Using the System

We've covered the design and features, but the most important aspect of any HTPC is going to be how well it works in actual practice. The system needs to be easy to use, responsive, and capable of handling the desired tasks. There are good and bad news in this area, unfortunately, though the bad may or may not affect you. We'll start with the good.

Using Windows Media Center 2005 as the basis of the system, most people will be right at home with the interface. Getting updated drivers and OS patches is going to be the same as for any other Windows XP system, more or less. Patches for a home theater device? Yeah, that's something of a drawback. If you don't want to hook it up to a network connection for internet access, maybe the patches wouldn't be required, but internet access is required in order to get the most out of the system.

Booting the system is simple, once it's plugged in and connected. We did find an initial delay at the Shuttle logo to be quite long on occasion, and we're not sure what caused this. The first time that we started the device, it "hung" at the Shuttle logo for about three minutes before booting. This continued to occur on hard resets, though soft reboots didn't normally have this delay. Initial configuration of Windows MCE was quick, as much of it was already complete, courtesy of Shuttle, and the only change that we had to make was to our location and area code. (The unit was initially set to Taiwan, which caused some trouble in configuring the TV Guide, but once changed to USA, the zip code worked properly.)

As this was a pre-release unit, we didn't receive documentation for the setup and configuration process. We didn't have too much trouble figuring out what to do, and in the past, Shuttle has always been very good on documentation. Other than a change in location and selecting our TV lineup, everything worked without difficulty.

In normal use, the M1000 also has a fast suspend/resume feature, which you activate by pressing the power button on the remote or keyboard. Powering the system back up after switching to this mode is about as close to instantaneous as possible; it literally takes a few seconds to resume functioning. There's a good reason for the speed of the suspend/resume feature, unfortunately: the system never actually turns off! Idle power draw was 75W, and in suspend mode, the power draw dropped to an "amazing" 73W. You might as well just leave the system on all the time, as we did encounter problems with the display failing to reinitialize after using the suspend mode. Hopefully, Shuttle will create a real suspend/resume mode with a future BIOS or software update.


Click to enlarge

Once Windows is loaded, the MCE button on the keyboard or remote will display the main Media Center menu. Here, you can select what you would like to do, with DVD, TV, Music, Videos, Pictures, and even Radio as options. (Radio reception is poor where I live, so even with the antenna, I couldn't pick up more than a few stations, none of which I enjoy. Besides, FM quality isn't very impressive these days.) DVD playback was easy and painless, and the quality was as good as anything else that we've used. Limitations of PureVideo are still present, but we didn't notice anything distracting with the implementation. As the amount of time available was limited, we chose to focus on the PVR and TV functions for the majority of the testing.

Here is where some complications arise. The design and features look great, but there's one glaring omission: HDTV support. Depending on your location, you may or may not be able to receive terrestrial HDTV broadcasts. I can't, due to geography, but I do have Comcast cable with the HDTV option. If you don't have HDTV, this all becomes meaningless and the unit functions great with time shifting.

In case you weren't aware, there is at present no commercial solution for receiving all HDTV content over cable (or satellite) into your PC. You can get the local HD channels, as they are required to be unencrypted, but premium HD channels are not an option. There are a couple HDTV cards that support QAM decoding, which will allow reception of the unencrypted channels, specifically the MyHD MDP-130 and the Fusion HDTV 5. Either card should work with cable as well as OTA (Over the Air) broadcasts, though I can't comment on satellite support.

As any HDTV owner will tell you, actual widescreen HDTV broadcasts are far superior to standard television, and the inability to record or even watch such programming through the M1000 limits its usefulness for high-end users. For most people with cable or satellite HDTV reception, you'd be better off paying a monthly subscription for a device that allows the recording and viewing of HD content. Again, this isn't really an omission on Shuttle's part, but so much as a lack of available technology. Until something like the cablecard standard is finalized and available, HD premium content will only be available when you use the cable or satellite box provided by the content provider. That's a major limitation, and there really isn't a solution right now.

