Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder

Electronics : Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder

Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder

from: Gateway



 : Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder
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Binding: Electronics
Brand: Gateway
EAN: 0827103006827
Label: Gateway
Manufacturer: Gateway
Model: 2520516
Publisher: Gateway
Studio: Gateway
Warranty: 1 year warranty



Editorial Review:






Features:
  • DVD player/recorder with camcorder-ready DV, composite-video, RF, and S-video inputs
  • Record from TV, VCR, or camcorder directly to DVD; up to 6 hours video recording per side (either DVD+R or DVD+RW)
  • Progressive-scan output for seamless, flicker-free images on high-definition and HD-ready TVs
  • Plays MP3 CDs, JPEG image CDs, video mode DVD-Rs and DVD-RWs
  • Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1-channel surround-sound passthrough from coaxial and optical digital-audio outputs





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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - So bad, it's like an experiment.
"If anyone buys this crap, we must be magicians!!!" must be the "in-house" Gateway motto for this pile of mung called the AR-230. Silly me...I thought I would purchase one of these machines for my wife for Christmas 2003. Three units and 2.2 years later I still can't record a single viable DVD on this thing. It has been collecting dust in the basement until quite recently however. (we gave up on the AR-230 about 1.9 years ago since our computer does it's job well.) You see, we noticed it said "progressive scan" on the unit. Golly! Now we can really take advantage of our HDTV right? Wrong. (...) DVD player looks fantastic compared to the pixel laden, rich vomit "block like" mess that the AR-230 produces.

Words cannot describe the frustration, anger and disgust. Avoid and run away...you get what you pay for...I just wish we could get our money back.

Thanks for your time.






Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Gateway AR230 - A Tech Support Nightmare
When it worked it was okay. I bought my Gateway in Feb 2004 and it worked for about 11 months. One day I put in a DVD and it just spun. I contacted Gateway and they said to send it in, it would take 5-7 days for processing.

I sent in my Gateway in December of 2004. Its Februrary and I'm still waiting. Gateway always replies to my inquiries but has not once said anything other than they are waiting for parts.

Thank you for using Gateway's Online E-mail Support. XXX, as I checked
on the status of your service request 2-1829958384, it stated that your
DVD-R player is on part processing stage. Please be informed that it
may
take 2 to 3 weeks for the completion on this service.

I have documented this correspondence in Service Request Number
XXXXXX in our contact tracking database. Please use this number
in the future if you need to contact us again regarding this issue.

Another response from last month:
I understand you want to inquire shipment of your DVD player. I checked
service request number XXXXX and found item in repair status.
Please contact us for further updates on the repair progress of your
DVD
player. Please be informed to contact us within 48 business hours.
Should you have any further customer service questions, do not hesitate
to contact us.

I have documented this correspondence in Service Request Number
XXXXXXXXX in our contact tracking database. Please use this number
in the future if you need to contact us again regarding this issue.

Please reply to this message if you require further assistance with
this
issue.

Thank you.






Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Has been great!
So far this dvd recorder has been great. We have purchased two of these. One from Amazon and one from Gateway. The one we purchased from Amazon does have the feature to turn off the macrovision and you can legally make back up copies of all the copyrighted dvds & vhs tapes that you own. The same unit we bought from Gateway.com for $100 less does not have the macrovision on/off feature but it did have the region free option. To see if your unit has the "Macrovision On/Off" feature on your remote press "Setup" then highlight "exit", while "exit" is highlighted enter "2960" and press enter. Another menu should open with the option to select your region code or make it region free and another option to turn macrovision on or off.




Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Bad user interface; unreliable recording
We bought a Gateway AR-230 in Jan 2004. We found the user
interface to be fairly bad. The timer recording section
is particularly bad (Timer recording allows: Once,
Daily, Weekly, but doesn't have "Weekday", sigh; Timer
recording has 5 or 6 slots, about 3 or 4 fewer than we need.)

Note: if you have one, DEFINITELY get the current firmware
from www.gateway.com! (version 1163 was released 2004-09-01)

The manual is, to be charitable, bad. Aside from leaving
out a *lot* of information, the quality of the English in it
(and in other online documents for the AR-230) is poor.

I saved the worst for last ... it's very unreliable. Of the
last 4 DVD+RWs we tried to timer record, two failed to
properly "stop" (one was in "Stopping" mode for 15 minutes
before it finally stopped!). The result were disks that
were unreadable in the Gateway or in any other of several
DVD drives I tried. (Oh, I could see the VOB, IFO, BUP files,
but they just weren't playable.)
This may be tied to using Memorex media ... opinion on the
web seems to be split on this. We'd been using non-Memory
successfully (95% success rate?) for most of the last year,
and accidentally picked up some Memorex DVD+RWs recently.

I had tried to return it about 1 week after the warranty
expired ... no luck. I should have ranted and raved then,
but an upgrade (10 months ago) to firmware version 1139
improved it from terribly to almost reliable.

IIRC, it has no battery backup for the programming, so we
have ours on a UPS. (Clock must also be set manually :)

All in all, an embarassing product ... a cheap price doesn't
justify that!

Tip for using any DVD recorder ... if you aren't going to save a show forever, record it on DVD+RW and avoid creating a disc
you'll be throwing away!



