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DMC 1000 Digital Media CenterOWNER’S MANUAL

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2

Jurjen Amsterdam

Harman Consumer Group, Inc.

12/08

  3  Introduction

  4  Terminology

  6  Features

  8  Front Panel Controls

 10  Front Panel Information Display

 12  Remote Control Functions 14  Rear Panel Connections

 16  Setup and Connections

17  Remote Control

 18  Digital Audio Connections

 19  Playback Basics

 19  Basic Play

 19  Disc Playback Features

 20  System Set-up

20 Media Library Setup

21  DVD Player Setup

22  Audio Setup

22  Video Setup

23  General Setup23  Advanced Setup

 24  DMC Basics

 26  Operation

32 Troubleshooting Guide

 34  Technical Specifications

 36  Appendix

 38  End User License Agreement

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Table of Contents

NOTE: This player is designed and manufactured

for compatibility with Region ManagementInformation that is encoded on most DVD discs.This player is designed only for playback of discs

with Region Code 2, or for discs that do not

contain Region Code information. If there isany other Region Code on a disc, that disc willnot play on the DVD.

Declaration of Conformity

2

declare in own responsibility, that the product describedin this owner’s manual is in compliance with technicalstandards:

EN 55013:2001

EN 55020:2002

EN 61000-3-2:2000

EN 61000-3-3:1995+A1:2001

EN 60065:2002

We, Harman Consumer Group, Inc.2, Route de Tours72500 Château-du-Loir,FRANCE

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INTRODUCTION

Introduction

Thank you for choosing theHarman Kardon DMC 1000

The DMC 1000 merges a high-end DVD player,including upscaling to 1080p with an HDMI™ output, with a media server capable of storing

up to 60,000 songs on its 250Gb hard drive.Simultaneous playback of different tracks is pos-sible in up to four zones, or you may link any orall of the zones to each other.

Thanks to Gracenote® MusicID,®* all contentrecorded from a CD to the DMC 1000’s harddrive is identified by album name, artist andgenre, with additional information to show thetitle of each track. Even better, for most popularalbums, the DMC 1000 will display the coverart when connected to the Internet. The contentis automatically organized by the identificationfields and by the cover, and you may select it andprogram playlists to suit any mood or occasion.

The graphical presentation of system content isavailable in both high-definition and standard-definition outputs, for crisp, easy-to-read displayson any video screen.

To enable you to get the maximum quality fromDVDs, the DVD is equipped with the latest indesign techniques, including advanced 10-bitvideo digital-to-analog converters (DAC) andVideo (composite), S-Video and RGB video (RGBvia SCART) outputs, to ensure that you get all thequality inherent in today’s DVD medium.For optimum playback of NTSC and PAL DVDwith compatible high-definition display devices,DVD is equipped with progressive componentvideo outputs.

When used with an HDMI-compatible audio/video receiver and video display, the programquality is preserved.By passing an uncompressed signal, degrada-tion is virtually nonexistent. And the single-cableconnection eliminates the problem of wiremanagement.

If you have not yet upgraded to an HDMI videodisplay, you may still enjoy pristine picture qual-ity with the DMC 1000’s precision video DACs,which output a Y/Pr/Pb progressive-scan com-ponent signal and composite and S-video. Thus,

no matter what type of video display used, youwill see images that are the closest thing to theoriginal film or performance this side of your localtheater.

When playing audio CDs, the playback quality isstate-of-the-art, matching that of the finest play-ers available.

In addition to DVD and CD playback, the DMC1000 offers audio and still-image playback fromboth solid-state media cards and USB drives. Youcan even record analog sources such as your oldtapes, cassettes and even vinyl records (with anoptional, external phono preamp) to store virtu-

ally any audio content for instant playback. Andthe DMC 1000 allows content to be transferredfrom the hard drive to the memory cards or a USBdrive, or even a recordable CD. This flexibility lets

you take your music with you in a wide range ofportable players, or in your car.

Additional features of the DMC 1000 includeiPod audio playback through Harman Kardon’soptional The Bridge accessory, with charging and

navigation available to any zone in your system.System control options include the unit’s backlitremote, optional external IR sensor/receivers.

If you have additional questions about thisproduct or its installation or operation that arenot answered in this manual, please contactyour dealer, as he is your best source of localinformation.

n Plays a Wide Range of Video and AudioFormats, Including DVD-Video Discs,VCD, Standard CD Audio Discs, CD-R/RW, DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, Audio Discsand MP3 Discs

n DVD playback upscaled to 1080p withHDMI 1.1 output for single-wireconnections

n Front- and rear panel USB input forplaying compatible music or image filesfrom portable devices and for recordingmusic files

n Automatically records from CD to inter-nal Media Library (250GB HDD, equal to60.000 songs)

n Distribute audio to up to four independ-ent zones simultaneously, allowingdifferent areas of the home to enjoyunique programs

n GraceNote music recognition service*for identification of album name, artistand genre, as well as displaying cover art

n Plays audio and video files from, andrecords from a CD to, solid-state mediacards or USB drives

n High-quality video reproduction withpixel-by-pixel processing, progres-sive scan output and 3/2 pull-downreconstruction

n High-Quality Video Playback 10-BitDACs, Progressive Scan and ComponentVideo Outputs

n Dolby Digital and DTS Data SignalOutput Through Both Optical andCoaxial Digital Audio Connections

n Audiophile-Grade Output DACs for theFinest Audio reproduction

n Easy-to-Use On-Screen NavigationSystem

n Playback of MP3 and Windows®

 WMAAudio Discs and JPEG image files

n Parental Lock Controls PreventUnauthorized Viewing of RestrictedMovies

n Extensive Programming Capability forAudio and Video Discs

n Multiple Options for Language,Soundtrack and Subtitle Selection

n Multiple-Angle Capabilities WithSpecially Encoded DVD Discs

n Backlit, Ergonomically Designed

Remote Control

READ THIS BEFORE OPERATINGYOUR UNIT

Install this DVD-Player in a well ventilated, cool,dry, clean place with at least 10 cm on the top,10 cm on the left and right, and 10 cm at theback – away from direct sunlight, heat sources,vibration, dust, moisture, and/or cold.Avoid installing this unit where foreign objectmay fall onto this unit and/or this unit may beexposed to liquid dripping or splashing. On thetop of this unit, do not place:

– Burning objects (i.e. candles), as they maycause fire, damage to this unit, and/or personalinjury.

– Containers with liquid in them, as they may falland liquid may cause electrical shock to theuser and/or damage to this unit.

Do not cover this unit with a newspaper, table-cloth, curtain, etc. in order not to obstruct heatradiation. If the temperature inside this unit rises,it may cause fire, damage to this unit, and/orpersonal injury.

Install this unit near the AC outlet and where theAC power plug can be reached easily.

This unit is not disconnected from the AC powersource as long as it is connected to the walloutlet, even if this unit itself is turned off. Thisstate is called the standby mode. In this state,this unit is designed to consume a very smallquantity of power.

WARNINGTO REDUCE THE RISK OF FIRE OR ELECTRICSHOCK, DO NOT EXPOSE THIS APPLIANCETO RAIN OR MOISTURE.

* Music recognition technology and related data are provided by Gracenote. Gracenote is the industry standard in

music recognition technology and related content delivery. For more information, visit www.gracenote.com.

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4 TERMINOLOGY

Terminology

Terminology

Since they share some of the characteristics andtechnology of CD players, many of the terms andoperational concepts used in a DVD player aresimilar to what you may be familiar with from CD

players and changers, or older video disc formatssuch as Laser Disc. However, if this is your firstDVD product, some of the terms used to describethe features of a DVD player may be unfamiliar.The following explanations should solve some ofthe mysteries of DVD, and help you to enjoy allthe power and flexibility of the DVD format andthe DVD.

With the arrival of DVD, disc data capacity hasincreased dramatically. On a DVD Video discmost of this capacity is taken up by MPEG 2video and the multichannel movie soundtrackin Dolby Digital and/or DTS. This information iscompressed.

Aspect Ratio: This is a description of the widthof a video image in relation to its height.A conventional video screen is four units wide forevery three units of height, that’s why the ratiois called ”4:3”. Newer wide aspect ratio videodisplays are 16 units wide for every nine units ofheight, making them more like the screen in amovie theater. The program material on a DVDmay be recorded in either format and, in addition,you may configure the DVD to play back in eitherformat, depending on the features recorded ona disc.

Media Library: The Media Library refers to

the content stored on the DMC 1000’s internalhard-disc drive. It contains all of the content thatyou have transferred to the DMC 1000, includingcopies of audio CDs, captures of audio streamsfrom the Auxiliary Analog Audio Inputs, andMP3 audio and JPEG image files transferred frommemory cards, discs or USB drives. The MediaLibrary automatically organizes the content sothat you may view it by track name, album, artist,genre, cover art (when available) or playlists thatyou have created. When a multizone system hasbeen connected, each zone may access differentcontent stored in the Media Library.

Multizone: A multizone system is used to dis-tribute audio to various rooms in the house sothat the occupants of each room may independ-ently choose different program material. TheDMC 1000 permits up to four different zones todistribute audio simultaneously. Multizone con-trol is usually set up by the custom installer.

Zone: A zone is a section of a multizone systemin which all loudspeakers in the zone play thesame source program. By connecting the DMC1000’s audio outputs for a specific zone to a mul-tichannel amplifier, you may include a number ofloudspeakers in a variety of room locations withinthe zone. Example: A four-channel amplifier con-nected to the Zone 2 Outputs may power a pairof speakers in the living room and a stereo ceilingspeaker in the connected dining room, so thatyou and your guests may enjoy the same programanywhere within the zone.

Component Video: This form of video signaleliminates many of the artifacts of traditionalcomposite video signals by splitting the signalinto a separate luminance channel (the “Y”signal channel) and two color-difference sig-nals (the Pr and Pb signal channels). With acomponent video connection, you will see greaterpicture resolution and eliminate many pictureimperfections such as the moiré patterns oftenseen on check-patterned cloth. However, in orderto benefit from component video, you must havea video display with Y/Pr/Pb component videoinputs. Do not connect the component video out-puts of the DMC 1000 to the standard composite

or S-video inputs of a TV or recorder.

HDCP (High-Bandwidth Digital ContentProtection): HDCP is the specification forprotecting digitally encoded content fromunauthorized copying when it is transmitted froma DVD player (or other video source) to a videodisplay using HDMI or DVI connections. In orderto take advantage of the high-resolution outputof the DMC 1000 via its HDMI output, yourdisplay must be HDCP-compliant. Virtually all dis-plays with HDMI inputs are HDCP-compliant, butnot all DVI-equipped displays are. If you are usingthe DMC 1000 with an optional HDMI-to-DVIcable or adapter, check the owner’s manual foryour display to determine whether it isHDCP-compliant.

HDMI™

 (High-Definition MultimediaInterface

): HDMI is a serial-bus form ofcommunication between the DVD player andthe video display or audio/video receiver. With

5Gbps of bandwidth, it is capable of passinguncompressed digital audio and high-definitiondigital video using a single cable. With HDMI, theDMC 1000 is capable of outputtinghigh-resolution (720p or 1080p) video and5.1-channel Dolby Digital or DTS digital audio,with the convenience of just a single cableconnection.

JPEG Files: JPEG stands for the JointPhotographic Experts Group, which developeda standard for compressing still images, suchas photographs. JPEG files may be created on apersonal computer by importing images from adigital camera, or scanning printed photographs.

These files may be burned onto a compact disc.The DMC 1000 is capable of recognizing JPEGfiles and enabling you to view them on your videoscreen.

Title: For a DVD, a title is defined as an entiremovie or program. There can be as many chapterswithin a title as the producers decide to include.Most discs include only one title, but some mayhave more than one, to give you a “DoubleFeature” presentation.

Chapter: DVD programs are divided intochapters and titles. Chapters are the sub-sections programmed into a single title on a disc.Chapters may be compared to the individualtracks on an audio CD.

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TERMINOLOGY

Terminology

RGB Video: This is a new form of video signalthat eliminates many of the artifacts of traditionalcomposite video signals by splitting the signalinto the three fundamental colors Red, Green andBlue (RGB). With an RGB connection (via SCART),you will see greater picture resolution and

eliminate many picture imperfections such as themoiré patterns often seen on checkered patternedcloths. However, in order to benefit from RGBvideo, you must have a video display with an RGBcompatible SCART input.

Progressive Scan: Due to the immense datastorage capacity of DVD, images are nowa-days stored progressively (intact, rather thaninterlaced). This allow all of the lines in eachframe (odd and even) to be shown at the sametime. DMC 1000 comes with true progressivescan video output resulting in a 40% greater lightoutput than a conventional TV and a stunningly

detailed, high definition image with absence ofvisible scanlines and motion artifacts.

WMA Files: WMA (Windows Media®

 Audio) isan audio compression format that was developedby the Microsoft

®

 Corporation for use with itsWindows Media Player. WMA files can be evensmaller in size than MP3 files, while maintainingsimilar quality. The DMC 1000 is among thoseDVD players capable of playing discs containingWMA files. Note that Windows Media Playeruses other file formats; however, the DMC1000 is only capable of playing files that end inthe “.wma” extension. See page 27 for moreinformation on WMA file support.

Multiple Angle: DVDs have the capability toshow up to four different views of the samescene in a program. When a disc is encoded withmultiple-angle information, pressing the Anglebutton will enable you to switch between thesedifferent views. Note that at present, few discs

take advantage of this capability and, whenthey do, the multiple-angle technology may onlybe present for short periods of time within thedisc. Producers will usually insert some sort oficon or graphic in the picture to alert you to theavailability of multiple viewing angles.

Reading: This is a message that you will seeafter you´ve loaded the disc and the tray hasclosed. It refers to the fact that the player mustfirst examine the contents of the disc to see if itis a CD or DVD, and then extract the informa-tion about the type of material on the disc, suchas languages, aspect ratios, subtitles, number

of titles and more. The slight delay while thecontents of the disc are read is normal.

Resume: The operation of the Stop Buttonon the DVD works differently from what youare used to on CD players. On a traditional CDplayer, when you press the Stop button, theunit does just that: it stops playback. On a CDplayer, when you press the start button again,the disc starts from the beginning. With the DVD,however, you have two options when playingDVD discs. Pressing Stop once will stop playback,but it actually puts the unit in the Resume mode.This means that you can turn the machine offand, when you press play the next time, the disc

will resume or continue from the point on thedisc where the Stop button was pressed. Thisis helpful if you are watching a movie and mustinterrupt your viewing session but wish to pick upwhere you left off. Pressing the Stop button twicewill stop the machine in a traditional mannerand, when the disc is played again, it will startfrom the beginning.

In resume mode, the cover of the DVD will bedisplayed, if available. Otherwise, theHarman Kardon screen will appear.

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6 FEATURES

Features

High quality video

• High Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) fora single wire, digital connection to yourHD-Ready screen.

• Advanced sophisticated 10-bit MPEG-2 video

decoding circuits.• Direct RGB output via SCART (selectable) for

optimum video performance. SCART connectoralso configurable for Composite Video output.

• Pure PAL with NTSC disc due to true NTSC/PALconversion.

• Dual-layer compatibility for extended play DVD.• Progressive Scan component video ouputs

(NTSC and PAL)• Playback of JPEG image files

High quality digital audio

• By connecting a DTS (Digital Theater Systems)or a Dolby Digital decoder, you can enjoy high

quality 5.1 digital surround sound from DTS orDolby Digital discs.

• With linear PCM audio at 16-24 bits and44-96 kHz (also on digital output, see tablepage 16), audio quality exceeding that of CDbecomes possible.

• Optical and coaxial digital audio output.

Inputs• Memory Card Slot 1: SD/MMC, Memory Stick• Memory Card Slot 2: Compact Flash• USB: Flash drive, client devices only• Analog Audio: 2-channel• Remote Control IR

Outputs• Analog Audio: Zone 1 (main zone): 6-channel (RCA jacks)Zones 2, 3 and 4: 2-channels per zone(RCA jacks)

• Remote Control IR• Digital audio: Coaxial and optical• Digital Audio/Video: HDMI• Analog Video: Composite, S-video and

component, Scart (RGB)

Data and Control Ports• Front- and rear-panel USB jacks for flash drives

and external USB hard drives (client only, FATor FAT32 formats only)

• Proprietary connection for iPod charging,audio* playback and navigation throughHarman Kardon’s The Bridge (sold separately)

• RS-232 port• RJ45 Ethernet jack for connection to broadband

network (required for cover art)• Remote control IR input and output *Requires compatible iPod.

Memory Cards• Slot 1 accepts Secure Digital (SD), Multimedia

Card (MMC) and Memory Stick (compatiblewith Magic Gate) cards. Other card types maybe used with a compatible adapter, but are notguaranteed to be recognized by the DMC 1000.

• Slot 2 accepts Compact Flash I (CF) cards, orcards using a Compact Flash 1-compatibleadapter.

• Cards with more than 1GB memory may notwork correctly.

• Video formats supported: MPEG-2 digital videofiles.

Recording Capabilities• Automatically records audio CDs to Media

Library (hard-disc drive)• Recording sources: Media Library, disc player,

memory cards, USB device, analog audio viarear-panel Auxiliary Analog Audio Inputs

• Recording destinations:  n Media Library (from any source)  n Data CD-R/RW disc, Memory Card installed

in Card Slot 1 or 2 or USB device (only fromplaylist programmed in Media Library)

• Recording speeds: CDs: 16x, AUX: 1x only• Recording quality: lossless (.wav), best (MP3:

320kb/sec), high (MP3: 256kb/sec), medium(MP3: 192kb/sec), basic (MP3: 128kb/sec)

• Recorded format: data files – original format;analog audio – .wav files; audio CDs – formatand sampling rate determined by recordingquality setting

Many convenient features

• On-Screen Menu lcons for disc information orplayer information and access to many majorfunctions of this unit.

• Subtitles may be displayed in one of numerouslanguages*.

• The multi-angle function allows you to choosethe viewing angle of scenes which were shotfrom a number of different angles (Limited toDVD’s recorded with multiple camera angles.)

• Multiple options for dialog language andsoundtrack selection (limited to DVD’s recordedwith multiple dialog languages or soundtracks).

• Intuitive menu operating system.• 4 step Zoom (off, x1, x2, x3) play and pause.

• Still-image rotation in 90-degree increments• Thumbnail still-image menu• User-selectable slideshow pace: slow,medium,

fast• Backlit, ergonomically designed remote control.• Future software upgrades accessible via

Internet. (See information below.)* The number of languages recorded depends on

the software.

Compatible with CDas well as DVD

• The DMC 1000 will play any conventional AudioCD or recordable (CD-R) or erasable CD(CD-RW), MP3, WMA (v9) or any VCD or DVD/

Video with the region code 0 or 2.

Disc formats supportedby this player

The unit can play the following disc formats(8 cm and 12 cm size):

• DVD

• DVD-R

• DVD-RW

• DVD+R

• DVD+RW

• CD

• CD-R

• CD-RW• VCD

• WMA (v9)

NOTE: Due to differences in the format ofcertain discs, it is possible that some discs mayinclude a mix of features that are not compatiblewith the DMC 1000. Similarly, although theDMC 1000 is capable of a wide range of features,not all discs include every capability of theDMC 1000 system. For example, although theDMC 1000 is compatible with multi-angle discs,that feature is only possible when the disc isspecially encoded for multipleangle play. In

addition, the DMC 1000 is capable of playingback both Dolby Digital and DTS soundtracks, butthe number and types of tracks available will varyfrom disc to disc. To make certain that a specificfeature or soundtrack option is available, pleasecheck the options noted on the disc jacket.

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FEATURES

Features

nPlayback capability for CD-R, CD-RW, WMA,JPEG, MP3, VCD/SVCD, DVD-R, DVD+R,DVD-RW and DVD+RW discs may vary dueto variations in the quality of the disc and therecorder used to create the disc.

n The DMC 1000 is compatible with mostdiscs recorded with files encoded using MP3or Windows Media 8, as well as JPEG stillimages. However, note that variations in theencoder or codec used and the bit rate of theencoding may affect the DMC 1000’s abilityto play back a specific disc. As a result, wecannot guarantee complete compatibility withall encoders and versions of the codecs. Forbest results, we recommend that MP3 files beencoded at bit rates ranging between 32kbpsand 320kbps. WMA files should be encodedat bit rates between 64kbps and 320kbps.Although the DMC 1000 is capable of playing

some WMA 9 files, not all features ofversion 9 are supported. JPEG files should con-tain no more than 5 megapixels, and the filesize should be no larger than 5Mb.

The DMC 1000 will NOT play the following:• DVD discs with a Region Code other than 2• DVD-ROM data discs• DVD-RAM discs• DVD-Audio discs• SACD(TM)-discs• CD-I discs• CD-G discs• SVCD discs• Kodak Photo CD

 discs (Kodak Picture CD discs,

available to consumers, may be viewed usingthe DMC 1000).

• Discs intended for use in video game consoles.• Discs recorded in the “VR” mode or at any

speed other than “SP”.• High-definition optical discs such as WMVHD,

HD-DVD and Blu-ray.

Memory Card Compatibility

The following types of memory cards may be usedwith the DMC 1000:

The DMC 1000 will play most recordablememory cards, but we cannot guarantee com-plete playback compatibility due to the widevariation in recorders and blank media.We can-not guarantee playback compatibility with cardshaving a memory capacity greater than1 gigabyte.

• Both Secure Digital (SD) and MMC (MultimediaCard) memory cards may be used in Card Slot1. The smaller miniSD and microSD cards maybe used in Card Slot 1, but require an adapter(not included).

• Memory Stick cards may also be used inCard Slot 1. Original Memory Stick cards arecompatible as is, but an adapter (not included)is required for the smaller Memory Stick Duocards.

• xD-Picture Card may be used in Card Slot 1.

• Compact Flash I cards may be used in Card Slot2. Compact Flash II cards and microdrives arenot compatible with the DMC 1000.

• Card Slot 1 accepts only SD, MMC and MemoryStick cards. Card Slot 2 accepts only CompactFlash I cards. Do not attempt to install a card

in a slot other than the one designated for itscard type.

• Cards with memory capacity greater than8 gigabyte are not recommended for use withthe DMC 1000.

Card Slot 1Gently insert an SD, MMC or Memory Stick card,label-side up, pushing it all the way in until itclicks. Remove the card by gently pressing it inagain until it unlatches, then you may pull it outof the slot.

Card Slot 2Gently insert a Compact Flash I card, label-side

up, pushing it all the way until it is firmly seatedin the slot. Remove the card by pulling it out ofthe slot.

 

USB Device CompatibilityClient USB devices, such as flash drives and mostexternal or some portable hard disc drives, maybe connected to the DMC 1000’s front or rearpanel’s USB port.

Many recent-model still cameras may also beconnected directly to the DMC 1000 via USB. Ingeneral, cameras or other USB devices that arecompatible with both Windows® and MacintoshOS computers may also be used with the DMC1000.

Do not connect a personal computer directly tothe DMC 1000. Due to their software design,the iPod, most other USB peripheral devices andaccessories – such as card readers, keyboardsand pointing devices – and software-specificdigital media players are not compatible withthe USB ports on the DMC 1000, even whenplaced in disc mode. To enjoy audio materials

stored on your compatible iPod, dock it in TheBridge (optional, and available from your HarmanKardon dealer).

Gently insert the connector end of your USBdevice into the USB Port, being careful to alignthe device’s plastic tongue to slide into the gapunderneath the port’s plastic tongue. Remove thedevice by pulling it out of the port.

Upgradeability via Internet

The ”firmware” controlling the functional-ity of the Harman Kardon DMC 1000 is fullyupgradeable. In the event of future improvementsto its operations and features, it will be possible

to download firmware upgrades from www.har-mankardon.com/International/All you have to do is create a CD-R with the dataand insert it in the DMC 1000 for an automaticupgrade.

Packing List

1 Harman Kardon DMC 1000 Player

1 Remote control

2 AAA batteries

1 HDMI cable

1 owner’s manual

1 Power cord.

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1 4   5 6 7 8 2   A 9

3 B DC EF

FRONT PANEL CONTROLS

Front Panel Controls

IMPORTANT NOTE: The DMC 1000’s front-panel controls use advanced touch-sensitivetechnology. To use the front panel, place a fingerover any of the illuminated icons. A gentle tap isall that is necessary. Wait a few seconds for theDMC 1000 to process each command. To removefingerprints, wipe the front panel with a dry

microfiber cloth.Power: When the DMC 1000 is connected toan AC power source and the rear-panel MasterPower Switch is on, this control will indicate oneof four power states:

• Full-Off Mode (dim blue) – The DMC 1000,including its hard-disc drive, is fully powereddown.

• Sleep (Standby) Mode (amber) – The DMC1000 will not respond to any commands otherthan to power on.

• Server Mode (amber) – Server Mode has nofunction.

• Full-Power Mode (bright blue) – The DMC1000 operates normally.

The description of each mode and the DMC1000’s response to the power controls is shownin Table A7 in the Appendix.

0 Main Information Display: This displaydelivers messages and status indications to helpyou operate the DMC 1000 player.

1 Power On/Off (Standby): Press the buttononce to turn the DMC 1000 player on, press itagain to put the unit in the Standby mode.

2 Open/Close: Press this button to open orclose the Disc Tray.

3 Disc Drawer.

4 Play/Pause: Press to initiate playback or toresume playback after Pause has been pressed.Press this button to momentarily pause playback.To resume playback, press the button again. If aDVD is playing, action will freeze and a still pic-ture will be displayed when the button is pressed.

5 Stop: Press this button once to place the discin the Resume mode, which means that playbackwill stop, but as long as the tray is not openedor the disc changed, DVD playback will continue

from the same point on the disc when the PlayButton is pressed again. Resume will also work ifthe unit was turned off. To stop a disc and haveplay start from the beginning, press the buttontwice.

6 Skip/Search (Previous): Press this buttonto move backward through the music tracks on aCD disc or the chapters on a DVD disc. Keep thebutton pressed to search backwards at one of theavailable speeds.

7 Skip/Search (Next): Press to move forwardthrough the music tracks on a CD or the chapterson a DVD disc. Keep the button pressed to searchforwards at one of the available speeds.

8 Record: When an audio CD is loaded, or theAnalog Audio Inputs are selected as the source,press this button to view the Record tab of theon-screen menu. Pressing this button does notbegin the recording.

NOTE: It is not possible to record from one ofthe memory cards or the USB device to any othermedia or to the USB device. It is also not pos-sible to transfer image or video files. However,an audio signal is always available at the AnalogAudio Outputs. You may make analog recordingsfrom any source by connecting an analog audiorecorder to the rear-panel Analog Audio Outputs.

9 Menu: Press to activate the on-screenmenu system, or to navigate back up one level inthe menu system.

NOTE: It is not possible to select a new sourcewhile the current source is playing or even whileit is paused. Press the Stop Button before select-ing a new source.

0 Ecran d’information principal

1 Marche/Arrêt (Mode de veille)

2 Ouverture du plateau

3 Tiroir de disque

4 Lecture/Pause

5 Arrêt

6 Saut/Recherche (Amont)

7 Saut/Recherche (Aval)

8 Enregistrer

9 Menu

A Touches de navigation

B Porte du panneau avant

C Fente à carte 1

D Fente à carte 2

E Port USB

F Capteur IR de télécommande

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FRONT PANEL CONTROLS

Front Panel Controls

A Navigation and Enter Buttons: Use thesebuttons to navigate the on-screen menus, andpress the Enter Button to select an item.

B Front-Panel Door: Open this door to accessthe two Card Slots and the front-panel USB Port.

To open it, gently press on the triangle in thecenter of the door until it unlatches; the door willdrop down. To close the door, remove all media,then press the door closed at the same centerlocation until you hear the latch click. To avoiddamaging the door, do not open or close it bygrabbing the edges.

C Card Slot 1: Insert an SD, MMC or MemoryStick memory card into this slot by gently pushingit all the way in until it clicks. The slot alsoaccommodates miniSD, microSD and MemoryStick Duo cards when used with the appropriateadapter, available in most electronics and compu-ter stores. Remove a card from this slot by gently

pushing it in until it unlatches, then pulling it allthe way out of the slot.

D Card Slot 2: Insert a Compact Flash Imemory card into this slot by gently pushing itall the way in until it is firmly seated in the slot.Remove it by pulling it all the way out of the slot.

E USB Port: Insert a USB client device’sconnector into this port, being careful to correctlyalign the device’s plastic tongue with the gap. Donot connect a computer to this port.

F Remote IR Sensor: This sensor receivesinfrared commands from the remote control.Make sure that it is not blocked, although an

optional IR sensor such as the Harman Kardon HE1000 may be connected to serve as an externalsensor when the unit is located in a differentroom, installed behind cabinet doors or whenthe sensor is otherwise blocked. For best results,always point your remote control at the DMC1000’s front panel.

