(WD TV-2 ) Western Digital upgrade from the existing WD TV media player

:itsawrap:

C200 Popcorn Hour Demo - Movie Jukeboxes


[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/N6yKV1W7rYM&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]





[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/DtPImwm5uYc&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/8kM_7dQ-v80&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/Olj8DzyXTYQ&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/tscegVYz2aM&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/TyTfiQi4g_Q&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/2PRjJcspgjI&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/ttjQ3OW3eJE&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/sxf36prWAOg&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]
 
It might be a long wait if im not in the batch 3 list of pre orders.



C-200 Delay Announcement
Dear Popcorn Hour Patrons,

I’d like to start by thanking those of you who have been patient in regards to your orders. I’m sure many of you are no doubt waiting anxiously for your shiny new C-200 to arrive. Since the launch on our site, we’ve had many different announcements as to when the product will ship and then about delays for said orders. With each and every post we have frustrated you as well as plenty of our own staff. Before now we’ve only mentioned that there will be delays and have yet to provide any information regarding why. Because of your patience and understanding, we feel it only right to share with you more information so you are better informed about the situation.

The first cause for delay was that we started taking orders without enough stock produced. We thought the device would be popular, we just had no idea how much so; and for that we thank you. The second cause for delay was that an entire batch of units had a mechanical defect on the case that created problems when installing a hard drive. The third cause has been one of the most devastating. The plant that is manufacturing our aluminum brushed front panels has repeatedly brought us batches that we have had to reject due to poor quality. We don’t want to pass off inferior products to you just as much as you don’t want them. Our fourth cause for delay has yet to occur. The factory we use will be off from October 1st through the 8th due to Golden Week in China. That’s one week of production greatly needed, but unavailable.

At this time we are trying to produce as many players as possible, without lowering our standards for a quality product. However, the culmination of these delays has affected our shipping schedule. We’re looking to ship batch 2 on or around the 30th of September. Due to the holiday delay, batch 3 is estimated to ship October 26th. We know that this will upset some of you, as it has us. We do apologize for the continued delay and want to assure you that we will be doing all that is possible to ship your orders as soon as possible. Thank you again for your patience and understanding.

With humblest regards,
The Popcorn Hour Team

http://www.networkedmediatank.com/showthread.php?tid=28680
We will update the orders list that fall into this batch at least 3 days before the shipping date.

http://www.networkedmediatank.com/showthread.php?tid=28644
 
I just finish watching Transformers 2 Bluray IMAX Version on the WD Media Player (not the Live one) and it was the most beautiful thing I ever saw..
I think that was the 1st real test for my TV to see what it was capable of.

Western Digital is BAWSE..However I don't think I'll be needing the LIVE one :smh:
 
all I play on mine is 720p MKV files.... had no problems


well actually, I had audio issues with 2 movies... it kept cutting out for one second. I think it was the way the movies were encoded or something.

mkv2vob is ya best friend you will never have audio issues again. :dance:
 
Yep, it's going to be a long wait. :smh:

10-22-2009

macrho
At this rate I'll receive my C-200 on...


.. April of 2010.

I'm just a bit surprised that the next batch of orders that is going out covers just a single day of orders

When should you theoretically receive shipment of your C200?

This offers two things:

o Possibility of a price drop
o Competition: maybe another vendor will ship something

Anyway, a customer who is really surprised at either how much demand was miscalculated or how much of a potential QA issue there is (or just a whiny repeat customer)

but wow

-----


RE: At this rate I'll receive my C-200 on...

chris57
Christ how many times.....

Demand was excpetionally high on the pre-sales opening day, if you do not remember it crashed the server.

So as demand tailed off after that day to normal levels you will see that the next batches will cover far greater time periods.

First batch was something like 10 mins
Next is 1 day
Next it has been said will be about one week, then one month.

