Your Ad Here

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.

Filed under:

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.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • Google+ Circles heading to Google Voice, creepers heading straight to voicemailGoogle+ Circles heading to Google Voice, creepers heading straight to voicemail

    If you've spent some quality time with Google+ , we're sure you've encountered Circles . , the feature that allows you to manipulate who sees your G+ posts and who doesn't. Now, the folk in Mountain View have added the social network management tool to Google Voice . You're able to organize your contacts into groups who can actually ring your Galaxy Nexus and people who are sent… »
  • Korea’s largest ISP plans ‘network fees’ for datahogs like YouTube, internet TVKorea’s largest ISP plans ‘network fees’ for datahogs like YouTube, internet TV

    South Korea's biggest internet provider plans to recoup high traffic network upgrades by charging YouTube and other data-hungry sites. KT will start by blocking access to a few TV apps found Samsung's internet TVs, seeking to strike up a payment deal where data-heavy services might ought to share advertising income or pay fees to the ISP. According an interview with Reuters, KT's vp of… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: