Apple TV just plain works

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nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
To say that Apple TV is the world’s best media streaming device could be considered faint praise, the tech equivalent of calling someone the world’s tallest dwarf. After all, most previous versions of these devices, which take music, video, and photos from your PC and play them on your TV and stereo, have been unreliable, hard to use and generally shunned by the buying public.


Apple has managed to rise above that kind of failure with its typical mantra: Keep it simple and make it pretty. Setting up our $299 Apple TV was a breeze, and anyone who’s used an iPod will be instantly familiar with its extravagantly attractive interface.
With a 40GB hard drive for storing content, the sleek device appears to be able to avoid the picture break-ups and glitches that frequently come with streaming video over a wireless network. The basic rule of Apple TV content seems to be: If you can play something in iTunes, you can play it on Apple TV. That puts some limitations on users, but then, that’s the price of simplicity.


*online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/PJ-AJ876A_pjMOS_20070320194930.jpg


A squished Mac mini?
The device looks a bit like the Mac mini after an elephant sat on it. It’s about 7 inches square and a little over an inch tall. It comes with a power cord, a remote about the size of an iPod nano, and that’s it. (Watch PC World’s video on Unboxing the Apple TV to see all included components.)
You’re on your own to purchase other cables you’ll need. For instance, if your TV is HDMI equipped, you’ll have to purchase a HDMI cable (about $20 at the Apple Store). The Apple TV has ports for HDMI connectors, component video, and analog video connections.
Once I connected the box to our PCW test HDTV (you must use a widescreen TV, by the way), the device started looking for a network connection. (Read our buying advice on purchasing a new TV to work with your Apple TV.) I was using Wi-Fi instead of an Ethernet connection, and the Apple TV couldn’t initially find my network. Once I typed in the network’s SSID on the on-screen keyboard, though, I was up and running. The box is very quiet but got significantly hot after about an hour.
You must link the Apple TV to a copy of iTunes on a PC or Mac. (The screen provides you with a passcode you must type into iTunes to make the connection.) Then Apple TV starts copying your content from your iTunes library onto its hard drive in a specific order: first movies, then TV shows, then music, etc. If there was a way to move something to the front of the line, it wasn’t obvious to me. I wanted to shift some of my photos to the device, but kept getting a message saying it was too busy copying my music and I should try again later.


Apple TV remote
Once some of my video and music was on the Apple TV’s hard drive, I started jumping around using the tiny remote. While the remote looks like an iPod, it doesn’t quite act like one. What looks like a click wheel doesn’t operate just by moving your thumb around the circumference of the wheel. Instead you need to click up, down, or sideways to move.
And while it’s admirable that Apple has managed to shave a remote down to essentially six buttons, you’d better be careful of this one. Given how often the big honking remote for my TV gets lost in the folds of the bed covers, this one won’t last a week unless it’s strapped to a boat anchor and a pager.


Video tests
For my video testing, I bought an episode of a new show from FX, The Riches, from iTunes. Picture quality for this drama was okay, but not sensational. Overall, the images seemed a bit dark and washed out, even in colorful outdoor scenes. Apple TV can decode up to a 720p signal and it can output up to 1080i. You may have trouble finding 720p content to display, though. The iTunes Store doesn’t sell it.
Apple TV will also play video that’s not on its hard drive. But for that, you’re dependent on streaming over your wireless network.
Music playback was very reminiscent of the iPod’s interface, with lots of ways to view your collection. Album art for the music I was playing displayed beautifully—so beautifully it made me wish I could navigate my collection by the cover art, like the cover flow view in iTunes. But, alas, that option isn’t available. One other complaint: Once you left the music area, your album stopped playing. I would have liked to be able to continue listening to my choice while I was picking through pictures or watching a slideshow.


My colleague Jonathan Seff at Macworld.com talked to Apple and posted this informative blog with more details about the Apple TV.