Syabas said last week that an order placed last week would be expected to be met by end of November.


http://www.networkedmediatank.com/showthread.php?tid=30089
:smh:
 
the question is; is the wait worth it? What's so special about that machine? I think the WD Media Player got it LOCKED everything else is just the runner up
 
No, not when the wait is that long. There are guys on that site that have been waiting for the Pop Corn Hour to ship since September.

It can do every thing the WD player can do and more. The only thing the WD player has on it is the price.


Review: Popcorn Hour

[flash]http://www.youtube.com/v/FnaHGWcrdFE&hl=en&fs=1&[/flash]​
 
No, not when the wait is that long. There are guys on that site that have been waiting for the Pop Corn Hour to ship since September.

It can do every thing the WD player can do and more. The only thing the WD player has on it is the price.

:smh: :smh: :smh:

nah this shit does TOO much.. and besides half that shit i dont even need. push in a hard drive like a nintendo cartridge? :smh:
 
Roku HD-XR Player and Roku SD Player announced (with hands-on!)

2009-10-26rokuxrunboxpage.jpg



We had big hopes the Roku HD-XR streaming player would add local streaming when those leaked pics showed a USB port, but we just got the official launch materials and a review unit, and as of right now the only difference between the new $129 HD-XR Player and the existing model is an upgrade to 802.11n WiFi -- the USB port is for "future use." Now, we're big proponents of 802.11n, so we're not complaining, but we've never had a problem streaming HD Netflix or Amazon with our regular Roku HD Player on 802.11g, so we're not too sure the HD-XR is worth the $30 premium right now. Roku is gearing up to launch a new Channel Store with additional content in the coming weeks, however, so there's a chance this little box will need the extra bandwidth sometime soon -- we'll have to wait and see.

Roku's also launching the SD-only Roku SD Player for $79, which might actually be the more interesting product here, as we know tons of people with old TVs in bedrooms and basements who would love some cheap movie streaming. It'll be in the same enclosure as the HD Player and the HD-XR Player, but only have 802.11g WiFi and RCA audio / video outputs.


Gallery: Roku HD-XR Player unboxing and hands-on

Gallery: Roku HD-XR and SD Player press images



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http://www.engadget.com/2009/10/27/roku-hdxr-player-announced-adds-802-11n-not-much-else-with-h/
 
I just picked up a WDTV Live from Best Buy for $119.00 this past weekend and it is the fucking truth. No more wasted money on 50 packs of Verbatim DVDs. I'll post a review of the live streaming capabilities once I get a Wireless USB card. :)
 
I just picked up a WDTV Live from Best Buy for $119.00 this past weekend and it is the fucking truth. No more wasted money on 50 packs of Verbatim DVDs. I'll post a review of the live streaming capabilities once I get a Wireless USB card. :)

I got the $99 one this past weekend. Haven't used it yet.
 
i fucking love WD I dont download nuthin less than 1080p movies. the WD makes the picture look beautiful!
 
ViewSonic's VMP70 media player does 1080p for less than a hundie

viewsonic-vmp70-angle-20091104-600.jpg


The WD TV is still more or less the king of the tiny media player boxes, but now Viewsonic is getting into the game at a lower price point -- and minus the whole network compatibility bit. The VMP70 is a "direct connect" media device, so it will play content from your choice of USB-compatible storage, pumping it at up to 1080p to your display over HDMI or component cables, also sporting composite for lower-def fare. It packs an S/PDIF port to get clean audio, and supports a slew of formats including the usual suspects (DivX,Xvid,H.264) along with some slightly less usual ones (RM/RMVB, DTS, OGG). It's all available for an MSRP of $129.99, but order now and you'll get special holiday pricing of $98.99. Operators are standing by... somewhere... probably.

viewsonic-vmp70-20091105-800-00001.jpg


http://www.engadget.com/photos/viewsonics-vmp70-media-player/2425342/
 
so a media player does what exactly :confused: You plug your hard drive to it an watch it on your tv... so basically its like replacing your dvd player wit the media player(that's connected to your hard drive) or is there something I'm missing :dunno:
 
so a media player does what exactly :confused: You plug your hard drive to it an watch it on your tv... so basically its like replacing your dvd player wit the media player(that's connected to your hard drive) or is there something I'm missing :dunno:

Get one bro! it's easy to use. well worth the price.
 

