Third Place - Tie: eMuzed Maui-II PCI PVR

For the third place runner-up, we have a tie between the eMuzed Maui-II PCI PVR and ATI's eHome Wonder PCI. 

The eMuzed Maui-II PCI PVR is another very common OEM solution and despite the fact that it uses the same LSI DVXPLORE codec as NVIDIA's NVTV, the Philips analog tuner ensures that we don't have the same grainy picture issues that we had with NVIDIA's card. 

The Maui offered fairly competitive picture quality, although slightly noisier than our first and second place offerings.  Once again, we see that the biggest problem ends up being how the tuner handles text.  With fewer artifacts than the fourth place AVerMedia, eMuzed still can't display text perfectly.  It's not exactly text, but rather borders with any sort of movement in them is where you get most of the problems.


Note the dots in the line above the text


The text artifacts are present here as well.


You can get an idea of some of the level of noise here.

Although it's fairly hard to find, the eMuzed Maui-II goes for under $99. 

Fourth Place: AVerMedia M150 Third Place - Tie: ATI eHome Wonder
Comments Locked

61 Comments

View All Comments

  • vailr - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    ATI’s TV Wonder Elite vs. eVGA's NVTV vs. Hauppauge PVR-150MCE
    http://www.techreport.com/reviews/2005q2/tuner-com...
  • Patman2099 - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    I got a Theatrix 550, its got a theatre 550 chip, but its made by sapphire. its listed at about half the price of the ATI card reviewed. Looks exactly the same too.

    I love it, works flawlessly in my HTPC
  • LX - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    Disappointed.

    Lots of fluff, less information.
    Where is the software compatibility tests?
    Where is the comparison of the MPEG-2 encoding?

    Incorrect statements like:
    "For example, the WinTV PVR-250 is identical to the PVR-500, although the latter has two tuners. The PVR-250 is also identical to the PVR-250MCE and the PVR-350."

    Check http://www.hauppauge.com/pages/compare_pvr.html

    Anand is getting sloppy.
  • segagenesis - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    #37 - Yep. Ive seen piles of them at CompUSA. Not readily available... maybe in Neverland. Seeing how it IS readily available I would still count it as fair game :P
  • sonicDivx - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    hey, Cygni. Just checked Newegg, guess what PVR-150 instock

    http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc...

    mind you this is the retail version. Also the 150 has been out for some time. I've even seen it at CompUsa.

    Also check out pcalchemy their prices are good. Also I trust HTPCNews or AVSForums more in terms on product reviews and knowledge on HTPC systems.

  • GoatMonkey - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    Why is there a sudden interest in reviewing these products just 2 weeks after I make my decision and buy something? I searched everywhere I could think of to find any information about these cards. I finally decided on a Hauppauge 500, which I'm happy with btw, but it's still annoying to get a decent review just *after* I buy something.

    Next up you should do a comparison of the software side of this: Beyond TV, Myth TV, Windows MCE, Chris TV, etc. How about a comparison of video capture and editing software also. I guess Anand's reviews mostly software, but maybe some other site will pick up this idea. I'm having a great time with Beyond TV btw.

  • bupkus - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    kjohnson,
    Perhaps you'd be happier in Red China where ideology police WATCH YOU!
  • leaglebob2 - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    How can you do a video review and post captured pictures without stating what the capture parameters were? ((of the video stream--not the stills))

    BTW==what were they?

    And assumng capturing was done "at the best settings" how about a review at the lower resolutions for those of us who record talk shows?

    You did all that work, and then stopped short.

    Thanks///bobbo.
  • Tiorapatea - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    Oops, sorry, triple post.
  • Tiorapatea - Wednesday, April 13, 2005 - link

    "That all changed when Microsoft released Windows XP Media Center Edition. Bringing the first true 10-foot UI to the PC..."

    Whilst I don't generally like to nitpick too much, I do find the lack of attention given on this site to Linux solutions a bit puzzling. Linux is really not that hard to get going, particularly for enthusiasts. And Anandtech does, I believe, aim to cater for the enthusiast.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now