Sadly, HDTV and HTPC are at present not the best fit, and the blame lies largely with the content providers. The content providers are lagging behind in other areas as well. HDTV looks great, that much is a given. However, I get something like 12 HDTV channels through Comcast, and of those, only 5 are really interesting to most people. Even worse, however, is that of the 5 channels that I might consider "worth watching", only about 25 to 33% of the programming is actual true HD content. ESPN HD, Fox HD, HBO HD, etc. regularly show standard 480i content resampled for HD. It might be broadcasting in 640x480 at 60 FPS, but it doesn't really look any better than 640x480i.

If HDTV isn't important to you - and there really aren't that many HD channels available right now, so this is entirely possible - then the SD capabilities become the focus. Here, the M1000 does very well. Flipping back and forth between the output of a Comcast box and the M1000, it was difficult to discern any loss in quality. The Comcast image did appear slightly better, but not so much that it was distracting. Time shifting, pause, and playback of live TV are all available at the touch of a button on the remote, and it works flawlessly. The dual TV tuners also allow for the recording or watching of up to two channels simultaneously - or you could record two shows and watch a DVD or other pre-recorded video (or live TV directly through the TV).


Click to enlarge

Did I say "flawlessly" about the PVR functions? Well, not quite. I tried recording a couple of college football games on Saturday, while watching an HD broadcast through my Comcast box. Everything worked as planned. I selected the games to record and came back later to view them. All the games ended up lasting longer than scheduled, unfortunately, and Windows MCE didn't know any better. The Notre Dame vs. USC game was cut off with ND leading 24-21 and 7:33 remaining. Oops. I'm not sure if any other PVR/DVR devices like TiVo would have done better, but missing the ending of a sporting event isn't the desired result. It would be nice to see Microsoft update MCE in some way to better handle rescheduled programs or overtime on sporting events, but you can always record the show following any sporting event just to be safe.

There was another glitch as well. One of the tuner cards seemed to get a bit of interference, resulting in a white flicker in the top inch or two of the screen every few seconds. This may have been due to splitting the cable signal four ways (two tuners, Comcast box, and cable modem), but it's still annoying. This glitch only appeared on one of the three recordings, but it was one of two overlapping shows, so most likely the second card had some signal quality problems.


Click to enlarge

Being Windows MCE based, the resulting videos are also in a proprietary MS codec, so you can't just play them in any media player. WMP10 and The Core MP both worked, but watching the videos on a different PC also resulted in periodic lag (even though the 1 to 2 MB/s transfer rate wasn't causing any problem for the 100 Mbit network). The videos also suffered from severe interlacing artifacts on some - but not all - PCs. (This appears to be a codec problem.) Attempts to capture screenshots of the faulty playback were unsuccessful, and photographs of a display are a poor representation of real use as well.


Click to enlarge

You can see above the output of the M1000 to the TV, with the black bars on the side being unused screen space. The HDTV output was configured to 1176x664 in order to avoid overscan. As mentioned earlier, the NVIDIA graphics card is a great choice for HDTV support, as the ability to customize the resolution comes in handy on many displays. At a standard 720p resolution, the start menu and many other parts of the display are hidden due to overscan. While it is technically the fault of the Toshiba 46H84, it is a common enough problem that it warrants mention. ATI does have a similar option, but it isn't as robust as NVIDIA's utility right now.

Scaling the signal from the standard 480i to the higher resolution does cause blurriness, but there's not much that can be done to make 480i look really great. In the football "action" shot above, you can see that NVIDIA's PureVideo is managing to get a decent quality image with no clear interlacing artifacts. While the quality may be decent, however, it is no match at all for the 480p feed of the same game.