 

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DMC DVD SVCD USB 1 USB 2 CARD 1 CARD 2 AUX LAN 1A-BALL

420ip 720ip 1080ip TITLE V.OFF TRACK CHAP DOLBY DTS HOUR MIN SEC

RAND REP

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FRONT PANEL INFORMATION DISPLAY

Front Panel Information Display

A Source Indicators: One of the Disc-TypeIndicators DMC [the Media Library], DVD, VCD,USB 1 [front], USB 2 [back], Card 1 [SD, MMC,Memory Stick, xD-Picture Card], Card 2 [CF],The Bridge or AUX will light to indicate the cur-rent media source. During a recording both thesource and destination media indicators will light.

Disc-Type Indicators: The DVD, CD, VCD orSVCD indicator will light to show the type of disccurrently being played.

B Playback-Mode Indicators: Theseindicators light to show the current playbackmode:

B Lights when a disc is playing in the normalmode

H Lights when the disc is in the Fast SearchForward mode. The on-screen banner displayindicates the selected speed (x2, x4, x8, x16)

1 Lights when the disc is paused.

G Lights when the disc is in the Fast SearchReverse mode. The on-screen banner display indi-cates the selected speed (x2, x4, x8, x16)

C Audio Bitstream Indicators: When aDolby

®

 Digital, DTS®

 or linear PCM digital audiosignal is present on the disc, one of theseindicators will light.

D Chapter/Track Number Indicators: Whena DVD disc is playing, these two positions in thedisplay will show the current chapter. When a CDdisc is playing they will show the current tracknumber.

E Time Indicators: These positions in theindicator will show the running time of a DVD inplay. When a CD is playing, these indicators willshow the current track time, time remaining inthe current track, or the total remaining time onthe disc.

NOTE: The IndicatorsDEF will also displaytext messages about the DVD’s status, includingLOADING when a disc is loading,POWER OFF when the unit is turned off, andDISC ERROR when a disc not compatible withthe DVD is put into the play position.

F Title Indicators: These two positions in thedisplay will show the current title number when aDVD disc is playing.

G V-OFF Indicator: This indicator lights whenthe unit’s video output has been turned off bypressing the V-OFF button on the remote control.

NOTE: The Video Off command will not affectthe HDMI Output because it may be in use foraudio. Avoid leaving the SETUP MENU on screenfor longer than a minute or two when using theHDMI Output, as the screen saver will not oper-ate on the SETUP MENUS and there is a dangerof “burning in” the image on plasma or CRT

displays.H Repeat Indicators: These indicators lightwhen any of the Repeat functions are in use.

I Message Area: Various messages appearin this two-line area. During media playback, thetrack count and time are displayed on the upperline, while identifying information scrolls on thelower line, depending on the media type.

J Random Indicator: This indicator lightswhen the unit is in the Random Play mode.

K Network: This indicator lights when theRJ45 jack is connected to a live network.

A Source/Disc Type IndicatorsB Playback-Mode Indicators

C Audio Bitstream IndicatorsD Chapter/Track Number IndicatorsE Time IndicatorsF Title Indicators

G V-OFF IndicatorH Repeat Indicators

I Message AreaJ Random IndicatorK NetworkL Video Output Indicators

M Angle IndicatorN Parental Lock Indicator

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FRONT PANEL INFORMATION DISPLAY

Front Panel Information Display

L Video Output Indicators: Either the 576ior 576p indicator will light to indicate whetherthe Component Video Outputs are in progres-sive scan mode. When the Composite or S-VideoOutputs are in use, this indicator will alwaysindicate the default 576i (interlaced scan) set-ting, even if you attempt to change the OutputResolution setting in the Video Setup menu to ahigher video resolution. When the HDMI Outputis in use, its video resolution will be indicated.The HDMI Output will upscale source materials tothe higher resolution, as indicated in the VIDEOSETUP menu (explained in the Initial Setup sec-tion). You may change the Video Out Resolutionsetting to a lower resolution to improve picturequality using the VIDEO SETUP menu. As youselect a specific HDMI Output video resolutionand the DMC 1000 successfully determines thatthe video display is capable of handling thatresolution, its indicator will light and will appear

briefly in the Message Display and on screen.

M Angle Indicator: This indicator blinks whenalternative viewing angles are available on theDVD currently playing.

N Parental Lock Indicator: This indicatorlights when the parental-lock system is engagedin order to prevent anyone from changing therating level without a code.

 

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12

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REMOTE CONTROL FUNCTIONS

Remote Control Functions

0 POWER ON: Turns on the player when it isin standby mode (Harman Kardon logo appearson screen).

1 POWER OFF: Turns off the player tostandby mode.

2 SUBTITLE: When a DVD is playing, press toselect a subtitle language or to turn subtitles off.

Note: Due to the variations in how DVD discsare authored, the subtitle languages displayedby the DMC 1000 may not accurately reflectthe actual languages available on the disc. It isrecommended that subtitles be selected using thedisc’s menu.

3 TITLE: When a disc is playing, press to makethe player go back to the first section of the disc.

4 ANGLE: Press to access various cameraangles on a DVD (If the DVD contains multiplecamera angles) or to rotate JPEG images.

5 AUDIO: Press to access various audiolanguages on a DVD (If the DVD containsmultiple audio streams).

6 ENTER: Press this button to activate asetting or option

7 OPEN/CLOSE: Press to open or close thedisc tray.

8 SETUP: Press this button to use theDMC 1000’s on-screen menu system to adjustthe player’s configuration settings.

9 ARROW buttons (M /N /K/L): Use tomove the cursor in the OSD. When the Zoomfunction is used with still images, use these but-tons to explore the enlarged image. While view-ing a still image, press the N Button to rotate theimage 90º clockwise, or the M Button to rotate it90º counterclockwise.

A INFO: Press for detailed informations on thedisc playing

POWER ON

POWER OFF

SUBTITLE

TITLE

ANGLEAUDIO

ENTER

OPEN/CLOSE

SETUP

ARROWS

INFO

DISC MENU

PAUSE

STATUS

SKIP/STEP (PREVIOUS)SKIP/STEP (NEXT)

PLAY

SEARCH/SLOW REVERSE

STOP

SEARCH/SLOW FORWARD

DIMMER

BACK

ZOOM

MENU

FINDA-B Repeat

V.OFF

LIGHT

NUMERIC KEYS

PLAY MODE

CLEAR

IR EMITTER

VIDEO MODE

RECORD

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REMOTE CONTROL FUNCTIONS

Remote Control Functions

B DISC MENU: Displays the actual DVD DiscMenu on the TV screen in play mode. When play-ing discs with JPEG images, pressing this buttonwill access the thumbnails.

C PAUSE: Freezes a picture (with DVD/VCD)

and pauses the playback signal (CD) when a discis playing. Press again for normal playback.

D STATUS: Press while a disc is playing toview banner display. Use the ARROW buttons tomove through the different features in the BannerDisplay.

E SKIP/STEP (Previous): Press to go tobeginning of current track. Press again quickly togo to beginning of previous track. After pressingthe PAUSE button, each press of this button willmove the image in reverse frame by frame.

F SKIP/STEP (Next): Press to go to beginningof next track. After pressing the PAUSE button,

each press of this button will move the imageforwards frame by frame.

G PLAY: Begins to play disc (closes disc trayfirst, if it is open.)

H SEARCH/SLOW (REV): Allows you tosearch in reverse through a disc while it is inplay mode. Each time you press this button, thesearch speed changes as indicated by a numberof arrows on the right top of your screen.After pressing the PAUSE button, each pressof this button will change the slow down speedindicated by a number of arrows in the right topof the screen.

I STOP: Stops playing a disc. When a disc isplaying, if you press STOP and PLAY, the disc willresume play, i.e. it will start from the same pointon the disc where the unit was stopped. If youpress STOP twice and the PLAY button, the discwill start play from the beginning.

J SEARCH/SLOW (FWD): Allows you tosearch forward through a disc while it is in playmode. Each time you press this button, the searchspeed changes as indicated by a number ofarrows on the right top of your screen.After pressing the PAUSE button, each press ofthis button will change the slow down speed asindicated by a number of arrows in the right top

of the screen.

K DIMMER: Press to change the brightnessof the front panel display or to turn the displayoff completely in the following order: FULLBRIGHTNESS ‹ HALF BRIGHTNESS ‹ OFF ‹ FULLBRIGHTNESS

L BACK: Press this button while viewingthe DMC 1000’s Setup menus or Status Displayto exit a drop down menu without making aselection. It has no effect on a disc’s menus.

M ZOOM: When a DVD or VCD is playing,press this button to zoom the picture so that it isenlarged. There are 4 steps to the zoom function,

each progressively larger. Press through each ofthe zoom stages to return to a normal picture.

N Menu: Press to display the main menu formedia playback and control.

O Find: When browsing content from theMedia Library, press to search for any audiotrack stored on the system’s hard-disc drive.

When the Find Track box opens, use the NumericKeys to enter the name of the desired track (seeNumeric Keys description). When a DVD is play-ing, press this button to display a dialog box thatallows you to directly select a group, title, trackor chapter as appropriate to the disc. With thecorrect cell in the dialog box highlighted, use theNumeric Keys to enter the section of the disc fromwhich you would like playback to begin (it is notnecessary to press the Enter Button). The disc willautomatically jump to that section. You may alsouse the function to begin playback from a specifictime point in the track, chapter or file, or on thedisc (DVDs and CDs), sometimes called Time

Search. With the Time cell highlighted, use theNumeric Keys to enter up to six digits that indi-cate the time from which you would like playbackto start. If you enter fewer than six digits, pressthe Enter Button to complete the entry, and thedisc will immediately jump to that point.

PA-B: Press to select section A-B and to playrepeatedly.

Q V.OFF: Press to turn off video output forimproved performance from audio-only discs.Press again to restore video output.

R LIGHT: Press to illuminate remotecontroller.

S NUMERIC KEYS: Select numbers bypressing these buttons. While managing theMedia Library, these buttons may also be usedto enter letters and punctuation when namingplaylists or content. A character-entry dialog boxwill appear to guide you, as shown in Figure35 on page 28. You may use the M /N /K/L Navigation Buttons to highlight the desired char-acter key and press the Enter Button repeatedlyuntil the desired character is displayed in the textbar at the top of the character-entry dialog box.You may find it easier to press the correspondingNumeric Key to directly select characters. Eachpress of a Numeric Key cycles through the upper-

and lowercase letters or symbols shown on theremote and on screen.

Use the alphabetic keys to jump to desired areasof the Media Library content. Example: Whiledisplaying the Media Library organized by art-ist, press any letter key to jump to the first artistwhose name begins with that letter.

T Play Mode: Press this button while a discis playing to display the Play Mode dialog box,which allows you to program Random or Repeatplayback and play lists.

U CLEAR: Press to remove the Banner menu

from the screen.

V IR EMITTER: This small, clear button-likedevice sends the IR commands from the remotecontrol to the DMC 1000. To ensure properperformance of the remote control, be sure topoint it toward the unit and do not cover it withyour fingers when sending remote commands.

 Video Mode: Press to cycle through theavailable video output settings. If you inadvert-ently change the video setting in the on-screenmenu system and the picture is lost or scrambled,press this button to return to a setting compatiblewith your video display.

 Record: Press this button to open a menuthat allows you to record content from one mediasource to another.

 • Audio CDs are automatically recorded to theMedia Library when they are inserted.

• Audio sources connected to the AuxiliaryAnalog Audio Inputs may only be recorded tothe Media Library. You may later transfer thatcontent from a playlist to a memory card, arecordable CD or a USB drive.

• To copy recordings from the Media Library to amemory card, a USB drive or a CD-R/RW disc,first create a playlist of the desired content. Ifthe content was originally imported tothe Media Library from a memory card or USBdevice, the DMC 1000 automatically created aplaylist at that time.

• When using the pull-down menus to select arecording source (“From”) and a destination(“To”) only those sources with available con-tent will appear. The Auxiliary Analog Audio

Inputs will always appear, because the DMC1000 is not capable of detecting the presenceof an audio signal.

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14

ManufacturedunderlicenseunderU.S.Patent#’s:5,451,942;5,956,674;5,974,380;

5,978,762;6,487,535& otherU.S.andworldwidepatentsissued& pending.DTS

isa registeredtrademark&theDTSlogosandSymbolare trademarksofDTS,Inc.  1996-2007DTS,Inc. AllRightsReserved.

9

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REAR PANEL CONNECTIONS

Rear Panel Connections

0 Optical Digital Output: Connect this jackto the optical digital input of an A/V receiver orsurround processor for Dolby Digital, DTS or PCMaudio playback.

1 Coaxial Digital Output: Connect this jackto the coaxial digital input of an A/V receiver orsurround processor for Dolby Digital, DTS or PCMaudio playback.

NOTE: The coaxial digital output should only beconnected to a digital input. Even though it is thesame RCA-type connector as standard analogaudio connections, DO NOT connect it to a con-ventional analog input jack.

Connect either the Optical Digital AudioOutput 0 or the Coaxial Digital AudioOutput 1 to a corresponding digital audioinput on your receiver or processor, but not both.

2 AC Power Cord: Connect this plug to anAC outlet. If the outlet is controlled by a switch,make certain that it is in the ON position.

3 Composite Video Output: Connect this jack to the video input on a television or videoprojector, or to a video input on an A/V receiveror processor if you are using that type of devicefor video input switching.

4 S-Video Output: Connect this jack to theS-Video input on a television or video projec-tor, or to an S-Video input on an A/V receiver orprocessor if you are using that type of device forS-Video input switching.

5 Component Video Outputs: These outputscarry the component video signals for connectionto display monitors with component video inputs.For standard analog TV’s or projectors withinputs marked Y/Pr/Pb or Y/Cr/Cb, connect theseoutputs to the corresponding inputs. If you havea high-definition television or projector that is

compatible with high scan rate progressive video,connect these jacks to the “HD Component”inputs. Note that if you are using a progressivescan display device, then ”Progressive” must beselected in the VideoSet-up Menu in order to take advantage of theprogressive scan circuitry. See page 22 for moreinformation on progressive scan video.

IMPORTANT: These jacks should NOT beconnected to standard composite video inputs.

6 SCART OUT (TV): If your TV has a SCARTsocket, you can connect a SCART cable to yourTV and to your DMC 1000 Player for improved

video quality. The SCART cable carries both audioand video. You can select Composite Video orRGB video for that SCART connector’s videooutput signal.

7 Remote Control Output: Connect this jackto the infrared (IR) input jack of another compat-ible Harman Kardon remote controlled productto have the built-in Remote Sensor on the DMC1000 provide IR signals to other compatibleproducts.

8 Remote Control Input: Connect the outputof a remote infrared sensor, or the remote controloutput of another compatibleHarman Kardon product, to this jack. This willenable the remote control to operate even whenthe front panel Remote Sensor on theDMC 1000 is blocked. This jack may also be used

with compatible IR remote control-based automa-tion systems.

