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New Netgear HD Media Player

post #1 of 24
Thread Starter 
Netgear is set to launch a new HD media player called the EVA9150 Digital Entertainer Elite. This box will put free videos & photos from YouTube & Flickr, as well as content from your PC, onto your high-definition TV.

New Netgear HD Media Player
post #2 of 24
I've seen a few mentions of the EVA9150 but have never seen a picture of one. All have been of the EVA9000
post #3 of 24
Do we know how the two differ?
post #4 of 24
I'm honestly not convinced there are actually two models. The EVA9000 is for real, I've no idea what the 9150 is.
post #5 of 24
I think it might be just the Euro version.
post #6 of 24
Isn't is going to be £399!

Bearing in mind that the EVA8000 is at last beginning to perform with some stability, and thats on the older chipset, wont it be a worry to spend so much more on this when other cheaper devices have been working for over a year on the newer chipset players?
post #7 of 24
I read even newer chipsets are due 1st quarter 2009.
post #8 of 24
Netgear has partnered with Verismonetworks (www.verisnonetworks.com). The new product from Netgear EVA9150 is supposed to run the software engine from verismonetworks (http://vunow.com/news/18?task=view)
post #9 of 24
looks verry good

first i was thinking to buy the wd hdtv

but now i think it is better to save a littlebit more money
and go for this one!!

or not
post #10 of 24
post #11 of 24
the reason why it looks good is because netgear have made an interface that fits 2009 not 2001




would that be so difficult popcorn hour and wd? ..i'd buy one if there was at least some artwork showing without having to piss about with some 3rd party skin
post #12 of 24
Maybe 2009 will be the year. I've been saying this since 2001. This box looks promising.
post #13 of 24
wish they took out the harddrive and make it cheaper. $250 is reasonable. at $400, it cost as much as PS3.
post #14 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by foxnews View Post

wish they took out the harddrive and make it cheaper. $250 is reasonable. at $400, it cost as much as PS3.

+1

First I heard of this thing, it was called the 9000 and the HDD was not included. Maybe we'll have a choice?

Anyone have any specifics about the hardware?
post #15 of 24
sorry i cant put any links here becausse
i have no 3 postings yet

but when you look at the site of netgear there you can sse everything

petje
post #16 of 24
Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150)
An ideal solution for serious media enthusiasts, NETGEAR's Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150) is the most powerful and flexible digital media player available, incorporating the latest video, audio and wireless technologies to deliver an unparalleled living room experience. Its integrated 500GB hard drive, easily user-upgradeable to larger capacity disks, makes the Digital Entertainer Elite the world's most powerful home video jukebox on the market. Consumers can play on their TVs Blu-Ray quality up to 1080p digital video, high-resolution digital photos, MP3s and recorded television shows from their PCs or storage on their network. They can also enjoy Internet content, such as YouTube, Internet radio, Flickr, RSS feeds, and videos from popular websites. The Digital Entertainer Elite automatically finds all digital media files on the home network and organizes them into an easily accessible library.

The Digital Entertainer Elite is exceptional in that it works simultaneously with Windows®, Mac® and Linux computers, and Networked Attached Storage (NAS) devices, such as NETGEAR's award-winning family of ReadyNAS® storage solutions. It supports an unmatched list of file formats, including:

Video formats: AVI, DivX, Xvid WMV, MOV, M4V, MP4, VOB, MPG, MP1, MP2, MP4, ISO, IFO, MKV, TS and M2TS;
Audio formats: MP1, MP2, MP3, WMA, WMA-Pro, AAC, FLAC, AIFF, WAV, LPCM, Dolby AC3 5.1 stereo downmix, Dolby AC3 5.1 passthrough, DTS 5.1 passthrough, Dolby TrueHD Downmix, Dolby+ Passthrough and DTS-HD Master Audio passthrough;
Subtitle formats: SUB, SRT, SMI, SAMI, TXT and DVD Subpicture; and,
Video codecs: MP1, MP2, MP4, Xvid, VC-1/WMV-9, H.264 and OpenDivX.
The Digital Entertainer Elite's two USB ports also enable instant access to content on a USB flash drive, digital camera, iPod® or other USB storage device. Three of NETGEAR's exclusive RangeMax internal metamaterial antennas and Dual-Band wireless 802.11n give the Digital Entertainer Elite the best wireless performance of any digital media player on the market. More specifically, the Dual-Band wireless enables the Digital Entertainer Elite to pick from not only three 2.4GHz channels, crowded by 802.11g wireless networks in the neighborhood, but up to twenty clearer channels in the 5GHz band. Further, the Sigma Designs 8635 chip ensures the most powerful and flexible audio and video performance.