Construction and Design Performance Benchmarks
Comments Locked

35 Comments

View All Comments

  • jamawass - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    quote:

    Did I say "flawlessly" about the PVR functions? Well, not quite. I tried recording a couple of college football games on Saturday, while watching an HD broadcast through my Comcast box. Everything worked as planned. I selected the games to record and came back later to view them. All the games ended up lasting longer than scheduled, unfortunately, and Windows MCE didn't know any better. The Notre Dame vs. USC game was cut off with ND leading 24-21 and 7:33 remaining.

    In all fairness this is not limited to the Shuttle/ Win XP MCE. I had the same problem with the PVR cable box from TimeWarner Cable. The game lasted about 4 hrs and the tivo only recorded 3 1/2 hrs that was on the schedule so I missed the "fake spike" play too as I couldn't watch the game live. Poor software programming as TitanTV doesn't do that with my winfast pvr card on my pc.
  • dr_wily - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    "watts measured at outlet"

    how is that accomplished?
  • JarredWalton - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    "Kill A Watt" device plugged into the outlet, with the M1000 plugged into that. The Kill A Watt is what most of us use for power testing. You can get them online for about $40 I think.
  • agent2099 - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    I'm suprised Shuttle did not use HDTV Tuners. That would make a device like this actually make sense.


    I was sure they would use something like 2 AVERTVHD MCE A180 Tuners instead of 2 analogue tuners.
  • glennpratt - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    What they should do is make one for Turion with the nVidia 6150 and use three PCI ports. One dual tuner NVTV and two HD AverMedia M180's
  • BigLan - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    MCE reuires that there is at least 1 SDTV tuner before you can adda HDTV tuner (don't ask me why though!.) At least with the newly-announced Fusion USB HDTV tuner you could add to this box.
  • agent2099 - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    In that case it should use one SD tuner and one HD Tuner.
  • Kishkumen - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    Having another black box sitting on top of a DVD player, sitting on top of your receiver, sitting on top of xyz single function device seems so old fashioned to me. I don't see an appliance such as this really having a place in my future home theater. The way I see it, the backend needs to be little more than a massive storage server placed out of sight like a basement with a terminal interface that contains tuners for all your inputs, over the air, cable, satellite, etc. The heavy lifting would be done by the remote frontends. The computers driving the frontends should not be seen as well and they should be capable of handling HDTV resoluations and all audio duties. I can see this being feasible with Apple's Mac Minis at some point very soon. Velcro the suckers to the back of a flat panel and you've got a very clean looking setup. In such a setup, you would have a Mac Mini driving your largest flat panel for your Home Theater, one in your kitchen, one in your bedroom and so on, each sharing the large repository of resources in your basement. I've achieved this to a certain degree using MythTV. I have a regular Shuttle XPC doing the gruntwork for my home theater, an actual Mac Mini driving a display in my kitchen (although it's underpowered for HDTV), an older Athlon XP in my bedroom and my study computer doubling as a remote frontend as well. Not perfect, but I'll get there. Oh yeah, and Windoze zombies need not apply.
  • glennpratt - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    You do realize this plays DVD's so you don't need a DVD player? Ever seen MCE Extenders? Everything you discuss is possible with extenders (and there cheaper then a Mac mini). Put a nice MCE box in the basement, extenders on the displays. HD extenders aren't out yet, but the Xbox 360 is coming in Nov. 22 and includes an HD capable MCE Extender (and it's cheaper then a Mac Mini in both forms).

    This thing does support HDTV, it just doesn't officially support HDTV from cable providers (which noone does). In fact it supports two SD tuners and two HD tuners for a total of 4 tuners.

    It WILL however, change channels and record SD and HDTV from the firewire out on many popular cable and DirecTV boxes with firewire using a free plugin.

    Windoze... what's that?
  • JarredWalton - Monday, October 17, 2005 - link

    Technically, MCE supports HDTV tuners, but the M1000 as shipped only has two PCI slots and they're filled with SD tuners already.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now