9 Zone 2/3/4 Analog Audio Outputs: Whenthe DMC 1000 is being used for multizone opera-tion, connect these jacks to the separate Zoneinputs on your multiroom controller or hub, or theamplifiers feeding the multizone system.

A HDMI Output: If you have an HDMI-compatible receiver or video display device, con-nect this output to an HDMI input on the receiveror video display for the highest-quality uncom-pressed digital audio and video available. Even ifyour receiver is not capable of processing audio

in the HDMI format, you may still experience thesuperb reproduction of HDMI video.

If your video display has a DVI input, you mayuse an optional HDMI-to-DVI cable or adapterfor the connection to the display. In all cases, thevideo display must be HDCP-compliant in orderto use the HDMI output. For best results, we donot recommend HDMI connections in excess of 3meters..

The following audio formats may be output viathe HDMI connection:

Audio CD – 2-Channel PCM or 5.1-channel DTS

DVD-Video – Up to 5.1-channel Dolby Digital or

DTS

0 Optical Digital Output1 Coaxial Digital Output

2 AC Power Cord3 Composite Video Output4 S-Video Output5 Component Video Outputs6 Scart TV Output

7 Remote Control Output8 Remote Control Input

9 Zone 2/3/4 Analog Audio OutputsA HDMI OutputB Zone 1 Analog Audio OutputsC Analog Audio InputD The Bridge Connection

E Network JackF USB Port

G RS-232 PortH Master Power SwitchI Fan Vent

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16 SETUP AND CONNECTIONS

Setup and Connections

Before connecting your DMC 1000, please:nEnsure that the power switch of this unit and

other equipment to be connected is set to offbefore commencing connection.

nDo not block ventilation holes of any of the

equipment and arrange them so that air cancirculate freely.

nRead through the instructions beforeconnecting other equipment.

nEnsure that you observe the color coding whenconnecting audio and video cables.

STEP ONE – Placement

Due to the heat generated by other system com-ponents, place the DMC 1000 on its own shelfrather than stacking it directly on another com-ponent. We do not recommend stacking othercomponents on top of the DMC 1000.

STEP TWO – Connect the DMC 1000to an A/V Receiver or Processor (Preferred)

If the receiver is HDMI-capable and HDCP-compliant, connect the HDMI OutputA to thereceiver’s HDMI Input to carry both audio andvideo.

If the receiver has only a DVI input, use an HDMI-to-DVI adapter, and make a separate audio con-nection.

If the receiver does not have an HDMI or DVIinput, select one video connection, in order of

preference: component video5, S-video4 orcomposite video3.

 For non-HDMI products, a separate audio conne-ction is also required. If available, connect eitherthe Optical0 or Coaxial Digital Audio Outputto the corresponding input on the receiver.

The DMC 1000 is capable of outputting up tofour separate analog audio streams for usein multizone systems. Zone 1 is used for themain listening room, and includes six channels.Connect the Zone 1 Analog Audio OutputsB to a receiver that does not have an availabledigital audio input. If digital audio connections

have been made to the receiver, make an addi-tional connection from the FL and FR jacks to thereceiver to monitor an analog source connectedto the Auxiliary Inputs during recording.

STEP THREE – Connect Media Sources

• Auxiliary Analog Audio InputsC: Connectthe line-level or “Tape” outputs of an analogdevice to these inputs. Do not connect a turnta-ble without a phono preamp.

• The BridgeD: Connect Harman Kardon’s TheBridge (sold separately) here to enjoy contentstored on a compatible iPod (not included).

• USB DevicesEF: Connect a compatibleUSB client device to either the front- or rear-panel USB Port. The front-panel port is locatedbehind the dropdown door.

STEP FOUR – Connect the DMC 1000 to aMultizone System (Optional)

The DMC 1000 may be used with up to fourzones simultaneously, with any or all zones linkedto each other. Zones 2, 3 and 4 are used to dis-tribute 2-channel audio to other locations. Zone

BC1 is the main listening area.

Connect the Analog Audio Outputs for each zonein the system to a receiver, processor, multizonecontroller or amplifier.

STEP FIVE – Connect the Remote IR Inputand Output

Connect the DMC 1000’s Remote IR Input8 tothe compatible IR output of another product, orto an IR receiver or controller, such as the option-al Harman Kardon HE 1000. When daisychainingdevices to allow for remote control up and downthe chain, connect the Remote IR Output7 tothe next product’s IR input. The DMC 1000 is

compatible with “stripped carrier” IR signals.

STEP SIX – Plug In AC Power

To avoid possible damage from a transient powersurge at plug-in, switch the Master Power Switchto the circle position (0). Plug the female end ofthe AC Power cord into the receptacle, and the

male end into an unswitched AC outlet. Due tothe DMC 1000’s power requirements, do notplug it into an accessory outlet on another com-ponent.

Connecting to a TV Only (Optional)

When using the DMC 1000 with a televisionbut no audio receiver or processor, connect it asfollows. Make the Analog Audio Connection B and one of the Video Connections (Composite Video 3, S-Video 4,Component Video 5). If your television orvideo display is HDMI-capable, you only need tomake the HDMI A connection, as it handles

both audio and video. Remember to plug in thepower cord.

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REMOTE CONTROL

Battery installation

Insert the batteries supplied while observing thecorrect (+) and (–) polarities.

Service life of batteries

nThe batteries normally last for about one year,although this depends on how often, and forwhat operations, the remote control is used.

n If the remote control unit fails to work evenwhen it is operated near the player, replacethe batteries.

nUse size “AAA” batteries.

Notes: 

nDo not attempt to recharge, short-circuit,disassemble, heat or throw the batteries intofire.

nDo not drop, step on or otherwise impact theremote control unit. This may damage theparts or lead to malfunction.

nDo not mix old and new batteries.

nWipe away any leakage inside the remote con-trol unit, and install new batteries.

nIf leakage should come into contact with partsof your body, wash it off thoroughly withwater.

n Batteries contain chemical substances and werecommend that you dispose of them properlyand in compliance with any local regulations.Do not simply throw them away but return toyour dealer or special battery disposal centers.

Remote control operation range

Point the remote control unit from no more thanabout 7 m from the remote control sensor andwithin about 60 degrees of the front of the unit.

nThe operating distance may vary according tothe brightness of the room.

Notes: nDo not point bright lights at the remote

control sensor.

nDo not place objects between the remote con-

trol unit and the remote control sensor.

nDo not use this remote control unit whilesimultaneously operating the remote controlunit of any other equipment.

Remote Control

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20 SYSTEM SETUP

System Setup

Turn On the DMC 1000

The DMC 1000 has four power states, eachdesigned to minimize unnecessary power con-sumption.

The description of each mode and the DMC

1000’s response to the power controls is shownin Table A7 in the Appendix.

IMPORTANT NOTE: When the HDMI Output isused, turn on the system components in reverseorder, starting with the video display, then anyreceiver or processor, and finally turn on the DMC1000.

The first time the system is used, turn it on asfollows:

Switch the Master Power Switch to the line posi-tion (I), placing the DMC 1000 in Full-Off powermode.

The “Start DMC 1000” message will appear onthe front panel, and the “Starting . . . ” messagewill appear on screen. Allow the system a fewminutes to fully start up.

The first time the DMC 1000 is turned on, theEnd User License Agreement (EULA) will appear.See Figure 1. The unit will not respond to anyother commands until you have scrolled throughthe entire agreement, and accepted its terms. Acopy of the complete EULA appears in the backof this manual, starting on page 37.

Figure 1 – End User Agreement

After you have accepted the EULA, the MainMenu will be displayed.

Figure 2 – Main Menu

The Main Menu is the usual starting point foreach listening or viewing session.

Display the Setup Menu

The first time the system is used, the Setup Menushould be configured. After Initial Setup is com-pleted, unless the user’s requirements change,it is usually not necessary to revisit the Setup

Menu. Press the Setup Button to display the SetupMenu (see Figure 3).

Figure 3 – Media Library Setup Menu

The Setup Menu, as with all menus on the DMC1000, is navigated using the F/G/D/E NavigationButtons. Press the Enter Button to select an itemhighlighted on screen.

There are six Setup Menus: Media Library, DVDPlayer, Audio, Video, General and Advanced.

Media Library Setup

The Media Library Setup Menu determines whataction the DMC 1000 takes when an audio discis loaded. Any time an audio CD is loaded, it isautomatically copied at high speed to the Media

Library. The DMC 1000 does not play audio CDsdirectly from the disc; playback is from the MediaLibrary.

Audio Disc Insert Preferences: Select RecordOnly to copy the disc to the Media Library withoutplaying it, or Play and Record to begin playbackfrom the Media Library after recording com-mences.

Audio Encoding Quality: Select the format tobe used for recording audio CDs to the MediaLibrary.

• Basic (MP3: 128kb/sec)

• Medium (MP3: 192kb/sec)

• High (MP3: 256kb/sec)

• Best (MP3: 320kb/sec)

• Lossless (.wav)

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21

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SYSTEM SETUP

System Setup

DVD Player Setup

Figure 4 

The DVD Player Setup menu (shown in Figure 4)contains settings that affect DVD playback. Theother media sources are not affected by thesesettings.

The DMC 1000’s Setup menu screens follow thesame basic format.

Select a menu by highlighting its tab on the leftside of the screen. The menu’s settings will bepreviewed, but you will not be able to make anychanges. See Figure 2. Press the Enter Button tomake adjustments to the menu.

The first setting in the menu will automaticallybe selected. If you wish to change its value, pressthe Enter Button to view the available options ina dropdown menu.Use theKL Buttons to highlight the desiredoption, and press the Enter Button to select it.

If you wish to close the dropdown menu withoutchanging the setting, press the Back Button.

The DVD Player Setup Menu contains thefollowing settings.

Preferred Subtitle Language: Defines yourpreferred subtitle language. Every time a disc willbe played that contains this subtitle language, itwill be shown automatically. If you do not findyour preferred language in the list of options, youcan select your preferred language by highlight-ing OTHER. Press ENTER and use the NavigationButtons to select your preferred language fromthe list shown on the screen. Note that only thoselanguages will be available that are actually on

the DVD you would like to play. You can also setthe preferred subtitle language to OFF. In thatcase no subtitles will be shown.

Preferred Audio Language: Defines yourpreferred audio language. Every time a disc isplayed that contains this audio language, it willbe activated automatically. If you do not find yourpreferred language in the list of options, you can

select your preferred language by highlightingOTHER. Press ENTER and use the NavigationButtons to select your preferred language fromthe list shown on the screen. Note that only thoselanguages will be available that are actually onthe DVD you would like to play.

Parental Control: Defines a password used tocontrol viewing of restricted programs. The fivestandard US rating symbols are ”G” (General,level 2), ”PG” (Parental Guidance, level 4),”PG13” (Parental Guidance and 13 years old,level 4), ”R” (Restricted, level 6) and ”NC 17”(from 17 years old, level 7). The DVD will accom-modate a total of eight rating steps, as set by

the DVD creators. These additional steps allowfor more critical control of program playback forall audiences. Level 8: All DVDs can be played.Levels 7 to 2: DVDs for general audiences/ chil-dren can be played. Level 1: DVDs for childrencan be played; DVDs for adults/general audiencesare prohibited. Follow the explanations on thescreen to set a new password.

Video Presentation Mode: Select Original todisplay videos and pictures in their native aspectratio, or Full when the DMC 1000 is connected toa 4:3 aspect ratio display.

When Full is selected, 16:9 materials will appear

on 4:3 displays in “letterbox” format, with blackbars at the top and bottom of the screen. On16:9 displays, 16:9 materials will fill the screen,but 4:3 materials will appear with black or graybars on the left and right sides of the screen.

NOTE: The DMC 1000’s own menu screens arealways output in widescreen (16:9) mode at amaximum resolution of 720p, depending on thedisplay’s capabilities. When viewed on a 4:3display, the menu screens will appear in letterboxformat.

Dynamic Range Compression: When playingspecially encoded Dolby Digital DVDs, turn onDynamic Range Compression to reduce the levelsof louder passages while maintaining the intel-ligibility of dialog and softer passages. Thisfeature is useful to avoid disturbing others while

watching action-packed DVDs. This is similar tothe “Night Mode” function on many DVD playersand A/V receivers.

DVD Bass Management: If all six of the Zone1 Analog Audio Outputs are connected to areceiver or processor that does not perform bassmanagement on its 6-channel audio inputs, turnthis setting on and configure the speaker settingsin the Audio Setup menu.

If the receiver is capable of analog bass manage-ment, leave this setting in the default Bypassmode and configure the receiver’s speaker set-tings. When this setting is off, the DMC 1000

speaker settings will have no effect.Select the Stereo/LtRt setting to output a 2-chan-nel recording, or a downmix of a surround-encod-ed program, through the Left- and Right-Channel

 jacks of the Zone 1 Analog Audio Outputs. Whenthe Bass Management setting is set to either ofthe other settings, these jacks will only output thefront left- and right-channel information, omittingthe center and surround information.

NOTE: The Stereo setting is required when eitherthe Digital Audio Out Format or HDMI AudioOut settings in the Audio Setup menu are setto Uncompressed (i.e., output a 2-channel PCM

signal).Content Play Mode: This setting compensatesfor disc authoring errors that occur when theframe rate is not properly maintained duringthe conversion from film to video. It only affectsprogressive scan display using the HDMI Outputor the Component Video Outputs. Three choicesare available:

• Auto: This is the recommended setting. TheDMC 1000 analyzes the signals from the DVD,determines whether it was originally recordedon video or shot on film, and adjusts the outputaccordingly.

• Film: Choose this option for material that wasoriginally shot on film, even though you areviewing it on video via a DVD.

• Video: Choose this option for material thatwas shot directly to video, such as concerts andsports programming.

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22 SYSTEM SETUP

System Setup

Audio Setup

Each setting applies to a certain type of audiooutput, but only for Zone 1. The audio output toZones 2, 3 and 4 is always full-range, 2-channelanalog line level.

Figure 5 – Audio Setup Menu

Speaker Setup: A dialog box appears, allow-ing you to program the Speaker Size settings

used with the Zone 1 (6-Channel) Analog AudioOutputs. The settings are dependent on the DVDBass Management setting in the DVD PlayerSetup menu.

• DVD Bass Management Bypass: This isthe default system setting, and should be usedwhen the receiver or processor is capable ofperforming bass management. Configure thespeaker settings on the receiver. All mainspeakers default to the Large (full-range) set-ting, and the subwoofer is on. These settingsmay not be changed.

