ASUS ships $100 O!Play HDP-R1 HD media streamer

Hey, you — yeah, you. Remember that O!Play HDP-R1 media player that ASUS teased us with back in June? Remember how you dedicated a calender to it so you could count down the days ’til its arrival? Time to stop all that madness, as said box is finally on sale and shipping right now within the US of A. For the surprisingly reasonable price of $99.99, users can utilize this very device to stream and play back an array of formats with 1080p resolution support. Heck, there’s even an eSATA and Ethernet port there, just waiting for your love. So, will you show it? Or is life still worth living knowing what you’ve neglected?

[Via Slashgear]

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ASUS ships $100 O!Play HDP-R1 HD media streamer originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Oct 2009 09:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Spawn Labs HD-720 aims to be the Slingbox to your game console, we go hands-on

Sure, your heart may be aflutter with thoughts of gaming cloud services like OnLive and OTOY, but quietly making its debut this week is Spawn Labs with its “Bring Your Own console” HD-720 video game streamer, due out this November for $199.95. In a nutshell, the device works as a Slingbox for your Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PS2, or GameCube and lets you play those consoles over the internet on your Windows PC (a Mac client is said to be in the works). The AV cables — component or composite, no HDMI at this point — are connected and can be then passed through to a TV as normal. A USB connection is used to sync up the controller, and there’s also an IR signal for turning the connected system(s) on and off. On the computer, you can log the Spawn Labs website and play either your own system or jump onto one of your friends’ systems for some faux-local co-op or to be a spectator.

We had a chance to take a look at the streamer and talk with some of the minds behind it at TechCrunch 50 to fill in some of the missing details. In a fairly controlled environment — the device hooked up via ethernet to a private router on the show floor — we were able to competently play Soul Calibur IV with what we were told was around 100ms audio / video and 5ms controller lag. Under ideal situations, it streams 720p / 30 frames per second in H.264 video with AAC-LC audio, but that can automatically downscale when the connection slows — should we decide we’re too lazy to make it from our bedroom to the couch to play Halo (an all too frequent scenario), it’ll clearly work fine over a local network, but it’s gonna be how well it works across that internet that’s the real deal-breaker, and we weren’t able to test that. Cross-continent play isn’t recommended, but you can have spectators from all over the world and it won’t at all affect your latency. Any PC controller can work and be custom-mapped, including just keyboard and mouse, although if you’re wanting to use a PS3 pad you’ll have to find the drivers for it yourself. The game window itself has buttons along the bottom for pulling up the system’s specific guide menu or recording the video for upload to YouTube. What’s impressive to us is that it’s said to work with any computer that can handle a 720p video stream, and so far in the labs they’ve apparently got it working well on an ION-based netbook — but we didn’t get to see that for ourselves, so we’ll hold applause until we can put it through its paces ourselves. See a video demonstration for yourself after the break.

Continue reading Video: Spawn Labs HD-720 aims to be the Slingbox to your game console, we go hands-on

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Video: Spawn Labs HD-720 aims to be the Slingbox to your game console, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 11:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Freecom’s MediaPlayer II NAS and media streamer aims high, scores low

Freecom's MediaPlayer II NAS and media streamer aims high, scores low

Freecom has released enough diverse disk-based products over the past few years to inspire hope that its latest attempt to bridge the network-attached storage and media streamer divide would succeed. Not the case, according to Register Hardware‘s review. File copies to the device were quick enough over USB, but once tethered on Ethernet got rather slow (10 minutes for a 1GB file, 36 minutes for 1,024 1MB files), and even worse over WiFi (14 and 44 minutes, respectively). So, that whole NAS aspect doesn’t exactly work out. Neither does the streaming side, with an inability to open H.264 or WMV9 files, and while it can decode high-definition MPEG2 files, it fails to play them smoothly. It can open DivX and Xvid files, and can even play DVD ISO files, but, sadly, that’s where the positives end for this £115 ($190), 500GB multi-tasker.

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Freecom’s MediaPlayer II NAS and media streamer aims high, scores low originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 08:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Netgear expands Digital Entertainer line with the EVA2000 Digital Entertainer Live

Netgear’s Digital Entertainer media streamers have always been well-admired as capable and flexible home theater units, and it sounds like the new Digital Entertainer Live will keep that trend alive while bringing prices down — the $150 box will play back just about any format you throw at it from just about any source, while offering YouTube, pay-per-view CinemaNow movies and VuNow and PlayOn support in the bargain. Seems like a pretty decent piece of kit, no outrageous claims here — oh, except for this line about the Live’s new video search tool that can “locate videos on the entire worldwide web” by searching “more than hundred thousand websites.” That sounds… ominous. Way to go, guys — first you add MKV support, then you try to blackmail the entire world. We always knew this would happen.

Update: We just spoke with Netgear and learned a couple interesting tidbits. First, although remote bears a resemblance to the one used with the Western Digital WD TV HD, that’s all — the actual box itself is completely different hardware, and the remote has a totally different layout. Second, PlayOn will be offered at a 25 percent discount to DE Live buyers, making the whole thing seem like even more of a bargain.