500x_HD_Media_Player_Battle_group.jpg


When Apple TV 3.0 came out, we were unimpressed. Readers asked what else they could use to play their many videos. Here are five nice ones to suit different needs—nearly all cost less, and do more, than ATV.

The goal here is simple: Play all the videos that I have ripped from DVD, downloaded from the web, shot with my own cameras or obtained in some other manner, no matter what the format. It sounds simple, but Apple TV can't do it. Neither can the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3. Video codecs and containers are a nightmare to keep track of, and even more of a nightmare to convert.

This isn't about photos and music. Apple TV is better at both of those than any of this stuff. It's also not about renting movies or buying movies, or even streaming movies from Netflix. Roku has a nice cheap box for that, and Apple TV is suitable if you just want to live inside Steve Jobs' media store. This is about playing non-DRM movies, pure and simple.This isn't about photos and music. Apple TV is better at both of those than any of this stuff. It's also not about renting movies or buying movies, or even streaming movies from Netflix. Roku has a nice cheap box for that, and Apple TV is suitable if you just want to live inside Steve Jobs' media store. This is about playing non-DRM movies, pure and simple.

The names might be familiar to you: The Popcorn Hour C-200 by Syabas is quickly gaining cult status (and has its own hacker wiki), while the other four smaller boxes come from brands you probably have experience with, including WD, Seagate, Netgear and Patriot. None have built-in wireless, but they all have Ethernet ports.

My two main tests were simple—I loaded PC and Mac formatted external hard drives with a variety of files ranging from H.264 MP4s to WMVs of several vintages, from raw AVCHD files in MTS wrappers to the hot new DivX 7 MKV. Then I browsed through my local network to a NAS that had a cache of similar files. Could I see them? Could I play them? These shouldn't be issues, but they're big issues.

Here's a rundown of each machine, and how they fared in testing:

500x_HD-players-medals.jpg


500x_HD-players-ranking.jpg


As you can see, there were clear leaders given my criteria above, but what struck me was how each one differed. Truth is, depending on who you are, any one of these might be the best fit. Here's what really separates them:

WD TV Live - $150

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I would have given this thing the solo spot at the top if it weren't for a few dings that might very well be fixed in a firmware update: It won't show you DVD menus on ripped DVD images, and when you play files with the suffix .m4v, it won't fast forward or rewind. Weird bug, and can be fixed if you just change .m4v to .mp4, but since that's the default file naming for Handbrake's "Apple TV" profile, it could be a problem for people, like me, who spent months ripping their entire DVD collection that way.

WD's strengths include a friendly user interface with handy video previews, some promising early online services (including Pandora), and the most reasonable photo and music handling I've seen in this cluster of gadgets.

Seagate FreeAgent Theater+ - $150

500x_Seagate_front_back.jpg


500x_Seagate_screen.jpg


I loved this when I tested it a few weeks ago, despite its fugly interface, and it holds up under testing. It does better with ripped .ISO files than WD, doing both DVD menus and chapters (and it doesn't have that weird .m4v bug either). Video was better, especially when running 1080p content. And when it came to browsing my Linksys NAS in search of movies, it could reach more and read more than the WD.

The tradeoff is that the interface is bad, and there's almost nothing in the way of online services. It gets points for making an attempt at sorting music, and displaying photos, but if that's a priority, WD is the better call.

Popcorn Hour C-200 - $300


500x_Popcorn_front_back.jpg


500x_Popcorn_screen.jpg


Hardcore AV nerds love this thing, and I understand why. There are more ways to get at video content than in any other set-top box I've ever seen, and if you really know how to hack, there's really not much it can't do.