• DVD Bass Management On: Use this set-

ting if the receiver is not capable of performingbass management, to ensure that the lowfrequencies steered to each channel match thefrequency-response capabilities of the speakers.

  n The default settings are Small (only fre-quencies of 200Hz and higher are passed)for all of the main speakers, and the sub-woofer is on.

n With the left and right speakers set toLarge, the center speaker may be set toSmall or None, but not Large. Change theCenter and Surround settings to None forstereo mode when listening to 2-channelrecordings. The subwoofer will remain on.Use this configuration when you desire theadded power of a separate subwoofer forthe low frequencies.

  n Change the left and right speaker settingto Small when using a speaker systemconsisting of small satellites and a sub-woofer. The Center and Surround settingswill automatically change to Small, and theSubwoofer setting will remain on; neithersetting may be changed.

• DVD Bass Management Stereo/LtRt: Usethis setting to output a 2-channel signal with-out a separate low-frequency channel for thesubwoofer. The front left and right speakersdefault to the Large (full-range) setting, withthe center, surround and subwoofer speak-ers all disabled. These settings may not bechanged.

Select Save when you have finished your adjust-ments, or Cancel to return to the Audio SetupMenu without making any changes.

Digital Audio Out Format: If your systemincludes 5.1 digital audio surround decoding(Dolby Digital and/or DTS), select Compressed asthe digital output. In that case all audio signalswill be output with their original format. If yoursystem only includes stereo and/or Dolby ProLogic, select Uncompressed. Then all audio sig-nals will be output in PCM format only (DTS willoutput no signal).

HDMI Audio Out: This setting determines theformat of the audio output via the HDMI Output.It is dependent upon the capabilities of yourreceiver or video display (if the DMC 1000 isconnected directly to a display). We recommendthat you leave it at the Auto setting, in whichcase the DMC 1000 will communicate with thedevice it’s connected to and automatically selecta setting that is compatible with that device.

• Auto: This is the default setting, and it isrecommended that you leave the HDMI AudioOut line at this setting. The DMC 1000 will

automatically select the correct setting, basedon the capabilities of your receiver or videodisplay.

• Uncompressed: At this setting, all digitalaudio is decoded and output as PCM streams.For example, a DVD with a Dolby Digital sound-track will be decoded, and 5.1 PCM streams(one per channel) will be output through theHDMI Output for playback by your receiver.

• Compressed: This setting may be used withreceivers that are capable of decoding digitalmultichannel formats from the HDMI stream.

• Off: Use this setting if your receiver is not

capable of processing the audio portion of theHDMI stream and you have made a separatedigital audio connection from the DMC 1000to the receiver. No audio will be passed to theHDMI Output.

IMPORTANT NOTE: When the HDMI Output isactive for audio, the Optical and Coaxial DigitalAudio Outputs are muted. If the HDMI Output isbeing used for video only and the S/P-DIF outputsare required for audio, turn the HDMI Audio Outsetting Off.

Video Setup

The Video Setting Submenu contains thefollowing settings. Follow the explanations in theInstruction Line on the bottom of your screen to

change the settings.These settings are usually set automatically bythe DMC 1000, depending on which video outputis in use. See Figure 6.

Figure 6 – Video Setup Menu

Video Output: When both the analog videooutputs and the HDMI Output are connected,select the desired video output. Both HDMI andthe analog video outputs are not available simul-taneously. Example: The HDMI Output is connect-ed to a display in the main listening room and theComposite Video Output is being distributed to amultizone system.

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SYSTEM SETUP

System Setup

Output Resolution: This setting may be used tochange the video output resolution. It affects theComponent Video Outputs and the HDMI Output,but with different allowed settings dependingupon whether the HDMI Output is in use. Thissetting may also be changed by pressing the

Video Mode Button on the remote repeatedly tocycle through the available settings options.

• HDMI Output In Use: With the HDMI Outputconnected to another device, this settingdefaults to Auto, but you may change it to576p, 720p, 1080i or 1080p. We recommendleaving the setting at Auto, in which theDMC 1000 sets the video output based on thecapabilities of the device it is connected to. Ifyou attempt to select a video output resolutionthat your video display is not capable of han-dling, such as 1080p for a display that is only1080i-capable, you will not see a picture.

• HDMI Output Not In Use: When no deviceis connected to the HDMI Output, this set-ting only applies to the Component VideoOutputs. Only two values are available: 576i(the default) and 576p. Select 576p only if yourvideo display’s component video inputs arecapable of handling a progressive scan signal.If it isn’t, you will see no picture or a distortedpicture when this setting is changed to 576p. Inthat case, press the Video Mode Button on theremote to correct it.

Picture Mode: Select from the Normal, Vivid,Sport and Nature picture settings to optimizeviewing of various types of programs. This set-

ting is a matter of taste, and there is no incorrectsetting.

Video Noise Reduction: We recommend thatyou leave this setting at the default “Off”. Ifvideo signal noise is observed when using thean-alog video outputs, turn this setting on to reducethe noise and improve the picture quality.

General Setup

These general system settings should be accessedwith caution. See Figure 7. If you are uncertainabout the proper setting for any of these options,consult with your dealer or installer, or contact

Harman Kardon Customer Service at www.har-mankardon.com.

Figure 7 – General Setup Menu

Software Update: When system softwareupdates are released, this setting will be usedduring the installation process. Do not make anychanges here unless instructed to do so.

Date & Time: The first time the DMC 1000 isused, set the local time and date here.

System Information: This setting displays thesoftware version number and the amount ofhard-disc space available. It is informational only.

Advanced Setup

The settings shown in Figure 8 should be used

with caution. If you have any doubts aboutwhether it is appropriate to change these set-tings, consult with your Harman Kardon dealer orcustom installer.

Figure 8 – Advanced Setup MenuBackup: This setting is used to back up the sys-tem and Media Library contents to a USB storagedevice.

Restore: This setting is used to restore a backupcopy of the system settings and Media Librarycontents. The existing contents of the MediaLibrary will be erased. Use this feature only inthe unlikely event that the hard-disc drive in yourDMC 1000 has been replaced.

Reset Factory Defaults: This setting is usedto return all of the Setup Menu settings to theirfactory defaults. They will then have to be recon-figured as required for your application. Thecontents of the Media Library are not affected bythis command.

Network: When the DMC 1000 is connectedto a network, the network settings are identifiedhere. This feature also allows you to test thenetwork connection to make certain that Internetaccess is available. Press the “9” key on theremote twice, to display the Internet Protocol (IP)address on the front panel.

Language Selected: Select the display lan-guage for the DMC 1000’s menus here. Choosefrom the default English, or Spanish, French,German or Italian.

Format USB: This command allows you toreformat a USB device, which completely erasesthe contents of the drive. Exercise great cautionbefore reformatting a drive.

Now that your DMC 1000 has been installed andconfigured, it’s easy to enjoy your favorite audioand video programs from a variety of media,including DVDs, CDs, memory cards, USB drivesand the DMC 1000’s own Media Library.

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24 DMC BASICS

DMC Basics

 Turning On the DMC 1000

The DMC 1000 has four power states, eachdesigned to minimize unnecessary power con-sumption.

• Full-Off Mode (Dim Blue) – The DMC 1000,

including its hard-disc drive, is fully powereddown, but is ready to be turned on using thefront panel or remote control.

• Sleep (Standby) Mode (Amber) – The DMC1000 will not respond to any commands otherthan to power on.

• Server Mode (Amber) – Server Mode has nofunction.

• Full-Power Mode (Bright Blue) – The DMC1000 operates normally.

See Table A7 in the Appendix for a description ofeach mode and the DMC 1000’s response to the

power controls.NOTE: There is technically a fifth state of “nopower,” in which the power cord is unpluggedand/or the rear-panel Master Power Switch isturned off in the circle position (0). However,it is unlikely you will see this situation in normaluse.

Press the front-panel Power Control or remotePower On Button to turn on the DMC 1000 whenthe Power Indicator is dim blue or amber.

When the Power Indicator is bright blue, pressthe front-panel Power Control or remote PowerOff Button to switch to Server Mode (Power

Indicator turns amber), or press and hold eithercontrol to turn the DMC 1000 fully off (PowerIndicator turns dim blue).

When the DMC 1000 is in Server Mode (PowerIndicator is amber and Server Mode message isdisplayed), press the Power Off Button on theremote to switch to Sleep Mode (Power Indicatorremains amber).

Using the DMC 1000

After turn-on, the DMC 1000 will display itsMain Menu (see Figure 9). If the Media Library isloaded with content, any cover art will appear ina mosaic in the background.

Figure 9 – Main Menu

From the Main Menu, you may play content

from the Media Library or select another sourcefor playback. You may program a Play Queue ofitems for immediate playback, or a Playlist that is

stored for later retrieval. Record an audio streamfrom a device connected to the Auxiliary Inputs,or copy a playlist to any of the portable media,including a recordable CD, a memory card or aUSB drive. You may also control audio playbackin up to four separate zones at a time. The DMC

1000’s sophisticated yet easy-to-use on-screenmenus will guide you at every stage.

Playing DVDs and CDs

With the DMC 1000 turned on, press the Open/Close Button on the front panel or remote. Gentlyplace the disc in the tray, making sure to seat itproperly. Refer to the Media Compatibility sectionfor details on which disc types may be played inthe DMC 1000. Other disc types will not play.The DMC 1000 will take a few moments to readand identify the disc.

If the disc is a DVD, it will automatically beginplaying. Although we recommend using the disc’sown menu system for navigation, audio trackselection and subtitle language selection, see theDVD Playback section for instructions on usingthe DMC 1000’s commands for these functions.

If the disc is an audio CD, the DMC 1000 willautomatically copy it to the Media Library at highspeed, displaying the progress of the recording asa percentage. The DMC 1000 is capable of play-ing back the recording almost as it is being made(if your unit has been set up for Play and Recordoperation). Once the recording is completed, youmay remove the disc and continue to listen to thecontent as it is played from the Media Library.

When a CD or other music content is addedto the Media Library, the DMC 1000 accessesGracenote MusicID, which includes a vast onlinedatabase containing identifying information foralmost every commercial CD in existence, as wellas cover art for the vast majority of CDs. Thispowerful service enhances the listening experi-ence, as the user is able to view album, artistand track information and the cover art duringplayback. This information is then stored in theMedia Library. A copy of the database residesin the DMC 1000 so that even when it is notconnected to the Internet, the identifying infor-mation for most popular CDs (except for cover

art) is retrieved and stored with the audio in theMedia Library. However, for the latest and mostcomplete version of the database, we recom-mend connecting the DMC 1000 to a high-speedInternet access point. Music recognition technol-ogy and related data are provided by Gracenote.Gracenote is the industry standard in music rec-ognition technology and related content delivery.For more information, visit www.gracenote.com.

NOTE: When no cover art is available, the DMC1000 will display a generic musical-note icon.This may occur if the DMC 1000 is not connectedto the Internet, if a noncommercial disc is loaded,or in rare instances when there is a gap in the

database.

DVD Playback

The DMC 1000 supports all of the features andoptions of standard DVDs. However, not all discsoffer each option at all times. If the “FunctionProhibited” icon (Ø) appears, then you are

attempting a function that is not available at thattime or with that media, and it does not indicatea problem with the DMC 1000.

Disc Playback Features

Skipping tracks or titles/chapters

To move forward or backward through the trackson a CD or the titles or chapters on a DVD, pressskip on the front panel or Previous/Next on theremote.

Fast Motion Playback/Fast Search

1. To move forward or backward through theDVD or CD disc being played at fast speed,

press Search on the remote. Once one of thesebuttons is pressed, the fast search will con-tinue until Play is pressed.

There are four fast-play speeds. Each press of theSearch Buttons will cycle to the next speed in thefollowing order: x2, x4, x8, x16, indicated by anumber of arrow indicators on the right top ofthe screen.

2. Press PLAY at any time to resume normalplayback.

Note that there will be no audio playback duringfast-forward or -reverse play of DVD discs. Thisis normal for DVD, as A/V receivers and surround

processors cannot process the digital audiostreams during fast-play modes; audio will beheard during fast-play of conventional CD’s.

Freeze Frame and Frame Advance(with DVD only)

1. Press PAUSE when a DVD is playing to freezethe picture.

2. Each time you press one of the STEP (FWD orREV) buttons, the picture advances one frame.

3. Press PLAY to resume normal playback.

Slow Motion Playback (with DVD only)

1. When a DVD disc is in pause or freeze frame

mode, you may move slowly forward or back-ward through the program being played at oneof the speeds by pressing the Slow Buttonson the remote. Each press of the buttons willmove to the next speed, indicated by a numberof arrow indicators on the right top of thescreen.

2. Press PLAY to resume normal playback.

Note that there will be no audio playback duringslow-forward or -reverse play of DVD discs. Thisis normal for DVD, as A/V receivers and surroundprocessors cannot process the digital audiostreams during slow modes. Slow play is not

available for CD.

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26 OPERATION

Operation

Audio Playback From the Media Library

The DMC 1000’s Media Library makes it easy tostore all of your audio content in one place forconvenient playback in your main home theaterroom, in three remote “zones” (if you have set

up the DMC 1000 as part of a multizone system),or anywhere else when you transfer the contentto portable media.

When you first turn on the DMC 1000, theassumption is that you will most likely want tolisten to content stored in your Media Library, andthe Main Menu (see Figure 14) is configured thatway.

Figure 14 – Main Menu

Press the Enter Button to select the highlighted“Play” option, and the DMC 1000 will offer youa variety of sorting options. Large music collec-tions may be easier to manage when sorted byartist or album. As shown in Figure 14, you mayselect from one of six possible sorts, or views, ofthe Media Library.

Cover Art: Displays a mosaic of album coversretrieved by Gracenote MusicID when the DMC1000 is connected to the Internet. Cover artmay be organized alphabetically by name, byartist or in the order added, starting with themost recent additions. As described below, usethe M /N /K /LNavigation Buttons to movethe “magnifying glass” to the desired album,and press the Enter Button to see the playbackoptions.

Tracks: Displays all tracks individually in alpha-betical order. The tracks may be organized alpha-betically by name, artist, album or in the orderadded, starting with the most recent additions.

Artists: Displays all artists in alphabetical order.Select an artist and press the Enter Button toview his or her albums.

Albums: Displays all albums in alphabeticalorder. Select an album and press the Enter Buttonto display its tracks.

Playlists: Displays all playlists you have pro-grammed.

Genres: Displays your library organized into gen-res. Select a genre and press the Enter Button toview all artists tagged with that genre.

Navigate to the desired sorting option and pressthe Enter Button to view the Media Library (see

Figure 15).

Figure 15 – Media Library

The Media Library lists the items (in this case,albums) in your collection, with the current selec-tion highlighted by a magnifying bar. The coverart, or an icon if the cover art could not be found,is highlighted. Press the Enter Button to expandthe album into a track view.