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Netgear expands Digital Entertainer line with the EVA2000 Digital Entertainer Live originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Sep 2009 17:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kodak Theatre HD Player updated with YouTube HD, 1080p support

We didn’t have a problem playing 30fps 1080p video on the Kodak Theatre HD Player when we tested it back in January, but apparently we were living on the edge — the box just got an update officially supporting 1080p playback. There’s also now YouTube HD support, some basic web browsing ability, and a few other features in the mix, so all in all it’s a nice little update for the $200 box with solid codec support and that nifty gyroscopic Pointer Remote. Current owners should see an option to update to 1.4 shortly, we’d imagine.

[Via Electronista]

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Kodak Theatre HD Player updated with YouTube HD, 1080p support originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jul 2009 20:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Conceptronic shows off potent Yuixx media streamer at Computex

Conceptronic has been doing a fairly admirable job with promoting itself as a serious player in the crowded media streamer market, and while its atypically designed Grab ‘n Go was certainly worth a look at CES, it’s the Yuixx that could really launch it into the next level. Shown over at Computex, this HD media streamer was loaded with broad format compatibility, Intel’s fledgling CE 3100 media processor and support for Yahoo! widgets, TV tuning, a “Firefox-based” web browser, a 3.5-inch internal hard drive, WiFi and Ethernet. We’re told that three variants will be made available for those looking for a more stripped-down version, and while an exact release date has yet to be set, an autumn introduction and a price range of around €250 ($354) to €450 ($638) is expected. Peek the read link for a few looks at the sleek user interface.

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Conceptronic shows off potent Yuixx media streamer at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Jun 2009 09:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS O!Play HDP-R1 media player won’t likely get an O-face

We knew it was coming, now the ASUS O!Play is official. The HDP-R1 HD Media Player supports HD video playback in a variety of codecs including MPEG1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, and RM/RMVB in a multitude of packages including .mp4, .mov, .avi, .divx, and .mkv just to name a few. FLAC and OGG audio? Yup, no problem. The box connects to your display over HDMI or composite A/V with an option for optical digital audio for multi-channel setups. Media can be slung off a single USB 2.0/eSATA combo port, second vanilla USB 2.0 jack, or streamed over fixed Ethernet if you prefer to keep your content on the other side of the house. Sorry, no 802.11n because, you know, everyone’s home is wired with Cat 5 (riiiight). No price or release date given; but it would have to be cheap and soon for us to be even remotely interested.

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ASUS O!Play HDP-R1 media player won’t likely get an O-face originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 01:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS to introduce O!Play media player at Computex

Wait, what’s this? ASUS diving head first into the HD media streamer game? Based on images and details acquired by Hardware, we’d say chances are looking pretty good. Reportedly, the aforementioned outfit will showcase its very own media player at Computex next week in Taiwan, and our expectations are already fairly lofty. The O!Play (codename HDP-R1) is said to be a fair bit quicker than competing models, and the file compatibility list is also worthy of laud. Port wise, this one’s packing eSATA, USB, HDMI, stereo audio jacks, optical digital audio, Ethernet and an AC port. If all goes well, we could see this little bugger in European stores by July, with a price tag pegged at €119 ($168). Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem as if that price nets you an internal HDD, but we’ll find out for sure soon enough.

[Via The Inquirer]

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ASUS to introduce O!Play media player at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 May 2009 17:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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mCubed’s RipNAS Statement now available in Europe

mCubed’s RipNAS Statement may be unique, but it isn’t apt to be widely adopted — at least not with price points like this. Hailed as the first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device, the product is also available in a traditional HDD form, though both handle automatic ripping, NAS duties and media streaming. Within, you’ll find a dual-core Atom CPU, gigabit Ethernet, a TEAC DVD drive, four USB 2.0 sockets and a fanless design. The pain? €1,795 ($2,500) for the 3TB HDD version, or €3,295 ($4,590) for the 500GB SSD model. If you’re unfazed by sticker shock, you can pick yours up right now over in Europe.

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mCubed’s RipNAS Statement now available in Europe originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 May 2009 14:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RipNAS Statement: world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device

We’ll be perfectly honest with you — the Atom-powered RipNAS definitely caught our interest when it launched with practically no major competitors back in February. Now, the RipNAS family has grown by two with the introduction of the Statement SSD and Statement HDD. We’re told that the former is the world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device, and we’ve absolutely no reason to believe otherwise. The totally silent, all-silver box is based on the Windows Home Server OS and handles a cornucopia of tasks: CD ripping, media streaming and networked file storage. Internal specifications include a dual-core Atom CPU, 2GB of RAM and four USB 2.0 ports. The Statement SSD arrives in a 500GB configuration (2 x 250GB SSDs), while the Statement HDD holds 3TB by way of two 1.5TB drives; mum’s the word on pricing, but don’t bank on ’em being cheap.

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RipNAS Statement: world’s first SSD-based CD ripping NAS device originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 03 May 2009 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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