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Samsung BD-H8900
Samsung BD-H8900 review
A decent Blu-ray player for those looking to avoid monthly subscription services
TechRadar's verdict
"For all of its flexibility, 3D Blu-ray disc playback and excellent
digital media-friendly design, there's something lacking on the
BD-H8900."
For
Twin tuners
Concise user interface
Glow-in-the-dark remote
Two USB slots
Against
Key apps hidden
Slow user interface
Samsung-centric features
Over complicated remote
Page 1 of 2Introduction, performance and picture quality
Ratings in depth
If you're not tempted by pricey packages that include PVRs from Sky and Virgin Media,
then it's to the confusingly tiny market for YouView or Freeview HD
recorders that you must head. Samsung's BD-H8900 (£353) is one of two
Freeview HD recorders it has issued in 2014; this version has a 1TB hard
disk, while the BD-H8500 (£329.95) holds half as much.
Price-wise,
it's a no contest between the two, and if that sounds like an exciting
package, that's not the half of it. The BD-H8900 adds a plethora of
other features that mark-out this out as a very special product indeed.
The
BD-H8900 is a Blu-ray player, too. Spinning 2D and 3D Blu-ray discs, it
also up-scales discs to Ultra HD 4K quality. Add a host of networking
features and playback of digital files from a USB and the BD-H8900 truly
is catch-all.
And then there are apps. While most Blu-ray
players and smart TVs include the BBC iPlayer, Samsung products are
unique in the UK for including catch-up for all of the terrestrial
channels in the UK. At least, that's the theory. Here the default
shortcuts are to second-rate apps like Vimeo, Dailymotion and Nat Geo
Images, with 4OD, ITV Player, Demand Five, YouTube, Netflix and Amazon
Instant all hidden away – and requiring time-consuming downloading –
from the Samsung Apps area. At
the time of writing the BBC iPlayer was missing, too, though before the
end of the review a new version of BBC News app had become available,
so we'll assume an upgrade is imminent.
I'm not convinced how
important a feature this is to prospective buyers of the BD-H8900, but
part of Samsung's Hyper Real Engine picture processing is 4K-upscaling.
This essentially claims to take pictures from Blu-ray and increase the
resolution by a factor of four. Special
skills don't extend to style, which isn't the BD-H8900's strong suite.
Measuring 282 x 430 x 55mm, it's big and space-hungry, though relatively
low-rise. The BD-H8900 is made from low-grade black plastic, but it
does have touch-sensitive controls.
On its left-hand side, which
is curved, a dial presents basic scanning controls for discs and the
standby switch. However, on more than one occasion we accidentally
switched-off the unit while fumbling with a USB stick nearby – those
buttons need moving to somewhere else.
Across the front is the
disc tray, a tiny LED display and a USB slot beneath a flip-out cover.
Around the back are a pair of RF slots for fuelling those Freeview HD
tuners alongside both an HDMI output, a digital optical audio output,
and a very useful – and nicely discreet – second USB slot stacked
underneath a wired Ethernet LAN slot. However, the BD-H8900 features
Wi-Fi connectivity, too.
The BD-H8900 also includes Miracast –
marketed here as AllShare Cast – for mirroring the screen of an Android
phone, though its only works with Samsung Galaxy devices so is likely to
annoy most users. Lastly
on the BD-H8900 comes an unexpected feature – Multiroom – though it's
once again a Samsung-centric system. If you do find yourself in the
market for a pair of Samsung's £300+ M7 wireless speakers then know that it can be linked to the BD-H8900 (as well as any Samsung smart TV launched this year such as a the UE65HU8500).
There is wider audio love, however, with the BD-H8900 best friends with
Blu-ray-centric digital audio formats like Dolby True HD, DTS-HD Master
Audio and DTS-HD High Resolution Audio.
Performance
Those
twin Freeview HD tuners are useful, but the box itself is criminally
underpowered. Able to record one channel while you watch another, or
record two channels while you watch one of them, the BD-H8900 offers
over 400 hours of standard-def recordings and about 250 hours in HD.
Making
recordings from Freeview HD on the BD-H8900 is technically simple.
Resplendent in black, blue and white, the electronic programme guide
displays (EPG) schedules over two hours for seven channels and has a
live TV thumbnail. It's possible to skip around the schedules without
even loading-up the EPG, but this can lag. It's
important to note than the Freeview HD interface and the Smart Hub are
completely separate, and bizarrely it's not possible to use Netflix
while making recordings.
Just as appealing to many will be the
BD-H8900's apps and streaming skills. Apps take a while to load, though
the fluency of the BD-H8900 with digital formats is excellent either
from a USB stick or using DLNA networking.