NOTE: You may have noticed that letters appearabove the Numeric Keys on the remote. The DMC1000 is capable of using alphabetic characters aswell as numbers, which allows you to search theMedia Library by entering the Numeric Key corre-sponding to the first letter of your selection. EachNumeric Key represents three letters. The firstpress jumps to the selections beginning with the

first letter in the group, and the character-entrydialog box appears. You may enter additional let-ters to refine your search or change the first letterby navigating to the Clear command and repeat-edly pressing the Numeric Key until the desiredletter appears in the text bar. Navigate to theDone command when you have finished enteringa search term. Alphanumeric entry is also usedto edit content tags and to name playlists. SeeFigure 16.

Figure 16 – Character-Entry Dialog Box

Use the F /G  Navigation Buttons to scrollthrough the playback options described below.The availability of each of these options andcommands depends on how the Media Library issorted.

• Play Now: The current selection is playedimmediately, replacing other content in thePlay Queue. The Play Queue is a list of contentin line to be played. It is saved until the DMC1000 is powered down to Full-Off mode (dimblue).

• Add to Queue: The current selection is addedto the end of the Play Queue, and the mediacurrently playing continues until it is finished.The Play Queue may be accessed from the MainMenu.

• Add to Playlist: The current selection isadded to a new or existing playlist. A dialogbox will pop up, asking you to select fromthe existing playlists or create a new one (seeFigure 17). The DMC 1000 is programmedwith several empty playlists named to fit dif-ferent moods or occasions, including Danceand Dinner. Up to four playlists are shown at

a time. The playlists may be accessed from theMain Menu.

Figure 17 – Select a Playlist

• View Artists: Available when the MediaLibrary is sorted by genre, this command dis-plays all artists within the selected genre.

• View Albums: Available when the MediaLibrary is sorted by artist, this commandexpands the current artist to view all of his orher albums in the library.

• View All Tracks: Expands the current albuminto a track view.

• Open Playlist: Available when the MediaLibrary is sorted by playlists, this commandopens the list.

• Edit Name: Available when the Media Libraryis sorted by playlists, this command allows youto rename the playlist if you no longer want touse the name selected when the playlist wascreated.

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OPERATION

Operation

• Edit Info: This command is available for tracksand albums only. A dialog box appears, allow-ing you to edit the identifying information,including renaming tracks. See Figure 18. Thebox is slightly different when the Media Libraryis sorted by tracks. A character-entry dialog box

appears when you select any field for editing.See Figure 16 and the note on the previouspage. Select the Find Info command to activateGracenote MusicID.

Figure 18 – Edit Info Dialog Box

• Delete: Select this command if you wish toremove the content from the Media Library. Beaware that the DMC 1000 does not play audioCD content directly from the disc. If you loadthe CD again, it will be recopied to the MediaLibrary.

Cover Art Sort

You may have noticed the cover art mosaic that

appears in the background of the Main Menuwhen you turn on the DMC 1000. With the MainMenu on screen, select the Cover Art sortingoption for the Media Library and the focus shiftsto this mosaic. Use the Navigation Buttonsto move the “magnifying glass” to the desiredalbum cover, identifying the artist and album.

Press the Enter Button to display the playbackoptions: Play, Add to Queue, Add to Playlist,View Album, Edit Info and Delete Album. SelectView Album to switch to the regular MediaLibrary view with the album expanded to view thetracks. The other playback commands function inthe same way as in the Media Library view.

NOTE: When no cover art is available (e.g., ifthe DMC 1000 was not connected to the Internetwhen the CD was loaded, if the disc is noncom-mercial or if there is a gap in the database),the album will not appear in the Cover Art sort,although you may select it when viewing the

Media Library by Tracks, Artists, Albums, Playlistsor Genres. A musical note icon, such as the oneshown in Figure 18, will appear in place of themissing cover art.

Data Media

The DMC 1000 recognizes media containing datafiles in the MP3, JPEG and WAV formats.

Load a data CD in the disc player, or insert amemory card in the appropriate card slot, orconnect a USB drive to either USB Port, and thedevice will be available for selection as a mediasource in the Main Menu. See Figure 19.

Figure 19 – Source Selection

When a data source is selected, the only sortingoptions are Audio and Photos. Select one, andthe regular Media Library will appear, except that

unlike audio CDs, which are organized as albumscontaining individual tracks for each song, datasources are organized as folders containing indi-vidual files for each song or still image. However,navigation of the content is similar to audio. SeeFigure 20.

Figure 20 – Data CD

Press the Enter Button to expand a folder, orselect the Go Up command to collapse it. Theother commands function as usual, and the Addto Library command allows you to import thecontent to the Media Library for playback afterthe media has been removed from the DMC1000.

The Play Queue and PlaylistsThe DMC 1000 allows you to program playliststhat are saved for future playback, plus a playqueue of items for immediate play.

The Play Queue

The Play Queue is simply a list of all items thatare queued up to be played. There are two waysto add an item to the play queue:

1. Display the desired content on screen byselecting the correct source (the Media Library,a card slot, a data CD or a USB device) andselecting the audio or still-image content.Scroll to the desired content, e.g., a song track

or file, use the F/G Navigation Buttons tohighlight the Play Now command, and pressthe Enter Button. The existing Play Queue willstop and add the selected item, which willbegin playing immediately. The previous PlayQueue items will be deleted.

2. With the desired content on screen andthe item selected, use the F/G NavigationButtons to highlight the Add to Queue com-mand. Press the Enter Button to add the itemto the end of the Play Queue.

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28 OPERATION

Operation

To view the play queue, press the Menu Buttonto display the Main Menu, and navigate to thePlay Queue line. Press the Enter Button. ThePlay Queue is preserved unless the DMC 1000 ispowered down to Full-Off mode (by pressing andholding the Power Off Button on the remote so

that the front-panel Power Indicator turns dimblue). If the Play Queue line in the Main Menu isdimmed, the Play Queue has been erased.

The Play Queue is not available during DVD play-back, or when The Bridge is the media source.

You may create playlists that are permanentlysaved by name for future playback.

Programming a Playlist

Playlists are not only a convenient way to storea queue of your favorite songs, but they arerequired to transfer audio from the Media Libraryto any of the portable media. See the Content

Transfer section for more information.To program a playlist, display the desired contenton screen by selecting the correct source (theMedia Library, a card slot, a data CD or a USBdevice) and selecting the audio or still-image con-tent. Scroll to the desired content, e.g., a songtrack or file, use the F/G Navigation Buttons tohighlight the Add to Playlist command, and pressthe Enter Button.

A pop-up screen will prompt you to select froman existing playlist, to name a new playlist, or toselect an empty prenamed playlist, such as Danceor Chill. See Figure 21. If you select one of theprenamed playlists and have already used thatname, a number will be added to the end to dif-ferentiate the new playlist. The pop-up dialog boxdisplays up to four playlists at a time. Scroll up ordown to view the remaining playlists.

Figure 21 – Select a Playlist

Playlists may be edited by selecting the PlaylistView from the Media Library. Press the MenuButton to view the Main Menu, and navigate tothe Playlists view in the Media Library. Press theEnter Button, and scroll to the desired playlist.The commands function as expected:

• Play Now: Plays the selected playlist immedi-ately, adding it to the Play Queue.

• Add to Queue: Adds the selected playlist tothe end of the Play Queue.

• Add to Playlist: Adds the selected playlist toa new or existing playlist.

• Open Playlist: Opens the playlist to allowediting of individual tracks, including removinga track from the playlist, changing the track’sorder within the list, selecting the track forimmediate play, adding the trackto the Play Queue or a playlist, editing thetrack’s identifying information or deleting thetrack from the Media Library.

• Edit Name: Opens the character-entry dialog

box to rename the playlist.

• Delete Playlist: Deletes the playlist (but notits contents) from the Media Library.

Using

The Bridge is an optional dock that may be usedwith a compatible iPod (not included). When TheBridge is connected to its proprietary input onthe DMC 1000 and the iPod is docked, you mayenjoy the audio and still-image materials storedon your iPod.

When an iPod is docked in The Bridge, the IPODFOUND message will appear on the front panel,and a banner with The Bridge icon and theDetected message will appear on screen. TheiPod will be in “disc mode,” and its screen willdisplay the “OK to disconnect” message. Do notphysically undock the iPod while its content isplaying. However, you may select the Undockcommand at any time.

Select The Bridge as the media source from theMain Menu. The menu shown in Figure 22 will

appear.

Figure 22 – The Bridge menu

Navigate the contents of the iPod in a similar

manner to other data media sources. Selectbetween the audio (music) and still-image (photo)content. When Music is selected, you may sortit using views similar to those in the iPod’s ownmenu: Playlists, Artists, Albums, Songs, Podcasts,Genres, Composers or Audio Books.

Only three options are available for iPod content:

Play Now: Begins play of the selected itemimmediately. The Play Queue is erased.

Open: If an individual track is selected, it beginsplay immediately. If the selected item is in anyother category, e.g., an artist or album, thiscommand opens the item so you may view its

contents.

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OPERATION

Operation

Undock iPod: This command ends play of anycontent on the iPod and returns to the MediaLibrary view of the Main Menu. The iPod’s ownmenu appears on its screen. To resume playback,physically undock the iPod from The Bridge andredock it.

Press the Back Button to return to the previousmenu level, similar to pressing the Menu buttonon the iPod itself.

You may not import content from the iPod to theMedia Library, and you may not add the iPod’scontent to the Play Queue or a playlist. You maynot record from the Media Library to an iPoddocked in The Bridge. These are limitations of theiPod’s design, and do not reflect a problem withthe DMC 1000.

NOTE: The Bridge may not be compatible withsome iPod models, particularly the iPhone andthe iPod touch. To enjoy content stored onthese devices, connect a cable from the device’sheadphone output to the DMC 1000’s AuxiliaryAnalog Audio Inputs.

Auxiliary Analog Audio Inputs

In addition to digital media, the DMC 1000 alsoaccommodates analog source devices, such ascassette decks and turntables, but mainly as arecording source. Connect the device to the rear-panel Auxiliary Inputs.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Do not connect a turntabledirectly to the DMC 1000 unless it includes anonboard phono preamp or is connected to anexternal phono preamp which is then pluggedinto the Auxiliary Inputs. Phono preamps may beavailable from specialty audio shops or electron-ics stores.

The device connected to the Auxiliary Inputs isnot available for source selection in the usualmanner. It is selected as a recording source,as described in the Content Transfer section,although it is possible to monitor the source with-out making a recording.

Content Transfer

One of the DMC 1000’s most exciting featuresis its ability to transfer content from one type ofmedia to another, and to store your libraryof music on its internal hard-disc drive.

The method for making recordings varies slightly,depending on the source media.

Audio CDs

As soon as an audio CD is loaded, the DMC 1000begins the process of copying it to the MediaLibrary at high speed. It displays the progress ofthe recording as a percentage recorded.

At the same time, the DMC 1000 automaticallybegins playing the copy of the CD from the MediaLibrary, if you have programmed the DMC 1000’sSetup Menu to do so.

The DMC 1000 uses Gracenote MusicID to iden-tify the CD, tag it with the correct informationand import the album cover art, if available. Ifthe DMC 1000 is not connected to the Internet,Gracenote MusicID will tag the content using theoffline database stored on the DMC 1000’s hard-disc drive; however, it will not display any coverart. For homemade discs, the service will attemptto identify the content based on any tags thatwere created when the disc was recorded.

After the DMC 1000 has finished copying the CDto the Media Library, you may remove the discand store it.

NOTE: The DMC 1000 initially copies the CDto .wav files. If you have adjusted the AudioEncoding Quality setting in the Media LibrarySetup menu to one of the MP3 formats, the DMC1000 will then encode the .wav files as MP3 filesat the specified sampling rate. If you attemptto transfer the CD from the Media Library to amemory card, recordable CD or USB drive beforethe encoding is completed, the files will be trans-ferred as .wav files. Since .wav files are much

larger than MP3 files, depending on your destina-tion media, you may not have enough space tocomplete the transfer.

Data CDs

Data CDs are discs that contain sound and imagefiles. They are recognized when loaded, butoperation is handled differently.

To transfer the CD’s content to the Media Library:

1. Select it as a playback source, and view theaudio files. Still-image files may not be addedto the Media Library.

2. The CD is listed as a single folder, which you

may expand as usual. Select the Add to Libraryoption to import it to the Media Library. Audiofiles are transferred in their original format,e.g., as MP3 files.

Auxiliary Inputs

With the analog audio device connected to theAuxiliary Inputs and the media loaded, eitherpress the Record Button, or press the MenuButton to view the Main Menu. Scroll to the

Record line and press the Enter Button.Select “Auxiliary” from the dropdown menu asthe recording source. See Figure 23.

Figure 23 – Select a Recording SourceNext, select the Media Library (the only option)as the recording destination. The screen shown inFigure 24 will appear.

 

Figure 24 – Record From the Auxiliary Inputs

Select the Listen to Aux In option to monitor theanalog device. Begin playing the device, andcue it up to the desired starting point. Example:most cassette tapes include about five secondsof blank leader tape, plus additional blank tapeat the beginning. Play until the audio begins soas to minimize the amount of dead air in therecording.

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30 OPERATION

Operation

NOTE: The DMC 1000 does not detect thepresence or absence of an audio signal at theAuxiliary Inputs.

When you are ready to begin the recording, selectthe Start Recording option and begin playback of

the analog device. You may experimentby making several recordings and deleting thoseyou don’t want.

While the recording is in progress, a screen simi-lar to the one shown in Figure 25 will appear.

Figure 25 – Recording in Progress

Make a note of the file name automaticallygenerated by the DMC 1000 to easily locate therecording later. The DMC 1000 also displays theelapsed time, and a graphic and numeric displayof the space available on the hard-disc drive.

Select the Pause Recording option to pausethe recording without starting a new file whenrecording is resumed. This feature is useful if youwish to record a series of audio tracks as one filewhile skipping breaks in between, such as when

recording an entire side of a cassette tape intoone file.

Select the Stop Recording option to end recordingof the file. The screen shown in Figure 26 willappear.

Figure 26 – Recording Complete

Select Done if you are finished, or Record Next torecord another track, which returns to the screenshown in Figure 25, allowing you to cue up thenext track.

To locate the newly recorded tracks, view theMedia Library by Track and by Last Added. Thetrack will be displayed at the top of the list. Youmay also sort the Track view by Name, lookingfor tracks starting with “AUX.” You may wish toview the Tracks by Artist, as all tracks with artist

“Unknown” will be listed first, and the recordingswill appear here.

Select the Edit Info option to rename the tracksand add other identifying information. Enter asmuch information as possible about the track toenable Gracenote MusicID to locate any coverart and properly tag the track. This is particularlyuseful when you have recorded commercialalbums from cassette, vinyl or other analogmedia.