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Great product at great price
I tried to order this through Gateway--bad mistake. I FINALLY got one from amazon. I had it hooked up and running in less than 30 mins, and I am not a tech guru. It works great for putting my DVR shows from Dish network onto dvd. We now have the 5th season of the sopranos and 2nd season of nip/tuck and they aren't even out yet! We also put pay per movies to dvd.

It also works great for transfering home movies and vhs. It doesn't work for actually copying dvd movies from dvd to dvd recorder b/c of copyright protection. You can get around this by purchasing another piece for under $50 by searching for how to get around dvd copyright protection.

No complaints, it works great. Complaints on this site are usually from people that don't know what they are doing. We are using Memorex DVD+R and DVD+RW from Wal Mart.



read more customer reviews on Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder


 





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Mark Matthews' Weblog

During the process of building the new query analysis feature for MySQL Enterprise Monitor 2.0, we thought the best way to test it at a nascent stage was to use it to tune our own application (since we use MySQL as the backend repository). What we found was actually quite interesting. It also showed that even to seasoned developers, who know that frameworks while helpful, often aren‘t the most direct, concise way to get things done, can often do very strange things that you don‘t quite expect.

For those of you that haven‘t heard about the feature itself, “query analysis“ takes all queries that are being processed by a MySQL server, normalizes them into something similar to a prepared statement form by removing literals, and then keeps track of total, min/max, average execution times, result set sizes, etc. at an aggregate level. It also takes snapshots of the “worst” examples of these queries, the ones with the highest execution time.

When we started using the first implementations of the feature on our own code, we found the following, interesting output:

What stuck out (at least to us), is that there is a lot of time spent toggling auto-commit state. In fact, if you add the "on" and "off" together, it's the second-most time consuming statement in our entire application! We thought we had this licked before we even looked at this query analysis data, because our application uses transactions all of the time, so we told DBCP to always return connections in auto-commit "false" mode. We even looked through what we thought was enough of the DBCP code to make sure this would actually work. So, what was causing these statements to run anyway? Well, the trick was, at this point during implementation, the server-side agent wasn't ready, so we were injecting this query analysis data via statement interceptors in the MySQL JDBC driver. So, we also setup the “worst” query to put in a stack trace in the comment field:

So, it was indeed coming out of some glue code we‘d written to wire DBCP into hibernate for our application (and still use our existing configuration mechanisms). Once the way was pointed, we set some appropriate breakpoints, and low-and-behold, we find this gem:

public void passivateObject(Object obj) throws Exception {
if(obj instanceof Connection) {
Connection conn = (Connection)obj;
if(!conn.getAutoCommit() && !conn.isReadOnly()) {
conn.rollback();
}
conn.clearWarnings();
conn.setAutoCommit(true);
}
if(obj instanceof DelegatingConnection) {
((DelegatingConnection)obj).passivate();
}
}

It makes sense to rollback when a connection is put back in the pool, as the application could‘ve misbehaved and started a transaction but didn‘t call commit() or rollback(). But, then, DBCP, without looking at how we‘ve configured this data source (to always be in auto-commit “false“), goes ahead and sets it to “true”.

So, what to do now? Should we internally fork DBCP, and keep merging this one-liner change every time we update DBCP? Do we file a bug, and wait for a new release of DBCP (we will, eventually). How do we fix it now? Well, once again, MySQL‘s JDBC interception facilities to the rescue. We just implement a very simple ConnectionLifecycleInterceptor that has the following implementation of setAutocommit(), which lets the caller setAutoCommit(false) and have it sent to the server, yet setAutoCommit(true) will never be sent to the server, and the JDBC driver will adjust its idea of autocommit state accordingly.

public boolean setAutoCommit(boolean flag) throws SQLException {
if (!flag) {
return true;
}

return false;
}

Of course, we had to test that nothing bad happened with our application using this trick, and when we determined that it was safe to operate in this manner, we ran query analysis again, and lo-and-behold, one issue solved, other statements to fix:

In my mind, the power of this feature is looking at query performance in aggregation. Seeing the SET … statements popping up in “SHOW PROCESSLIST” (which you‘d be lucky to catch, they‘re very short), or even in the general query log, wouldn‘t have demonstrated the amount of time wasted that we see here in our UI. Using this feature we have iteratively improved performance, watching with each release which queries bubble to the top, and tackling them.

For those of you that would like to see this feature in action on your own systems, if you‘re an existing MySQL Enterprise customer, you can get access to the beta release of MySQL Enterprise Monitor 2.0 at the MySQL Enterprise website.

For those of you that aren‘t yet existing customers, hold tight, soon we‘ll refresh the enterprise trial with this codebase.

In either case, feel free to ask us questions about the new features in our forums at http://forums.mysql.com/list.php?166

For those of you wanting to integrate query analysis with your application at a source-code level like we did with this example, hold tight as well and watch this space. MySQL Enterprise Monitor 2.0 supports REST as a way to populate the repository, and I‘ll be posting an example of how to do this with Connector/J and statement interceptors soon!


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Gateway AR230 Progressive-Scan DVD Player / Recorder

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