Teac Japan announced the LP-R550 today [JP], a kind of Swiss Army knife for audio freaks. Buyers get a turntable, a cassette player/recorder, a CD player/recorder and a PLL synthesized AM/FM stereo ...
The PD-507T features TEAC's proprietary CD-transport mechanism. This is manufactured in-house, and is designed to deliver ...
The TEAC PD-507T is a no-compromise CD transport built for those still committed to physical media. At $1,699 USD, it ...
If you happen to still have LPs laying around and have sometime to dub ’em onto a digital medium, this TEAC player might be for you. Or, if you happen to have grandparents that still enjoy their LPs ...
CHIBA CITY, Japan--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Teac exhibits the HD-R1 recorder/player that uses Compact Flash as the recording media, at Inter BEE 2007, an international broadcasting equipment exhibition, in ...
Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, ...
Teac Corp will introduce a CD recorder for analog media, such as cassette tapes and vinyl records. LP-R500 dubs the analog media into CD-R/RW directly. The product is also equipped with FM/AM radio ...
LAS VEGAS -An expanded selection of CD-recorders from a variety of suppliers will overwhelm limited MiniDisc introductions at CES, but MD activists Sony and Sharp will counter with new functions and ...
TEAC ESOTERIC COMPANY is the latest manufacturer to realize reference quality video scaling with Anchor Bay’s video processing ASIC to be “Powered by ABT.” Campbell, CA — June 23, 2006 — Anchor Bay ...
TOKYO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Teac Corporation (hereinafter Teac) (TOKYO:6803), the world leader in instrumentation data recorders, today announced a new control API for the TEAC WX-7000 portable wide band ...
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. Why do CDs get such a bad rap? After all, it wasn’t that ...