Media Library

You may transfer audio content from the MediaLibrary to any of the portable media – memorycards installed in the card slots, a USB deviceconnected to one of the USB Ports, or a record-able CD loaded in the Disc Player.

1. Create a playlist of the desired content. ThePlay Queue may not be used for this purpose.

2. Press the Record Button, or select the Recordcommand from the Main Menu, and select theMedia Library as the source, with the othermedia as the destination.

NOTES:• When a blank recordable CD has been loaded,

you will be presented with the options ofrecording it as an audio disc or as an MP3disc. Audio discs conform to the “red book”standard and may be played in any standardCD player. Many CD players are not capable ofplaying MP3 discs. Check with the manufac-turer of the player for more information.

• Any standard CD-R disc may be used. SpecialMusic/Audio Recordable CDs are not required.

3. The DMC 1000 will display the playlists in theMedia Library.Select one or more playlists for recording.

4. When all selections have been made, selectthe “Record Selected” option to begin thetransfer.

Selections are transferred in the same formatin which they are stored in the Media Library.Thus, if your CDs are automatically recorded tothe Media Library in the MP3 format, they willbe transferred to the portable media as MP3s.Analog audio streams are recorded from theAuxiliary Inputs as lossless WAV files, and aretransferred in that format to the portable media.

NOTE: If recordings made from the AuxiliaryAnalog Audio Inputs were tagged by GracenoteMusicID, the DMC 1000 will generate new filenames in the format of [artist] – [three-digit tracknumber].wav. The tags will be transferred to theportable media with the file. Thus, if you uploadthe file from the media to your PC using softwarethat is capable of recognizing the tags, the trackwill appear with its correct song title and otherinformation.

Solid-State Media

You may transfer content from any of the solid-state media (memory cards or USB device) to theMedia Library in a similar fashion to recordingfrom the Media Library. However, it is not neces-sary to create a playlist, since the data media arealready organized as file folders.

1. Press the Record Button, or select the Recordcommand from the Main Menu, and selectthe solid-state media as the source, with theMedia Library (the only option) as the destina-tion.

2. The DMC 1000 will display the folders and filesstored on the media. Select one or more itemsfor recording.

3. When all selections have been made, selectthe “Record Selected” option to begin thetransfer.

NOTE: Content may only be transferred from oneof the solid-state media to the Media Library, notfrom one of the solid-state media to the other.If you wish to transfer content from one type ofmedia to another, first add the content to theMedia Library, and then record it to the othertype of media.

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OPERATION

Operation

Multizone Operation

The DMC 1000 is capable of streaming audio toup to four independent zones simultaneously,allowing users in different areas of the home toenjoy unique programs. The zones may easily be

linked or unlinked to each other, to play the sameprogram in more than one zone. Manage thezones by displaying the Main Menu and selectingthe Zones command. The screen shown in Figure27 will appear.

Figure 27 – Zones Menu

Zone 1 is the current zone, as indicated by thecheckmark in the box to its left. Each zone isassigned a different color box, indicating none ofthe zones are linked to other zones.

To rename a zone, highlight the button contain-ing its name and press the Enter Button. Selectone of the default names, such as Den or DiningRoom, or create a new name. The DMC 1000’scharacter-entry dialog box will appear to guideyou. (See Figure 16.)

To link zones together, highlight the line for what

will be the “master” zone.If other zones are linked to the master zone,content playing in the master zone is streamedto any zones linked to it. Select the Zone Linksoption, and then select one or more of the otherthree zones to link to the master zone.

To unlink zones, highlight the master zone andselect the Zone Links option. Click on a linkedzone to select it for unlinking.

To begin playback in any zone, navigate to itsline, make sure the colored box to the left of thezone name is highlighted and press the EnterButton. A checkmark will appear in the box. Pressthe Menu Button to display the Main Menu, andthe current zone, along with any other zones

linked to it, will be identified in the upper rightcorner of the video display.Select content for playback in that zone as usual.

When you return to the Zones menu, the coverart for the current selection, or a generic iconwhen no cover art was found, appears to the leftof the line for each active zone.

Interrupt playback to any zone by navigating toit and selecting the Pause Playback option. TheDMC 1000 will remember its location in the cur-rent selection when the Play Button is pressed toresume playback. When the Stop Playback optionis selected, the DMC 1000 will not remember the

location, and when the Play Button is pressed,playback will start from the beginning of theselection.

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32

Troubleshooting Guide

Symptom Possible Cause Solution

Unit does not turn on • No AC power • Check AC power plug and make certain any switched outlet is turned on.

• Make sure Master Power Switch on rear panel isturned on to the “1” position.

• If DMC 1000 was in “Full-Off” Power Mode(Power Indicator dim blue), wait for system to reboot.

Disc does not play • Disc loaded improperly • Load disc label-side up; align the disc with the guides and place

it in its proper position.• Incorrect disc type • Check to see that disc is CD, CD-R, CD-RW, VCD, MP3, WMA, 

JPEG, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW (standard conforming),or DVD-Video; other types will not play.

• Invalid Region Code • Use Region 2 or Open Region (0) disc only.• Rating is above parental preset • Enter password to override or change rating settings.

No picture • Intermittent connections • Check all video connections. 

• Wrong input • Check input selection of TV or receiver.• Progressive Scan output selected • Use Progressive Scan mode only with compatible TV. If needed, press

the Progressive Scan/Interlaced Button L to toggle to thecorrect mode.

• Video Off feature active • Press Video Off Button Q to reactivate video circuitry (see page 26)

  • HDMI OutputA is connected to a • The HDMI OutputA may not be used with video displays that are not

video display that is not HDCP-compliant. HDCP-compliant. Unplug the cable and select another audio and videoconnection (see pages 13 through 14).

• HDMI communications need to be reset • Turn off all HDMI devices (DMC 1000, receiver, TV). Turn on devices in this order: TV, then receiver, then DMC 1000.

No sound • Intermittent connections • Check all audio connections. 

• Incorrect digital audio selection • Check digital audio settings. • DVD disc is in fast or slow mode • There is no audio playback on DVD discs during fast or slow modes. 

• Surround receiver not compatible • Use analog audio outputs. with 96kHz PCM audio

• Incorrect zone selection • Use the Zones command in the Main Menu to select thedesired zone for playback.

• Zone not linked to active zone • Use the Zones command in the Main Menu to link or unlinkzones to each other.

• Attempting to use Coaxial or Optical • The HDMI and other digital audio outputs are not available at

Digital Audio Output with HDMI the same time. To use the Coaxial or Optical Digital Audio Outputs,Output active change the HDMI Audio Out setting in the Audio Setup menu to Off.

Picture is distorted or jumps during • MPEG-2 decoding • It is a normal artifact of DVD playback for pictures to jump or showfast forward or reverse play some distortion during rapid play.

• DTS decoding • Due to the format of DTS recordings, fast-play may overshootor undershoot desired place.

Some remote buttons do not operate • Function not permitted at this time • With most discs, some functions are not permitted at certain

during DVD play; prohibited symbol times (e.g., Track Skip) or at all (e.g., direct audio track selection).

appears (see below)

The OSD menu is in a foreign language • Incorrect OSD language • Change the display language selection.

The symbol appears • Requested function not available at • Certain functions may be disabled by the DVD itself duringthis time passages of a disc.

Picture is displayed in the • Incorrect match of aspect ratio settings • Change aspect ratio settings. 

wrong aspect ratio to disc

Remote control inoperative • Weak batteries • Change both batteries. • Sensor is blocked • Clear path to sensor or use optional outboard remote sensor.

Disc will not copy to VCR • Copy protection • Many DVDs are encoded with copy protection to prevent

copying to VCR.

Password not accepted. • Incorrect password being used or • Factory default password “1234” always remains active. 

password has been forgotten.

TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE

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TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE

Troubleshooting Guide

Screen saver not activated • Screen saver will not activate when • Clear Setup menus or press Video Off Button to avoidSetup menus are displayed burn-in on plasma and CRT displays.

Cannot program playlist • Current source is other than • Playlists may only be programmed from content stored

Media Library in the Media Library. Transfer the other source’s content

to the Media Library, view it from within the Media Libraryand then create a playlist.

Unable to select desired media • No media is present • Insert the appropriate memory card into one of the card 

source slots, or a USB flash drive into the USB Port

• Wrong type of USB drive was inserted • Only USB flash drives that do not function as stand alonein USB Port MP3 players are compatible

• Media was not inserted correctly • Remove media and carefully insert according to the instructions on page 7

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34 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Technical Specifications

Applicable Disc: Disc formats: 5 inch (12 cm) or 3 inch (8 cm) DVD Video, Standard conforming DVD+RW, DVD+R, DVD-R,DVD-RW, VCD, CD, CD-R, MP3, WMA, JPEG or CD-RW discs,Region code: DVD Movie disc with Code 2 or 0 only.DVD-Layers: Single Side/Single Layer, Single Side/Dual Layer, Dual Side/Single Layer, Dual Side/Dual LayerAudio formats: Linear PCM, MPEG, Windows Media

®

 9,

Dolby Digital or DTS Audio discsStill-image format: JPEG

Memory cards Slot 1: Secure Digital (SD), Multimedia Card (MMC) and Memory Stick (compatible with Magic Gate)cards. Other card types may be used with a compatible adapter, but are not guaranteed to be recognizedby the DMC 1000 Slot 2: Compact Flash I (CF) cards, or cards using a Compact Flash 1-compatible adapt-er Card Capacity: Up to 1 GB

USB Port: Up to USB 2.0-compatible solid-state flash drives

Video Signal System: PAL/NTSC

HDMI™ Output: Video: 576p, 720p, 1080i, 1080pHDMI Version 1.1a-compliantHDCP Version 1.1-compliant

Composite Video Output: Dolby Digital or DTS Audio discs

S Video Output: Still-image format: JPEG

Component Video Output: Y: 1 Vp-p/75 Ohms, sync negative polarity

Cr: 0.7 Vp-p/75 Ohms

Cb: 0.7 Vp-p/75 Ohms

Analog Audio Output: 2 Vrms max

Frequency Response: DVD (Linear PCM): 2Hz - 22kHz (48kHz sampling)2Hz - 44kHz (96kHz sampling)

CD: 2Hz - 20kHz

Signal/Noise Ratio (SNR): 105 dB (A-weighted)

Dynamic Range: DVD: 100dB (18 Bit) / 105dB (20 Bit)CD/DVD: 96dB (16 Bit)

THD/1kHz: DVD/CD: 0.0025 %

Wow & Flutter: Below Measurable Limits

AC Power: 100 - 240 V/50 ~ 60 Hz

Power Consumption: 12 Watts (Standby)/60 Watts (Max)

Dimensions (WxHxD): 440 x 103 x 405 mm

Weight: 8.7 kg

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36 APPENDIX

Appendix

Appendix – Default settings and worksheets

Table A1 – Media Library Setup Menu

Setting Default Your Settings

Auto Disc Insert Preferences Play & Record

Audio Encoding Quality MP3 192kbps (Medium)

Table A2 – DVD Player Setup Menu

Setting Default Your Settings

Preferred Subtitle Language Off

Preferred Audio Language English

Parental Control Level Off

Video Presentation Mode Original

Dynamic Range Compression Off

DVD Bass Management Off

 Table A3 – Audio Setup Menu

Setting Default Your Settings

Speaker Setup Front L & R: Large

Surround L & R: Large

Center: Large

Subwoofer: Yes

Front L & R:

Surround L & R:

Center:

Subwoofer:

Digital Audio Out Format Compressed

HDMI Audio Out Auto

Table A4 – Video Setup Menu

Setting Default Your Settings

Video Output Depends on physical connections.

Output Resolution Depends on physical connections:

Analog (composite or S-video): 480i

Analog (component): 480p

HDMI: Auto

Table A5 – General Setup MenuNOTE: These settings are not adjusted in normal use.

Setting Purpose Your Settings

Software Update If a system software upgrade

becomes available in the future,

download it to a CD and follow the

instructions here.

Not used.

Date & Time Set system date and time after a reset. Adjusted only after a reset.

System Information Displays software version and

hard-disc drive usage.

Not used.

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APPENDIX

Appendix

Table A6 – Advanced Setup Menu

Setting Purpose Your Settings

Backup Backs up hard-disc drive as a precaution. After your custom installer transfers yourmusic collection to the Media Library, he

or she should back it up as a precaution.Restore In case the hard-disc drive is replaced, restores the Media

Library from the last version that was backed up.Keep your backup of the Media Libraryupdated.

Reset Factory Defaults System reset. Use only as a last resort. Requires recon-figuring all system settings. The MediaLibrary’s contents are not affected.

Network Displays network identification Ethernet:parameters. IP Address:Subnet Mask:Gateway Address:DNS 1:DNS 2:

Proxy Address:Proxy Port Number:

Language Selected Sets system display language. Default is English.

Format USB Reformats a USB device, erasing all content. Exercise extreme caution before usingthis command.

Table A7 – Power Modes

PowerMode

Indicator Functionality Front-PanelPower Control

Remote ControlPower On

Remote ControlPower Off

Full-Off Mode Dim blue System powereddown

System boots andgoes to Full-Power

Mode

System boots andgoes to Full-Power

Mode

No action

Sleep Mode Amber Standby; unit isready for quickturn-on

Full-Power Mode Full-Power Mode No action

Server Mode Amber Play continues toend, remote controlnot active, hdmi notactive.

Full-Power Mode Full-Power Mode Sleep Mode

Full-Power Bright blue Operates normally Single press >Server ModePress and hold >Full-Off Mode

No action Single press >Server ModePress and hold >Full-Off Mode

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38

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11. Governing Law. This Agreement shall be governedby and construed in accordance with the substan-tive laws of the state of New York, excluding all

applicable laws pertaining to conflicts of law andthe United Nations Convention on Contracts for theInternational Sale of Goods.

12. Limitation of Transfer. The Software and this licenseto use the Software is transferable, provided that:(i) all Software updates are included in the transfer;(ii) You do not retain a copy of the Software; (iii)You transfer the Software upon and as an intactpart of a permanent and permissible transfer of theProduct; and (iv) the transferee agrees to be boundby the terms and conditions of this Agreement inconnection with the use of the Product. The termsand conditions of this Agreement will bind andinure to the benefit of such permitted transferees.

13. Survival. Sections 3, 4, 6, 7, 11 and 13 wi ll survivethe termination and expiration of this Agreement.

14. Entire Agreement. This Agreement is the completeand final agreement between You and Harman withrespect to the subject matter of this Agreement. Tothe extent that any terms of any Harman policiesor programs for support services conflict with theterms of this Agreement, the terms of this Agree-ment shall control.

15. Severability. If any court or other tribunal of compe-tent jurisdiction finds or holds any provision of thisAgreement to be void, invalid, illegal or otherwiseunenforceable the remaining provisions of thisAgreement will remain in full force and effect.

