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
Comments Locked

43 Comments

View All Comments

  • slyck - Tuesday, November 22, 2011 - link

    D-LINK.... the only reason I need to never purchase a Boxee Box.
  • Master_Sigma - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Do any of these devices support playback of 10-bit h.264 encodes? I watch alot of anime fansubs and that community has already started moving over to that standard (most NEW fansubs being released nowadays uses 10-bit encoding). My PC can play them fine but I was wondering if there was an off-the-shelf playback device out now that supports them or if I would buy/build a little HTPC, like the ZOTAC Zbox Nano (hopefully with Llano), to do the job.
  • ganeshts - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Please look in the Video Codecs Compatibility section under H.264 ; Both Boxee Box and NTV550 play such videos with a blank screen. The POHD2 plays with blocking artifacts. You have to rely on PC for playback of such streams for another year or so (at the least)
  • Master_Sigma - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    Herp, derp. That's what I get for not reading. Thanks!
  • Nogib - Wednesday, November 23, 2011 - link

    Well if those fansubbers weren't complete elitist dicks we wouldn't have this problem. I've loved being able to play 8-bit h.264 encodes on my WDTV Live Plus as well as my netbook (AMD Ontario acceleration is flawless!). But no, can't run this 10-bit garbage on those. Instead of waiting for proper hardware support, fansubbers assumed we all either have HTPCs or love to sit at a computer desk to watch shows. And once one group started doing it the others all followed suit to make sure their e-penis measured up.

    You can tell I'm only slightly bitter about them changing from 8-bit to 10-bit when there is zero benefit....
  • chrnochime - Tuesday, December 6, 2011 - link

    They do it for free. Don't like it? Go learn Japanese and not have to rely on fansubber to feed your anime needs. Why are you whining about something that you get for free anyway?
  • geniekid - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    As others above me have said, it looks like an HTPC is still the most capable media center. That said, for the prices of these three alternatives, I would be hard pressed to recommend building an HTPC unless there's some functionality you just can't live without or you're a hobbyist like me :)
  • cjs150 - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    And a great summary of the state of the market

    Which, for media streamers, sucks.

    These are not consumer grade devices and the rate of progress is such that I doubt they ever will be.

    On the other hand it is now possible to build or buy a PC that doubles as a proper part of an AV system, that works well and gets better and better. Problem is it takes a bit of work to get Windows 7, XBMC or whatever OS you prefer, to work they way you want.

    Zotac nano AD10 is a fantastic bit of kit (please lose the fan though) and close to perfect given its very small size or if you want something larger, AMD Motherboards are a great start and there are some really nice cases out there (for example love look of Wesena, just not convinced by build quality/design)

    Sadly you get what you pay for
  • thudo - Monday, November 21, 2011 - link

    http://www.pivosgroup.com/

    I own this and its quite fantastic for $99 and getting GREAT reviews. Devs are also the only in the biz to rapidly response to suggestions from the customer. Sure its NOT perfect but it works quite well.

    Maybe it was too new (Oct 03, 2011) to be reviewed by Anandtech.. :|
  • Destiny - Tuesday, November 22, 2011 - link

    This is a roundup of updates to reviews and articles written for these players on AnandTech from almost a year ago. So basically it is an updated review after the Writer gave them ample time for firmware updates to bring them up to par because at launch they were all horrible and not market ready.

    The Pivos Aios uses the same RealTek 1185 chipset as the AC Ryan that is reviewed here. So features and codec support would be the same because the RealTek SDK does not offer any much difference in custom firmware... so basically it would be a same review as the AC Ryan as mentioned here...

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now