Media players are often used to display slideshows of photo albums and other pictures. Most media streamers specify a list of supported codecs, but users are often frustrated with slow photo loading times. In this section, we will present some analysis of the image formats support of the three media streamers.

Image Formats Compatibility Details
A.C.Ryan PlayOn!HD2
Firmware Version v9.5.3.r5440
Format Notes
JPG Tested Upto 40MP ; Takes less than 3s On Average To Decode and Scale to 1920x1080
GIF Supported (Animated GIFs Show First Frame Only)
JPS Not Supported
Miscellaneous Formats MPO Not Supported
DNG Partially Supported (18MP Recognized, 37MP Tagged as Invalid File)
TIFF Supported (Multipage Files Display First Page)
PNG Supported

 

Image Formats Compatibility Details
Netgear NTV550
Firmware Version 3.2.16NA
Format Notes
JPG Tested Upto 40MP ; Takes 8s On Average To Decode and Scale to 1920x1080
GIF Supported
JPS Not Supported
Miscellaneous Formats MPO Not Supported
DNG Not Supported
TIFF Supported (Multipage Files Display First Page)
PNG Supported (>20 MP PNGs failed to display)

 

Image Formats Compatibility Details
D-Link Boxee Box
Firmware Version v1.2.2.20482
Format Notes
JPG Tested Upto 40MP ; Takes 5s On Average To Decode and Scale to 1920x1080
GIF Supported (Animated GIFs Display First Frame)
JPS Not Supported
Miscellaneous Formats MPO Not Supported
DNG Supported
TIFF Supported (Multipage Files Display First Page)
PNG Supported

 

Subtitle Formats Support Streaming Services Support
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  • kolepard - Sunday, November 20, 2011 - link

    Could you mention where you found a Boxee Box for $90? I can't seem to find one for much under $200, and at $90 I'd purchase additional units.

    Kevin
  • gplracer - Sunday, November 20, 2011 - link

    Looks like a media pc is still the best choice.
  • Matt355 - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    I replaced my HTPC after I purchased the Boxee Box. It serves my Needs Perfectly and uses far less electricity, its never gone over 15w and is easier for other family members to use.
  • jbm - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Indeed. No full 10bit-Support=fail for fansubs. What use is a streaming device when you cannot play your current video downloads.
  • ganeshts - Sunday, November 20, 2011 - link

    http://forums.boxee.tv/showthread.php?t=46697

    I am sure we will see more such offers as time goes by.
  • Matt355 - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    I purchased my Boxee Box from Best Buy for $89.99 last week. They price matched Comp USA, who was sold out. No doubt Amazon will be offering it at that price soon also.
    I must say I had not really considered it at $179.99 but if I had Known how good it is I would have Gladly payed full price, It plays everything. even video I had Problems With on the WD Media Player, it applies dvd and album art to music and video files and has channels for streaming live content from the internet and only uses 15W under full load, far better then my HTPC it replaced. I only wish now that I had purchased a second one while it was on sale.
  • mcturkey - Sunday, November 20, 2011 - link

    The biggest issue I have with all of these is the fact that if you truly want to move to a whole-house entertainment system, none of them support streaming CableCard tuners and the DVR functionality that provides. Of the Media Center Extenders that exist with this capability, only the 360 is still supported, and it requires a Windows 7 system with a fair bit of processing power and memory to transcode newer formats on the fly.

    I am about to take the plunge on moving to 360s for streaming from my HTPC for movies/tv shows/cable. If someone would just make a proper media streaming box with the kind of native codec support that these streamers have and make it an MCE, they could really make a killing. But I'm not going to have multiple boxes for this stuff. I'd build HTPCs for all the rooms, but you lose out on proper whole-house DVR capability, and you have to manually assign tuners to each box, making it more of a hassle to use than it should be.
  • Matt355 - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Boxee Box will be selling a dongle that plugs in and allows recording of over air TV, I tried the X Box 360 Solution and gave up. There is no excuse for the 360 not supporting more codecs. That sad, I can point my Boxee Box to any folder on my Windows Home Server or Macbook, So you could record on 1 PC or server and point all your Boxee's to it and stream to any room. All codecs are built in to Boxee Box. Just like WD Media Player. so no transcoding and no re encoding required.
  • CU - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Mythtv can do that. You setup a backend somewhere, and then install frontends at each TV.
  • mcturkey - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    MythTV doesn't work with CableCard tuners, though, which is necessary for making whole-home DVR and TV support work. The only software that has been certified by Cable Card Labs or whatever they're called is Windows Media Center :( It's not just playing back recorded stuff (which requires extenders under WMC due to copy-never flags), but also sharing tuners for live TV. I'd much prefer to use HTPCs for this as I'd never need to worry about codecs and transcoding--not to mention having more control over the interface.

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