16. Copyright Notices, Attributions and Licenses. Some

of Harman’s licensors require the reproduction ofcertain copyright notices and authorship attributionin Harman’s documentation. Such notices, attribu-tions and licenses are as follows:

LAME-3.93.1. © 2002 Steve Lhomme. [email protected] The Software contained in theProduct uses the LAME software. LAME is licensedto Harman and You under the GNU Lesser GeneralPublic License – Version 2.1, see below for licenseterms. Harman does not modify the LAME software.For more information visit http://www.mp3dev.org.

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END-USER LICENSE AGREEMENT (EULA)

IMPORTANT. READ CAREFULLY. THIS END-USER LICENSE AGREEMENT (“AGREEMENT”) DEFINES THE LEGALAGREEMENT BETWEEN YOU (INDIVIDUAL OR ENTITY) AND HARMAN CONSUMER GROUP, INC. (“HARMAN”).YOU ARE PERMITTED TO USE THE DMC1000 (“PRODUCT”) AND THE SOFTWARE CONTAINED AND EMBEDDED

IN THE PRODUCT (“SOFTWARE”) ONLY IF YOU ACCEPT ALL OF THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS CONTAINED INTHIS AGREEMENT. BY USING THE PRODUCT AND SOFTWARE, YOU ARE AGREEING TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMSAND CONDITIONS OF THIS AGREEMENT. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO BE BOUND, YOU MUST STOP USING THEPRODUCT AND SOFTWARE. YOU AND HARMAN AGREE AS FOLLOWS:

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Libtar-1.2.11. © 1998-2003 University of IllinoisBoard of Trustees, © 1998-2003 Mark D. Rothall.All rights reserved. http://www.feep.net/libtar.Redistribution and use in source and binary forms,with or without modification, are permitted provi-ded that the following conditions are met: (1) Redis-

tributions of source code must retain the abovecopyright notice, this list of conditions and thefollowing disclaimer; (2) Redistributions in binaryform must reproduce the above copyright notice,this list of conditions and the following disclaimer inthe documentation and/or other materials providedwith the distribution; and (3) Neither the name ofthe <ORGANIZATION> nor the names of its contri-butors may be used to endorse or promote productsderived from this software without specific priorwritten permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDEDBY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBU-TORS “AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIEDWARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITYAND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE

DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRI-GHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FORANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENTOF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OFUSE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUP-TION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORYOF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICTLIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OROTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THEUSE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THEPOSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

Libxm-2.6.19. © 1998-2003 Daniel Veillard.For more information visit http://xmlsoft.org/.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, toany person obtaining a copy of this software andassociated documentation files (the “Software”), todeal in the Software without restriction, includingwithout limitation the rights to use, copy, modify,merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sellcopies of the Software, and to permit persons towhom the Software is furnished to do so, subjectto the following condi tions: The above copyrightnotice and this permission notice shall be includedin all copies or substantial portions of the Software.THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS,” WITHOUTWARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIESOF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR

PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENTSHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERSBE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHERLIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF ORIN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USEOR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

Gracenote EULA

Gracenote and Muze® Terms of Use

This device contains software from Gracenote, Inc.of 2000 Powell St. Emeryville, California 94608(“Gracenote”) and may include portions ofcontent belonging to or licensed from Muze Inc.of 304 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10013(“Muze”).

The software from Gracenote (the “GracenoteSoftware”) enables this device to do disc andmusic file identification and obtain music-relatedinformation, including name, artist, track, and titleinformation (“Gracenote Data”) from online servers(“Gracenote Servers”), and to perform other func-

tions. You may use Gracenote Data only by meansof the intended End User functions of this device.

You agree that you will use the content from Muze(“Muze Content”), Gracenote Data, the GracenoteSoftware, and Gracenote Servers for your ownpersonal, non-commercial use only. You agree not toassign, copy, transfer or transmit the Muze Content,Gracenote Software or any Gracenote Data (exceptin a Tag associated with a music file) to any thirdparty. YOU AGREE NOT TO USE OR EXPLOIT MUZECONTENT, GRACENOTE DATA, THE GRACENOTESOFTWARE, OR GRACENOTE SERVERS, EXCEPT ASEXPRESSLY PERMITTED HEREIN.

You agree that your non-exclusive licenses to usethe Muze Content, Gracenote Data, the Gracenote

Software, and Gracenote Servers will terminateif you violate these restrictions. If your licensesterminate, you agree to cease any and all use ofthe Muze Content, Gracenote Data, the GracenoteSoftware, and Gracenote Servers. Gracenote andMuze, respectively, reserve all rights in GracenoteData, the Gracenote Software, and the GracenoteServers and Muze Content, including all ownershiprights. Under no circumstances will either Gracenoteor Muze become liable for any payment to you forany information that you provide, including anycopyrighted material or music file information. Youagree that Gracenote and/or Muze may enforce itsrespective rights, collectively or separately, underthis agreement against you, directly in each compa-ny’s own name.

Gracenote uses a unique identifier to track queriesfor statistical purposes. The purpose of a randomlyassigned numeric identifier is to allow Gracenote tocount queries without knowing anything about whoyou are. For more information, see the web pageat www.gracenote.com for the Gracenote PrivacyPolicy.

THE GRACENOTE SOFTWARE, EACH ITEM OFGRACENOTE DATA AND THE MUZE CONTENT ARELICENSED TO YOU “AS IS.” NEITHER GRACENOTENOR MUZE MAKES ANY REPRESENTATIONS ORWARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, REGARDINGTHE ACCURACY OF ANY GRACENOTE DATA FROMTHE GRACENOTE SERVERS OR MUZE CONTENT.GRACENOTE AND MUZE COLLECTIVELY AND SEPA-RATELY RESERVE THE RIGHT TO DELETE DATA AND/OR CONTENT FROM THE COMPANIES’ RESPEC-TIVE SERVERS OR, IN THE CASE OF GRACENOTE,CHANGE DATA CATEGORIES FOR ANY CAUSE THATGRACENOTE DEEMS SUFFICIENT. NO WARRANTYIS MADE THAT EITHER MUZE CONTENT OR THEGRACENOTE SOFTWARE OR GRACENOTE SERVERSARE ERROR-FREE OR THAT THE FUNCTIONINGOF THE GRACENOTE SOFTWARE OR GRACENOTESERVERS WILL BE UNINTERRUPTED. GRACENOTEIS NOT OBLIGATED TO PROVIDE YOU WITH ANYENHANCED OR ADDITIONAL DATA TYPES THATGRACENOTE MAY CHOOSE TO PROVIDE IN THEFUTURE AND IS FREE TO DISCONTINUE ITS ONLINESERVICES AT ANY TIME. GRACENOTE AND MUZE

DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, IMPLIEDWARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FORA PARTICULAR PURPOSE, TITLE, AND NON-IN-

FRINGEMENT. NEITHER GRACENOTE NOR MUZEWARRANTS THE RESULTS THAT WILL BE OBTAINEDBY YOUR USE OF THE GRACENOTE SOFTWAREOR ANY GRACENOTE SERVER. IN NO CASE WILLGRACENOTE OR MUZE BE LIABLE FOR ANYCONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES OR

FOR ANY LOST PROFITS OR LOST REVENUES FORANY REASON WHATSOEVER. © Gracenote 2006

17. Open Source. Certain libraries are licensed to Youunder the terms of the GNU Lesser General PublicLicense, Version 2.1 (“GNU LGPL”). Harman is notallowed to sub-license the GNU LGPL libraries toYou as You are deemed to have Your own directlicense from the original licensee. Harman does notmodify these libraries in any way. Harman herebyoffers to You, upon Your request and for the actualcosts of materials and shipping, all source codeand object code files for all GNU LGPL librariescontained in the Software.

18. GNU Lesser General Public License, Version 2.1,February 1999

Preamble: The licenses for most software aredesigned to take away your freedom to share andchange it. By contrast, the GNU General PublicLicenses are intended to guarantee your freedomto share and change free software – to make surethe software is free for all its users. This license,the Lesser General Public License, applies to somespecially designated software packages – typicallylibraries – of the Free Software Foundation andother authors who decide to use it. You can use ittoo, but we suggest you first think carefully aboutwhether this license or the ordinary General PublicLicense is the better strategy to usein any particular case, based on the explanationsbelow.

When we speak of free software, we are referringto freedom of use, not price. Our General PublicLicenses are designed to make sure that you havethe freedom to distribute copies of free software(and charge for this service if you wish); that youreceive source code or can get it if you want i t; thatyou can change the software and use pieces of it innew free programs; and that you are informed thatyou can do these things.

To protect your rights, we need to make restrictionsthat forbid distributors to deny you these rightsor to ask you to surrender these rights. Theserestrictions translate to certain responsibilities foryou if you distribute copies of the library or if youmodify it. For example, if you distribute copies of the

library, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give therecipients all the rights that we gave you. You mustmake sure that they, too, receive or can get thesource code. If you link other code with the library,you must provide complete object files to the reci-pients, so that they can relink them with the libraryafter making changes to the library and recompilingit. And you must show them these terms so theyknow their rights. We protect your rights with atwo-step method: (1) we copyright the library, and(2) we offer you this license, which gives you legalpermission to copy, distribute and/or modify thelibrary. To protect each distributor, we want to makeit very clear that there i s no warranty for the freelibrary. Also, if the library is modified by someoneelse and passed on, the recipients should know that

what they have is not the original version, so thatthe original author’s reputation will not be affectedby problems that might be introduced by others.

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rivative of the Library (because it contains portionsof the Library), rather than a “work that uses thelibrary.” The executable is therefore covered by thisLicense. Section 6 states terms for distribution ofsuch executables.

When a “work that uses the Library” uses material

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If such an object file uses only numerical para-meters, data structure layouts and accessors, andsmall macros and small inline functions (ten linesor less in length), then the use of the object file isunrestricted, regardless of whether it is legally aderivative work. (Executables containing this objectcode plus portions of the Library will still fall underSection 6.)

Otherwise, if the work is a derivative of the Library,you may distribute the object code for the workunder the terms of Section 6. Any executablescontaining that work also fall under Section 6,whether or not they are linked directly with theLibrary itself.

6. As an exception to the Sections above, you may alsocombine or link a “work that uses the Library” withthe Library to produce a work containing portionsof the Library, and distribute that work under termsof your choice, provided that the terms permitmodification of the work for the customer’s ownuse and reverse engineering for debugging suchmodifications.

You must give prominent notice with each copy of

the work that the Library is used in it and that theLibrary and its use are covered by this License. Youmust supply a copy of this License. If the work du-ring execution displays copyright notices, you mustinclude the copyright notice for the Library amongthem, as well as a reference directing the user tothe copy of this License. Also, you must do oneof these things: a) Accompany the work with thecomplete corresponding machine-readable sourcecode for the Library including whatever changeswere used in the work (which must be distributedunder Sections 1 and 2 above); and, if the workis an executable linked with the Library, with thecomplete machine-readable “work that uses theLibrary,” as object code and/or source code, so that

the user can modify the Library and then relinkto produce a modified executable containing themodified Library. (It is understood that the userwho changes the contents of definitions files in theLibrary will not necessarily be able to recompilethe application to use the modified definitions.); b)Use a suitable shared library mechanism for linkingwith the Library. A suitable mechanism is one that(1) uses at run time a copy of the library alreadypresent on the user’s computer system, rather thancopying library functions into the executable, and(2) will operate properly with a modified version ofthe library, if the user installs one, as long as themodified version is interface-compatible with theversion that the work was made with; c) Accompanythe work with a written offer, valid for at least three

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It may happen that this requirement contradicts thelicense restrictions of other proprietary libraries thatdo not normally accompany the operating system.Such a contradiction means you cannot use both

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7. You may place library facilities that are a workbased on the Library side-by-side in a single librarytogether with other library facilities not covered bythis License, and distribute such a combined library,provided that the separate distribution of the workbased on the Library and of the other library facili-ties is otherwise permitted, and provided that youdo these two things: a) Accompany the combinedlibrary with a copy of the same work based on theLibrary, uncombined with any other library facilities.This must be distributed under the terms of theSections above; and b) Give prominent notice withthe combined library of the fact that part of it is a

work based on the Library, and explaining whereto find the accompanying uncombined form of thesame work.

8. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, link with, ordistribute the Library except as expressly providedunder this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy,modify, sublicense, link with, or distribute theLibrary is void, and will automatically terminateyour rights under this License. However, parties whohave received copies, or rights, from you under thisLicense will not have their licenses terminated solong as such parties remain in full compliance.

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License.

11. If, as a consequence of a court judgment orallegation of patent infringement or for any otherreason (not limited to patent issues), conditions areimposed on you (whether by court order, agreementor otherwise) that contradict the conditions of thisLicense, they do not excuse you from the conditions

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If any portion of this section is held invalid orunenforceable under any particular circumstance,the balance of the section is intended to apply, andthe section as a whole is intended to apply in othercircumstances.

It is not the purpose of this section to induce you toinfringe any patents or other property right claimsor to contest validity of any such claims; this sectionhas the sole purpose of protecting the integrity ofthe free software distribution system which is im-plemented by public license practices. Many peoplehave made generous contributions to the widerange of software distributed through that systemin reliance on consistent application of that system;it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or sheis willing to distribute software through any othersystem and a licensee cannot impose that choice.

This section is intended to make thoroughly clearwhat is believed to be a consequence of the rest ofthis License.

12. If the distribution and/or use of the Library isrestricted in certain countries either by patents or bycopyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holderwho places the Library under this License may addan explicit geographical distribution limitationexcluding those countries, so that distribution ispermitted only in or among countries not thusexcluded. In such case, this License incorporates thelimitation as if written in the body of this License.

13. The Free Software Foundation may publish revisedand/or new versions of the Lesser General PublicLicense from time to time. Such new versions will besimilar in spirit to the present version, but may differin detail to address new problems or concerns.

Each version is given a distinguishing version

number. If the Library specifies a version numberof this License which applies to it and “any laterversion,” you have the option of following the termsand conditions either of that version or of any laterversion published by the Free Software Foundation.If the Library does not specify a license versionnumber, you may choose any version ever publishedby the Free Software Foundation.

14. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Library intoother free programs whose distribution conditionsare incompatible with these, write to the authorto ask for permission. For software which is copy-righted by the Free Software Foundation, write tothe Free Software Foundation; we sometimes makeexceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by

the two goals of preserving the free status of allderivatives of our free software and of promotingthe sharing and reuse of software generally.

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NO WARRANTY

15. BECAUSE THE LIBRARY IS LICENSED FREE OFCHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE LI-BRARY, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLELAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRI-TING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER

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