Multiple NETGEAR Digital Entertainer Elite units can work in concert throughout a house. Using Follow Me, consumers can pause a video in one room and resume it in another. While in Party Mode, they can synchronize music playback for whole-home listening.

The Digital Entertainer Elite also features NETGEAR's award-winning Push N' Connect to seamlessly and securely connect wireless clients based on Wi-Fi Protected Set-up (WPS), eliminating the need to remember or input password keys. Further, NETGEAR's Digital Entertainer Elite includes environmentally friendly features, such as an energy-efficient power supply and auto-sleep mode.

Backed by a one-year warranty and full 24/7 technical support, the NETGEAR Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150) is expected to be available in February through leading retailers, e-commerce sites, and value-added resellers at an MSRP in the U.S. of $399.

NETGEAR's product introductions take advantage of two major trends that we are seeing with consumers digital media and connectivity, said Kurt Scherf, vice president and principal analyst of Parks Associates, which specializes in research and analysis for digital living technologies. First, as digital media collections grow, we anticipate that the average broadband household will require a significant amount of additional storage and media centralization capabilities. Second, our Digital Media Evolution study finds high demand for connected CE experiences that can deliver premium Web content to the living room.
post #17 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by petje View Post

Dolby TrueHD Downmix

That's a showstopper.
post #18 of 24
Quote:


at an MSRP in the U.S. of $399.


$399 and NO DTS 5.1 Downmix to Stereo


People want DTS Downmix, not DolbyTrueHD Downmix, Netgear!
post #19 of 24
Does "TrueHD Downmix" mean that I won't be able to get a TrueHD bitstream to my TrueHD capable receiver? I'm in the market for a media streamer which can play BD rips (m2ts files are fine), but it must be able to preserve the full TrueHD audio stream so my receiver can decode it.

I agree that if "TrueHD Downmix" mean no TrueHD bitstream then this is a joke. How could a new product with such a feature set not include TrueHD bitstreaming capability?
post #20 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by petje View Post

sorry i cant put any links here becausse
i have no 3 postings yet

but when you look at the site of netgear there you can sse everything

petje

Don't you think I looked there first? And, no, I don't see "everything."

Quote:
Originally Posted by petje View Post

Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150)
An ideal solution for serious media enthusiasts, NETGEAR’s Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150) is the most powerful and flexible digital media player available, incorporating the latest video, audio and wireless technologies to deliver an unparalleled living room experience. Its integrated 500GB hard drive, easily user-upgradeable to larger capacity disks, makes the Digital Entertainer Elite the world’s most powerful home video jukebox on the market. Consumers can play on their TVs Blu-Ray quality up to 1080p digital video, high-resolution digital photos, MP3s and recorded television shows from their PCs or storage on their network. They can also enjoy Internet content, such as YouTube, Internet radio, Flickr™, RSS feeds, and videos from popular websites. The Digital Entertainer Elite automatically finds all digital media files on the home network and organizes them into an easily accessible library.