Bottom line
As good as Apple TV is, I was still left thinking it could do more. For instance, it’s got an Internet connection and a hard drive, so why do I have to download a video or album to my PC, then have it sync to the Apple TV? Wouldn’t it be easier to cut out the middleman and have Apple TV connect directly to the iTunes Store?


Despite those reservations, though, Apple TV is more than just the tallest dwarf out there. It’s the first media streaming device I could imagine recommending to a non-geek. And I wouldn’t be surprised if it evolves into something even more powerful.



Source: “Review: Apple TV Just Plain Works” — PC World
 
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aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
"Apple TV just plain works"... like every other Apple product - so it is no big surprise at all. :)
 

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
Ten Geek Details on Apple TV

*www.ilounge.com/assets/images/author_icon_6477.jpg By Jeremy Horwitz
Editor-in-Chief, iLounge
Published: Thursday, March 22, 2007
Last Update: Thursday, March 22, 2007


Six months after it was announced, Apple TV is finally here, and of course, our testing is well underway. In order to canvas a variety of different televisions and possible usage models, iLounge’s editors have assembled a robust testing environment for our two Apple TV units: four computers, five HDTVs ranging in size and resolution, one widescreen non-HDTV, and audio receivers with and without optical audio inputs. Prior to our final review, we wanted to share some of our preliminary findings for those who are interested.

1. The 40GB hard disk actually has a formatted capacity of under 33GB. Unlike 40GB iPods, which typically provide a little over 37GB of formatted capacity, Apple TV’s 40GB hard disk has 32.83GB of available space for your media content. What’s taking up an iPod nano worth of space? A start-up video clip is probably responsible for a tiny fraction of it, with the unit’s operating system to blame for a larger portion.

Read more...

____________________

Apple TV hacked to play XviD format videos
Posted Mar 23rd 2007 1:00PM by Brian Liloia

Word has come in that the Apple TV has been cleverly hacked (yes, already) to play XviD format videos, according to users from the Something Awful forums.

To achieve this, the hardware hacker dissected the Apple TV, removing the hard drive and then mounting it on a Mac, where the drive pops up as a native HFS volume. (Notably, this proves that the device indeed runs a custom version of Mac OS X.) The user was then able to install Dropbear, an SSH server application, in combination with the video container Perian, and finally, a custom script was written to allow the Apple TV to properly read an XviD format video.

Read more...
 
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nepcker

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
"Apple TV just plain works"... like every other Apple product - so it is no big surprise at all.

You're 100% right. But PC World is saying this, not MacWorld or other Mac-related publications.
 

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
The right thing will be said by all intelligent and objective people. MacWorld is a very objective publication, BTW. They bash Apple whenever and wherever deserved. :)
 

gxsaurav

You gave been GXified
Apple TV hacked to play XviD format videos
Posted Mar 23rd 2007 1:00PM by Brian Liloia

Word has come in that the Apple TV has been cleverly hacked (yes, already) to play XviD format videos, according to users from the Something Awful forums.

To achieve this, the hardware hacker dissected the Apple TV, removing the hard drive and then mounting it on a Mac, where the drive pops up as a native HFS volume. (Notably, this proves that the device indeed runs a custom version of Mac OS X.) The user was then able to install Dropbear, an SSH server application, in combination with the video container Perian, and finally, a custom script was written to allow the Apple TV to properly read an XviD format video.

Read more...

Yes, it is hacked. i wonder how many normal, non techie users are gonna do this as u said who are the buyers of Apple TV. Is it official? Nope...What does it requirs to hack, an Apple Mac (HFS Partition).

and this hack unfortunately prevents video synchronization since the it uses reference QuickTime files for the videos to properly play.

Gr8 flaw :D

Apple knows how to make money by flashy things it seems. They know there are many loyal fans who will buy anything Apple blindly
 

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
I just posted that as a news item. I did not intend to say that it made the product any better than it already is. Just stop posting useless comments, please!
 
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