz club, rock arena, video game, virtual surround, and mono movie. Other features include:
- Surround playback formats: DTS 96/24 decoding for DVD video; DTS-ES 6.1 and Matrix 6.1; DTS NEO:6; Dolby Digital EX; Dolby Pro Logic IIx; Neural Surround
- Denon's 7 Channel Stereo mode transforms 2-channel sources (such as CD, tape, stereo radio) into surround sound, free of delay effects and unnatural artifacts, from all 7 speakers.
- 8-channel external inputs
- Variable subwoofer crossover switching (40/60/80/90/100/110/120/150/200/250 Hz)
- Night mode
- Glow key remote control
- Power transformer for high power, twin drive rectifier, and large aluminum extruded heatsink
Cinema Equalizer
The sound from movie sources recorded in Dolby Digital, DTS, or other formats emphasizes high-frequency range due to a theater's front speakers being placed behind the movie screen. If this sound is reproduced in the home theater without correction, the high-frequency range is too strong. This Denon receiver's Cinema Equalizer feature corrects these high-frequency components so that the sound is clearer and easier to listen to when using Dolby Digital, Dolby Pro Logic II, Dolby Digital EX and DTS surround modes.
What's in the Box
Receiver, power cord, remote control (with batteries), DM-S205 Auto Setup microphone, printed operating instructions
Customer Reviews:
Welcome to the Minor leagues.......2007-08-24
I bought this on Amazon for 40% less than C City, & I feel like that I stole it. I have this hooked to Sat & DVD, it is only used for TV. The room is 30' x 23' & I have not had it over 0; it is way loud. I was a little concerned since it was rated 75w, but @ 6ohms it is rated 110w.
This is my first experience with this level of equipment, so the manual was confusing & redundant; plus when you made some adjustments it automatically undid other adjustments that you had made. With some inputs you are adjusting speaker volume [which I understood], but the inputs that I used [optical]. The only adjustment is in feet. I did figure out less feet = less volume. I did all my adjustments from the Receiver [it seemed much easier]. The auto-setup mic in my case was useless. One feature that I do like is you can cut it off on the receiver & it uses no electricity. I did get it balanced perfect, excelent sound; & unbelievable price.
Great Receiver...Terrible Manual/Remote.......2007-03-04
Let me preface by saying the sound and capabilities of this receiver are best of the bunch for this price point. Not only are there multiple inputs and outputs for every video source, but excellent quality conversions as well. The sound definition and reproduction is fabulous as well. Read the tech specs and brag sheets from Denon for all the info...it's all true.
The main criticism I have is the Owner's Manual and System Setup. I am a tech geek. I love this stuff. But I have never found a manual so poorly written or organized. Instructions on setup are incomplete. Directions concerning how to access certain menus don't work if one switch on the remote is in the wrong position (this switch is never referenced in the directions, by the way...happy hunting). Seemingly simple actions, such as selecting Zone 2 speakers On, are convuluted. There is a Zone 2 button on the front of the actual unit. Seems easy, yes? Just press it. But pressing it does nothing unless you navigate (without much help from the manual) to section 2 of System Setup and scroll to the Preamp section. From there, choose between Zone 2, Surround, Speaker Set A or B. Apparently the Zone 2 Preamp (a separate preamp from the main) also powers a second set of surround speakers used in a 7.1 configuration OR a set of Zone 2 speakers for use in a secondary location. That's great...that's fine. But why would you put a Zone 2 button on the face of the unit AND a Preamp setup in the 4th level of a System Setup Menu? It's redundant. Worse yet, the button on the face of the unit doesn't even work properly if the System Setup Menu isn't configured properly. Clearly, if I want that set of speakers to be used as Zone 2, shouldn't I just press "Zone 2." If I want them as Surround, couldn't I just press it again to de-select? Why not make the button on the face "Zone 2/Surround" and be done with it?
This is just one example of an overly complicated receiver. Here's another seemingly simple item. The volume control increases in increments of 0.5 db per volume touch on the remote. This is pratically imperceptible and with a range of -80db to 16db, you can quickly get frustrated hammering away at your remote like a video game controller. Alternatively, if you press and hold the volume button on a remote, the volume increases too fast and overshoots. Why not make this control interval adjustable? If you're going to preset a volume control at 0.5 db per touch (which is ridiculous), why not allow the user to customize the interval?
Bottom line: The hardware and performance of this unit is great. But the engineers that designed it are not. And the individuals who wrote the owner's manual and designed the remote must have been playing a practical joke. Did they not product test these items? For ease of use alone, I would seriously consider an Onkyo or Harmon Kardon before buying this unit.
A great entry level Denon!.......2006-12-27
Denon always has great sound, so I'm not going to waste time talking about that. I'm going to try to concentrate on some very minor things that I lost when upgrading from my JVC. So if you don't like nitpicking, then hurry out and buy this unit! If interested, read on to see if these little things matter to you, too.
New features that I love, and why I upgraded:
3 Component video inputs. This was actually hard to find, as many new receivers have only 2, or have HDMI instead.
Multi-source, multi-zone. I've always had yard speakers but never multi-source.
Video up-conversion. That means that I can just leave the TV on component video all the time without pushing tons of buttons to control the TV's input source. Much easier to plug a camcorder on rare occasions.
Independent Video/Audio select. This wasn't really rant/raved about in the specs, but I think it is very cool because you can listen to some audio while having say, a news scroll going in the background on video. Also, it turns out it is incredibly important for me, since I don't have enough video inputs (see below) for my VCR and media center together, so I have to do some fancy wiring to capture old footage from camcorders and VCR's into MPEG2.