The Digital Entertainer Elite is exceptional in that it works simultaneously with Windows®, Mac® and Linux computers, and Networked Attached Storage (NAS) devices, such as NETGEAR’s award-winning family of ReadyNAS® storage solutions. It supports an unmatched list of file formats, including:

Video formats: AVI, DivX, Xvid WMV, MOV, M4V, MP4, VOB, MPG, MP1, MP2, MP4, ISO, IFO, MKV, TS and M2TS;
Audio formats: MP1, MP2, MP3, WMA, WMA-Pro, AAC, FLAC, AIFF, WAV, LPCM, Dolby AC3 5.1 stereo downmix, Dolby AC3 5.1 passthrough, DTS 5.1 passthrough, Dolby TrueHD Downmix, Dolby+ Passthrough and DTS-HD Master Audio passthrough;
Subtitle formats: SUB, SRT, SMI, SAMI, TXT and DVD Subpicture; and,
Video codecs: MP1, MP2, MP4, Xvid, VC-1/WMV-9, H.264 and OpenDivX.
The Digital Entertainer Elite’s two USB ports also enable instant access to content on a USB flash drive, digital camera, iPod® or other USB storage device. Three of NETGEAR’s exclusive RangeMax™ internal metamaterial antennas and Dual-Band wireless 802.11n give the Digital Entertainer Elite the best wireless performance of any digital media player on the market. More specifically, the Dual-Band wireless enables the Digital Entertainer Elite to pick from not only three 2.4GHz channels, crowded by 802.11g wireless networks in the neighborhood, but up to twenty clearer channels in the 5GHz band. Further, the Sigma Designs 8635 chip ensures the most powerful and flexible audio and video performance.

Multiple NETGEAR Digital Entertainer Elite units can work in concert throughout a house. Using “Follow Me,” consumers can pause a video in one room and resume it in another. While in “Party Mode,” they can synchronize music playback for whole-home listening.

The Digital Entertainer Elite also features NETGEAR’s award-winning Push ‘N’ Connect to seamlessly and securely connect wireless clients based on Wi-Fi Protected Set-up (WPS), eliminating the need to remember or input password keys. Further, NETGEAR’s Digital Entertainer Elite includes environmentally friendly features, such as an energy-efficient power supply and auto-sleep mode.

Backed by a one-year warranty and full 24/7 technical support, the NETGEAR Digital Entertainer Elite (EVA9150) is expected to be available in February through leading retailers, e-commerce sites, and value-added resellers at an MSRP in the U.S. of $399.

“NETGEAR’s product introductions take advantage of two major trends that we are seeing with consumers — digital media and connectivity,” said Kurt Scherf, vice president and principal analyst of Parks Associates, which specializes in research and analysis for digital living technologies. “First, as digital media collections grow, we anticipate that the average broadband household will require a significant amount of additional storage and media centralization capabilities. Second, our Digital Media Evolution study finds high demand for connected CE experiences that can deliver premium Web content to the living room.”

1. Alphabet soup. Mostly PR crap. (You missed the more detailed specs.)
2. I said hardware: CPU/SOC/DSP, etc.
post #21 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike_W View Post

Does "TrueHD Downmix" mean that I won't be able to get a TrueHD bitstream to my TrueHD capable receiver? I'm in the market for a media streamer which can play BD rips (m2ts files are fine), but it must be able to preserve the full TrueHD audio stream so my receiver can decode it.

I agree that if "TrueHD Downmix" mean no TrueHD bitstream then this is a joke. How could a new product with such a feature set not include TrueHD bitstreaming capability?

The footnote under Audio Formats does indicate "passthrough" for AC3 5.1, DTS 5.1 and DTS-HD Master Audio, but as you note, the main table says only Dolby TrueHD Downmix. If this is not a typo, Netgear has dropped the ball a fourth (?) time. If so, I'll just keep the TViX.

Update: The version of the table on the data sheet lists passthrough for True-HD [sic], as well. So maybe that was a typo, after all.
post #22 of 24
I am just starting to research media players and was wondering do these devices pass through video at native format? I would prefer to feed all videos to a very good video processor.
post #23 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by mifronte View Post

I am just starting to research media players and was wondering do these devices pass through video at native format? I would prefer to feed all videos to a very good video processor.

So far, most that I've investigated do not. They seem to assume you're feeding a display directly. You'll have to select a single resolution or let the device do it by EDID. I guess the devs don't want any more work.
post #24 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by lsarver View Post

So far, most that I've investigated do not. They seem to assume you're feeding a display directly. You'll have to select a single resolution or let the device do it by EDID. I guess the devs don't want any more work.

It's a good way to hold down the cost and most have good scalers and de-interlacers anyway.
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