Reg Hardware

Comments on: Sling Media SlingBox networkable TV tuner

Streaming as what 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 12:02 GMT

And the likelihood that it will be streaming sensibly (say MPEG2 on request) is how low?

Pity - it would be nice to have this talk to my Hauppage MVP

Dixons? 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 13:16 GMT

I was all ready to get my credit card out and buy one until I read

> Sling Media's shipping in the UK exclusively through Dixons Store Group

What no MacOSX Or Linux? 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 13:19 GMT

What no MacOSX Or Linux players?

That excludes almost every other PC in the house. I'll have to set up an old laptop with windows just to receive the signal? Booo.

Quality? 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 15:36 GMT

A nice review of the functionality and design but how well does it work:

What's the picture quality like - how degraded is it from broadcast by the additional encode/decode?

Assuming your uplink tops out at 256k a lot of compression is likely - does it look good on a 15" screen? 20" screen? bigger?

How stable is it - my experience of low bitrates on a webcam is pretty poor with the picture freezing regularly - does this manage to maintain a connection reliably to avoid interupting playback?

Wifi+SlingBox = Bad 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 15:41 GMT

At 54Mbps for wireless-G, I don't think that the SlingBox would have enough sufficient bandwidth to do the job. This would be one of the primary reasons for using a wired connection. I'm sure to be able to broadcast over broadband there is some level of downgrading the level of detail; but in order to get the best picture on any computer in the house, you need more than wireless can offer. I've tried streaming mpeg-2 video from my PVR to my wireless laptop with abismal results--on Standard TV no less, forget about HD.

Works well, remote control is brilliant 

Posted Friday 29th September 2006 16:40 GMT

As a true gadget geek who also travels a lot, I bought one of these almost as soon as it came out.

I found it easy to set up, and the quality is good, much better than I was expecting. There is a noticeable lag, even on a LAN, of about 2 seconds but that's not really a problem. I have a 100MBit wired network, 11MBit WLAN and 256kBit ADSL uplink to the outside world. Quality is full screen on my laptop on wired, full screen with occasional stutters on wireless and quarter screen when travelling.

It does a surprisingly good job of adjusting for flunctuating network conditions, although you will get dropouts if you're watching from a bad connection (the East Coast GNER service for instance).

There really isn't any way of describing the freedom and ease of use its remote control options give you - this is what sets it apart from just streaming video across the net. It's well worth it for that alone.

I wouldn't try to watch anything with subtitles across a slow connection though - action movies and cartoons are definitely its compression algorthms strong points.

I haven't yet tried wiring it up to, say, a baby monitor system yet, but that should be a neat thing which is possible.

What I'd like is a way of getting it to throttle the amount of data transferred depending on the time of day - not sure it can go to that level of management yet though.

laggy? yes, but 

Posted Monday 2nd October 2006 08:37 GMT

> The downside is that controlling another device is laggy,

You can easily switch on the "control mode" where picture quality is reduced but the latency is also reduced. This is great for when you want to do things like control a Sky+ box planner.

PS I bought my SlingBox based upon this review

Same kinda thing, except free 

Posted Wednesday 4th October 2006 15:51 GMT

If you already have a Media Center PC with a TV tuner card, pretty much the same features are available free using Orb. http://www.orb.com

I bought a Hauppage TV Tuner card, with an Infrared Transceiver (25 quid on ebay) which can change the channel of your set top box remotely, or tune using the app provided direct from an regular TV arial. The stream is MPEG 2 I think, and can be watched on any PC with one of the more recent versions of Media Player, and controlled fully using the Orb web site. Unfortunatley work still use NT4, so my only option for sagging off is via my PDA on works (or the office above's unsecured) wireless LAN.

All of this being free is still a little too good to be true, so no idea how long it will remain FOC, fill your boots.

overheating 

Posted Sunday 8th October 2006 11:04 GMT

The initial review says 'more later' about overheating of the Slingbox.

Is there therefore a safety issue if you need to leave it on or on standby (which?)at home (whihc may be empty), as well as presumably the digital box and router/modem?

Jill