orcishgamer: I'll pick one of those up on the way home from work tomorrow:)
I am a bit curious, can one really use one of those single piece systems to do 5.1 in a room (I'm thinking with TV here)? You seem to know quite a bit about audio, so I'm asking:)
Full Disclosure: I was a tech support rep for Klipsch for three years. Love the products. Lukewarm on the company.
To an extent, yes you can achieve the illusion of 5.1 audio with a sound bar... but it is really just using reflected sound to mimic 5.1 But a sound bar cannot offer discreet channels. Sound bars are simply a single case design with a right, left and center channel. So, for the serious home theater buff, no, sound bars don't work. For the casual user who wants a richer sound than TV speakers without hanging rear speakers on the wall... yes, they can do an okay job.
Note, the job they can do gets worse in open architecture rooms... You know, living room opens out to kitchen and dining room, high ceilings, etc... Because there is so little to reflect sound off of. The hardcore HT geek needs a rectangular room with 8 foot ceilings, not a lot of windows, etc., but we can't all afford to have dedicated rooms like that (least I can't). Actually having real rears mitigates a lot of those problems.
And the thing is, very few of them have the impact of a traditional 5.1 set with 2 sides, 2 rears, and a center (and sub).
All that said, those Palladiums I linked... I have sat in an acoustically perfect room, with high end gear and listened to those speakers. I listened to a perfect analog recording of a live Diana Krall (audio guys LOVE Diana Krall) performance and closed my eyes. You could hear the breaths between words. You could here the sound of her shoe hitting the foot pedals on the piano before she pressed down on the pedal. It's breathtaking. It is as if the music were being projected through the very throat of God.
Then I put in an Elvis Costello CD (can you believe she's married to Elvis Costello?) and (note: I am a HUGE Elvis Costello fan) and it sounded like shit. Of course, Elvis is awesome, but this was a CD pressed in the early 90s, made from original analog recordings transferred to digital with only a cursory attempt at remastering... and everything that is flawed about digital recording was front and center. Because the speakers can give you the highest highs and lowest lows, you can hear the clipping from the compression used in the transfer. It sounded like what jaggies look like in graphics.
My own home theater speakers are big and sound awesome, but are far far far more modest than those beautiful Palladiums.