Product Description: Memorex is the No. 1 brand in digital media worldwide, offering a wide portfolio of solutions for storing data, photo, audio and video formats. Memorex' product portfolio includes high-quality products at competitive prices, thus reflecting the company's philosophy to provide innovative concepts on fast-growing market sectors.
Amazon.com Product Description: Specially designed to remove dust from a CD and DVD player's lens, this laser lens cleaner contains six brushes to gently remove dust and dirt from your disc players' lens, and seven sound optimization tools for use with audio setup and designed to optimize the sound quality of your stereo system.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
Rating: - good service, good price
I got good service with a good price. Not totally convinced that the dvd cleaner does as good as job as I thought it would do, but I am not unhappy.
Rating: - Why clean your CD/DVD laser lens?
If you've even owned a phonograph player, you periodially cleaned the needle because of lint and dust. It's the same with the laser lens on a CD/DVD media player. They need to be cleaned of lint and dust and the easiest way to do this is to use a CD/DVD cleaning disk. I've owned other CD/DVD lens cleaning disks but the Memorex Lens Cleaner is one of the better units around. It also includes a sound optimization tool that walks you through the optimizing of your sound system speakers. Pretty awesome!
Rating: - Piece of poop
This was inexpensive, arrived quickly and did not work in any dvd/cd player I own. Beware if it seems too good to be true it is.
Rating: - Roll the Dice
I tried this product on two DVD players. It seemed like it was working from the audio portion of the program. I was unable to get the associated video portion to work on screen. It was unable to clean the DVD players for them to work.
Rating: - Not Mac compatible
I bought this to clean the laser on my MacBook Pro, which had been struggling to read certain discs. The laptop couldn't mount this disc and just spits it out. I tried it in two other devices, a desktop computer and a Sony DVD player, and it was rejected by both of them too.