Now, here are my gripes:
First, I've always had JVC receivers, but they stopped making receivers with enough inputs for me. So I had to switch brands. I've always loved JVC for what I think is a good mix of advanced features but user friendly enough for the wife or visitors. Well, this new Denon bad boy is tough for even me to navigate until I get used to it, and I haven't even tried to demo how to use it to my wife yet. I understand they are less expensive, but I don't like switches on the remote. Rather I prefer the device selection by button, with some indicator (glowing or LCD display) to show what is currently selected. Also, it is still difficult to figure out when the buttons on the back are active or not for each source. This will take some getting used to but I haven't figured out the pattern yet. Oh yeah, speaking of the back, it is very difficult to open unless I've got a long thumbnail!
Another small gripe is the "dB" volume indication, rather than all positively offset from zero. I've had other components like this before, but it is still weird. Also regarding the volume, it steps very small with a single press, but then advanced too quickly when held down. Last gripe on volume: With my JVC, it remembered the last volume level for each source when you switch back to it. This is VERY handy since not all sources have the same input level. So with the Denon, sometimes you switch sources and get blasted with sound.
One more thing that many people won't care about, but I certainly do. Normally when you plug headphones into a receiver (or most devices), the speakers are muted. With my JVC, you could leave the headphone jack plugged in all the time and you just switch the speakers on/off, while having headphones + speakers active. This was great because I have a wireless base station that can be picked up upstairs by my wireless speaker in the shower, or I like to listen on wireless headphones when everyone is asleep. I don't have to plug/unplug headphone jacks all the time. Well, as I expected, this is a rare, unheralded feature that I lost when upgrading to this Denon.
I also wish there were just one more rear video input source. I have DVD, Cable, and a Meda Center PC connected, which doesn't leave an opening for my old S-Video VCR, which I occasionally need. Now if I need it, I have to do a little rewiring, and then wire it back. And why isn't there an S-video input in the front for video, rather than just composite? It is cool this upconverts to component at the output, but I'll still lose a little quality when hooking up my camcorder.
Don't get me wrong, this is a great unit, and I was very pleased to find a Denon that met nearly all my needs without breaking my bank.
Product Description
The Denon 6.1 Home Theater Audio Video Receiver delivers premium sound quality for movies, music and other devices. Offering Dolby Digital Surround and DTS decoding up to 6.1 channels, this receiver delivers 75 Watts per channel rated over the full sonic spectrum of 20 Hz to 20,000Hz and 110 Watts per channel based at 1,000Hz. With the latest sound technologies and cutting-edge consumer features, controlling Home Theater sound will be as easy as ensuring a great listening experience, every single time. DTS ES 96/24 5.1 decoding for DVD Video Analog Devices HammerHead SHARC 32 bit floating point DSP processor 6 Channels equal power amplifier section 75 watts per channel (8 ohms, 20 Hz-20 kHz, less than. 05%THD) 110 watts per channel (6 ohms, 1 kHz, less than. 7%THD) Analog Devices, 24 bit, 192 kHz high resolution DACs on all 8 channels True 24 bit, 96 kHz Digital Interface Receiver 24 bit, 96 kHz A/D conversion on Stereo analog inputs Adjustable High and Low Pass Crossover (40/60/80/100/120/150/200/250Hz) 3 Assignable Component Video inputs (100MHz Bandwidth) Video Conversion of Composite to S-Video and/or to Component 4 sets composite and 3 S-video inputs 5.1 external wide bandwidth (100 kHz) inputs for multi-channel formats, such as DVD-Audio and Super Audio CD 5/6/7 Channel Stereo Digitally regulated volume control with. 5dB increment adjustments and step range of -80 to +15 Personal Memory Plus 3 assignable digital inputs (2 Optical, 1 Coaxial) 8 analog inputs including built-in AM/FM tuner Direct Access Tuner presets by remote Glo-Key pre-programmed remote control
Customer Reviews:
Best Mid-Range Receiver yet.......2006-04-04
I've owned old stereo receivers and I've owned very High-End receivers and this one is the best Mid-End one yet. The system has all the bells and whistles that you'd ever need for a Mid-Range Receiver. I've hooked it up 5.1 and it's great it even comes with a mic that sets up your speaker levels for you. If you're still not satisfied with how they're set up it still allows you to tweak the speaker levels yourself i.e. Speaker size, LFE and Sub Cross-Over etc. Lots of audio selections for getting the right sound when listening to music, movies or even television. The video up scaling feature is a bonus as well. When I contacted Denon about the remote they got back to me within seconds of sending my email, great friendly service. I'm impressed compared to other audio companies I've dealt with.
My only complaints are that the manual wasn't easy to follow and I could see how some people with none to little receiver experience may not be able to setup the system correctly. Also, the universal remote wasn't the greatest I couldn't program it to work with any of my older components.
Junk.......2006-01-16
This is one of the worst purchases I have ever made, electronic or not. The Dolby Digital 7.1 is anything but; you are lucky to get 3.1. The rear surround speakers don't work unless you invoke junky old Pro-Logic. Heck, if I wanted Pro-Logic, I could have spent $50 for some ancient receiver with that 80s technology.
On top of that, the remote is incomprehensible, as is the manual. It is the worst Japanese English manual I have seen for years. And the build quality is cheap, with plastic-y knobs. For $400, I expect at least some attention to those details. I mailed this back to my retailer and hooked up my old Outlaw again. It doesn't have the video upconversion, so I have some more cables to deal with, but at least it gives me honest Dolby Digital 5.1. Avoid this unit at all costs.
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