Picture quality
The
BD-H8900 is all about hi-def and upwards. A blast of Homes Under the
Hammer from BBC One looks a little cut-up, with fast-moving presenters
and camera pans lacking clean lines. Move to Later With Jools Holland on
BBC Two HD and the detail and depth returns – even in the gloom – with a
recording pleasingly identical to the broadcast.
Stuck in the
'movie' preset, the BD-H8900 copes well with 2D Blu-ray. During our test
disc of The Wolf of Wall Street, colours are particularly well-handled,
with skin tones looking natural and colours emboldened by great
contrast.
It's perhaps not the most criminally detailed Full HD
image we've ever seen, but jagged edges are non-existent, while motion
is smooth even during rapid camera pans. A scene of Jordan Belfort being
driven away from his mansion sees the detail in the background
retained, even in a slowly moving shot, while frenetic close-ups are
clean and highly convincing. Best of all, the images are always
comfortable to watch. That
Hyper Real Engine is doing a great job, and it gets better with a
run-through of Gravity on 3D Blu-ray, which is packed full of
depth-filled visuals that are tightly presented. Yes, there are a couple
of judders – such as when Dr Stone spins rapidly towards the camera –
but it's nothing serious.
When it comes to 4K, we're slightly
concerned that the BD-H8900 didn't play any of our selection of pro-res
MOV and compressed MP4 files in 4K resolution. That might not bother you
now, but in a couple of years when you inevitably buy a 4K TV it could
get irritating. Still, with reasonably effective 4K upscaling on-board
for exactly that problem (as tested on a 55-inch Samsung 4K TV), it's
hard to argue that the BD-H8900 isn't more future-proof than most
Blu-ray players.
A decent Blu-ray player for those looking to avoid monthly subscription services
TechRadar's verdict
"For all of its flexibility, 3D Blu-ray disc playback and excellent
digital media-friendly design, there's something lacking on the
BD-H8900. Navigation and operation are a low point for the otherwise
generally very impressive user interface. But for anyone after a
catch-all solution without monthly subs, this is as good as it gets."
For
Twin tuners
Concise user interface
Glow-in-the-dark remote
Two USB slots
Against
Key apps hidden
Slow user interface
Samsung-centric features
Over complicated remote
Page 2 of 2Verdict
Twin Freeview HD tuners and 3D Blu-ray playback sounds like a
marriage made in heaven, but there's little to love about how this
over-worked machine lurches around its cluttered user interface. It's
not a bad problem – Virgin's TiVo has exactly the same issues – but the
BD-H8900 isn't quite as shiny as it first appears. That's a shame
because it's otherwise supremely talented at everything from digital
file support to disc playback.
We liked
There's as much
content here in terms of apps and streaming TV services as on previous
Samsung smart Blu-ray players and TVs, but it's packed within a a
tighter, savvier user interface than before. Whisper it, but Samsung's
designers appear to have been heavily influenced by recent LG TVs.
Browsing
and watching pre-recorded Freeview HD programmes is cleanly done
through apps on the home page, with the contents of attached USB
thumbdrives and computers shown, too. HD pics from all sources impress,
but it's the handling of digital files that's the highlight, with
support stretching to the likes of AVI, MKV, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, WMV and AVC
HD for video.
Music comes in WAV, FLAC, APE, AIFF and OGG
lossless files as well as WMA and MP3, while photos stretch to GIF and
PNG as well as JPEG. It's even possible to use keywords to search for
content across any connected devices, too.
Skipping around
digital TV schedules while continuing to watch live TV is a breeze,
while disc loading speeds are impressive, too; it takes a mere seven
seconds to begin playing a fresh disc.
We disliked
Despite
the user interface looking better than ever and a far cry from the
cluttered look of Samsung products from a few years ago the BD-H8900 is a
tad slow to navigate, while apps load slowly.
Apps are mostly
there, but hard to find, while inspecting Freeview HD recordings is a
bit of a mess, too, with dynamic thumbnails tricky to comprehend at a
glance. It's unnecessarily visual and all a bit confusing. A Films &
TV Shows tab dominates the Smart Hub, too, despite being a sideline
feature at best. I wasn't much impressed with the look of standard
definition channels, which seem soft and blocky.
While initially
impressive, the remote control proves laking in a few departments –
there are just too many buttons serving virtually no purpose. No wonder
it's so big.
Final verdict
Just like Virgin's TiVo box
(though with one less TV tuner), the BD-H8900 lacks the processing power
to truly be a breakthrough product.
It's the best value of
Samsung's two pricey Freeview HD recorders, but for all of its
flexibility, 3D Blu-ray disc playback and excellent digital
media-friendly design, the navigation and operation is a low-point.
So
too is a muddled approach to key apps, with second-rate apps too
high-up on Smart Hub and many catch-up TV apps hidden in an online
store. Video quality is generally very good and digital file handling
excellent. It's not perfect, but for anyone after a catch-all solution
without monthly subs, this is as good as it gets.
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