Final Words

Overall, Patriot’s Box Office represents a great first effort by a company making its first steps into the field of consumer electronics devices. The box’s main feature is to play just about any media file type and bring your media collection to your big screen. It can bitstream the core audio codecs or send LPCM over HDMI, and stream even the the highest bitrate media over a wired 100Mb Ethernet connection. This is all very impressive for a device at a sub $100 price point with mail in rebate at the time of publication from Amazon (or $99 from Newegg). With the addition of the hi-def audio playback in a future firmware update, I would seriously consider this device over some of its more expensive competitors. You would be hard pressed to find more features and functionality at this price point. On PC you can pay $100 just for the software needed to play hi-def movies in Media Center, not to mention the other hardware required to enable hi-def audio. Or you can get this box and a large USB drive and be on your way today.

All that being said, know what your own needs are as the Patriot Box Office is far from a perfect all in one solution. This is not quite a consumer level product yet. It requires some registry tweaking for Windows 7 sharing, and a PC to enable bittorrent and internet content support. The internet content support is far from user friendly and is a ways behind products like Boxee in terms of ease of use and overall implementation. If you want to be able to stream full quality Blu-ray movies this device may work at present, assuming you have a robust enough network and keep the Box Office connected via Ethernet. Overall the capabilities of the supported wireless adapter were underwhelming. It limited us to a sub-10Mbps bitrate.

Also in need of improvement is the very basic GUI. Browsing through endless folders is okay, but if you have multiple TB hard drives like I do, each one full of movies, it can be hard to remember where a specific one is located. A media aggregator or search function would be welcomed here, or something to show cover art the way My Movies does within Media Center. The Box Office's shortcut function wasn’t quite up to the task for me.

There are a few things in the works though, like the aforementioned hi-def audio support, as well as a wireless-n USB adapter. (Ed: Note that 11n networking still rarely comes anywhere near the throughput of even 100Mb Ethernet unless you live in an area with few other wireless signals. With four neighbors running 11g networks, I'm lucky to get a stable 54Mb connection; enable 11n and my WiFi network fails within minutes to hours--and I've tried four different routers!) If you’re not afraid to go wired, you’ll be able to stream your home videos, pictures, music and some nice looking 720p transcodes of your hi-def movies today. If you're not afraid to use the internal HDD bay and some USB drives you can play back a sizeable collection of full definition Blu-ray .iso or .mkv files. You can even stream your standard def .vob files from your PC and save your USB drive space for the hi-def movies. You can also add non-copyrighted content over bittorrent to round out your collection. If your main diet of TV and movies comes from internet sources, then perhaps it may be better to look at a different option. While there is support for aggregators like TVersity, it is far from user friendly or seamless in execution. All in all, the Patriot Box Office is hard to beat at its price point, and really leads one to believe that true affordable “All-in-one” solutions are perhaps just a generation or two away.

Testing - Great Over Wired, Iffy Over Wireless
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  • pomatoso - Tuesday, October 5, 2010 - link

    Hello,
    I have a question.
    I have a lot of DVD .iso images.
    Does the Patriot allow to navigating menù without uncoding DVD in ifo/vob files?
    I'm not talking about BR, just traditional DVD.
    Thank you.
    Pom
  • gwolfman - Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - link

    Sry, I mean Alan. :) Forgive me...
  • therealnickdanger - Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - link

    You should really check out the LG BD390 Blu-Ray player. It's discontinued and very hard to find now, but it does nearly everything this box does (even 1080p MKV), but it also plays discs locally, and has built-in Netflix, Pandora, Youtube, Amazon, etc...
  • therealnickdanger - Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - link

    Oh yeah, and it's Wireless-N...
  • Souka - Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - link

    I'd recommend the BriteView (www.brite-view.com) BV-5005HD.

    $99 (same as the patriot) and $24 for the optional 802.11N adapter.

    Wired, wireless, all video/audio formats, EXCELLENT Customer service and a few features this Patriot doesn't have.

    This unit suports bittorrents... just drop a link into a folder and the unit downloads until done....with zero-K upload.

    Search is included, playlists, file/copy, support for two USB drives or a USB drive and wi-fi dongle.

    Online or USB updates for the firmware.

    The customer service is excellent...helped resovled a problem I was haivng (my fault...the unit didn't like drives formatted in 64k clusters.) The customer service help me identify the problem and put it on the "to-fix" list for their engineers.

    My $.02

    :)
  • Penti - Saturday, February 27, 2010 - link

    Actually they should still look at some of those LG/Samsung players.

    The newer LG's should also support MKV/H.264 fine, they state MKV support in the specs. Also has as said Netflix and other services, not only warez. Watching retail material is worth something. So it wouldn't hurt looking at something like BD570. A Popcorn Hour (C-200) which does BD menus, DVD menus and commercial discs cost more. (Which in itself might be better if you like a option of on-board hdd.). It's important to understand though that most companies releasing media players don't really do any engineering themselves, the chip already come with software to support all the various video formats and they might only be able to do minimal changes to the system.

    So for many people a LG BD570 with BD, MKV, network and Netflix support might be a better match. They just miss Amazon VOD there. If we only could have those kind of services here in Sweden... Your lucky in the states. We can't get anything like this in our living rooms, IPTV boxes with a "video store" of 600 old movies isn't exactly moving forward. We got cheap WDTV Live HD's for the warez though :) Any way you have much to choose from. And you should utilize all those online services.
  • RamIt - Wednesday, February 17, 2010 - link

    Says on that site that there is serious lag with any 1080 content using wireless n.
  • Souka - Friday, February 19, 2010 - link

    1080p will always lag on wireless...perhaps if the router is in the same room it'll be ok...but otherwise go wired or usb drive.

    I have wireless on mine, but just use it to copy files to the 1TB drive I have attached to the media player.
  • Kensei - Tuesday, February 16, 2010 - link

    Good review
    thanks Anand

    That would be Alan to you sir.

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