It's a big ole thing—they call it a "network tank," and despite remind me of the far cooler ones in Tron, I get it. It has an internal BitTorrent client and you can plug in a Blu-ray drive, for God's sake. I found very few video formats that it wouldn't support (FLV was one) but I had to take major points off because for being so big, it has a lame interface, and it comes with an RF remote that only worked when I stood within 3 feet. They even mention that there might be problems with interference, and that if people experience that, they can buy the IR remote. Great, thanks.

My only question—and, commenters, it's not rhetorical—is why spend $300 on this (plus extra for the optional internal HDD and the IR remote) when you can just buy a home-theater PC?

Patriot Box Office - $130

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500x_Patriot_screen.jpg


This was the dark horse of the group, being a late entry by a company known only for computer memory. I was surprised at how well it held up. It actually could decode more tested formats than any other device in this lineup—it did Flash video (FLV), which the three above can't render. Only the WD and the Patriot show you video previews, too. As small as it is, there's a space for a 2.5" SATA drive in there, and even a BitTorrent client. You can copy files to and from different drives and the network, and it's the cheapest of the lot, at $130.

So why did it come in a distant 3rd? Unlike the three above, it can't read Mac formatted hard drives, and its video quality was noticeably the worst of the batch. That said, if you are a hacker sort and want something to play with that doesn't cost as much as Popcorn, set your sights on this.

Netgear Digital Entertainer Live

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500x_Netgear_screen.jpg


As you can probably tell by now, Netgear had the most disappointing box of the lineup, despite its Apple TV ripoff of a look and feel. Lack of Mac media support and the inability to read key file formats, like DivX 7 and AVCHD, meant it couldn't pass muster with real video fanatics. Its biggest point of woe was the fact that it didn't support any file over 720p in resolution—whether that's a software thing or a hardware thing, it's sure not future-proof, and probably best to stay away.

I also didn't like the fact that its interface is laid out entirely for retail, like an Apple TV without the panache, or a Roku box that costs more and doesn't do Netflix. Local files were not a priority, and despite the friendly interface, it doesn't even make an attempt to differentiate photos and music. I did give it a gold star for online services, but only because it had the most in this group—if online services are what you love, buy a Roku, or a TiVo, or an Xbox, or a friggin' Apple TV.

Still not sure what you're looking for, check the spec comparisons here:

500x_HD-players-features.jpg
 
I just received my Western Digital Live. That joint is the shit!:yes: I swooped it up off Amazon for $119.99 with a Buffalo mini wireless N usb drive for $29.99. Total cost with shipping was just under $150, and my first impressions are that this was a good purchase. I first tried playing some files off a hard drive and it worked good, but then I plugged in the wireless and installed the software on my desktop. I had to make a shared network folder and make it viewable, but once setup:eek::eek::eek:.

It is streaming pretty good....hell.....really don't even think that I will need to even plug the usb hard drive in.:lol::dance::dance:

I tested on of the include sample HD videos, and it played smooth over wireless:dance::dance:
 
I am so tempted to get the WDTV Live...or even save up for the Popcorn Hour, but all I have is one 26 inch HDTV and my first gen WDTV plays all of my from the low quality one linkers to the Blu Ray rips and the m-HD files.
 
I am so tempted to get the WDTV Live...or even save up for the Popcorn Hour, but all I have is one 26 inch HDTV and my first gen WDTV plays all of my from the low quality one linkers to the Blu Ray rips and the m-HD files.

I started to get the OG original one from Best Buy since it was on sale this week for $74.99, but the Gen 2 decodes DTS, and the live adds ethernet. I picked the Live since it was only $20 more than the Gen 2 that decodes DTS sound and has a ethernet port and supports wireless and comes with a few sites loaded like youtube. So far from my computer room to the bedroom it streams well enough to not even really need to plug in a hardrive.:dance:

I am tempted to pick another one up so I can have one for the Bedroom and one for the living room and not have to unplug it and move it around.
 
i already have some motorola nim-100's in the house so im going to grab one of these for the kids rooom and STOP burning damn dvd's 3 spindles of chit in there and half of it wont play anymore fukk that add a 2TB drive and im good for a while
 
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