The last few products from Western Digital that I have unboxed have eschewed any unnecessary cables or connectors which usually end up in the unused pile. The WDTV Live Hub was no different. Opening up the package revealed the following contents:

  1. Short and concise setup guide with pictorial guidance
  2. Warranty and tech support information booklet
  3. The main Live Hub unit
  4. 24W power adapter
  5. Remote control with 2 batteries

The main unit was surprisingly easy and lightweight to handle. With a diagonal measurement of around 9.5" and a weight of less than 600g, carrying it around was as easy as handling a tablet. Compared to the earlier WDTV models, the height (or depth, depending upon orientation) has been reduced. The new industrial design blends the unit into any home theater setting. One of the main complaints about earlier WDTV units was the lack of an explicit power button on the unit. The Live Hub take care of this, and we now have a recessed rectangular power button in the lower left corner of the front panel. The Live Hub has 2 USB 2.0 ports, and one of them is made available at the lower right corner of the front panel. In the middle is the WD logo lit up from behind by a powerful white LED indicator. By default, this indicator blinks when the internal hard disk is accessed through the network. At other times (when the unit is powered on), this indicator remains lit. Fortunately, the LED can be completely disabled from one of the internal menus.

The rest of the connectivity options are at the rear end of the unit. From the left, we have the power adapter input, optical SPDIF out, HDMI 1.4 output, USB 2.0 port, GbE connector, composite A/V out and component video out.

The remote is a welcome departure from what was used for the earlier versions of the WDTV. With a numeric / text entry keypad akin to the one found on mobile phones, it becomes easier to enter search queries on YouTube / passwords etc. The build quality of the remote is also much better. The plastic at the back of the remote is gone, and overall, it feels much better to hold and operate.

Let us wrap up this section with a table summarizing the A/V and data connectivity options of the WDTV Live Hub.

Western Digital WDTV Live Hub
Feature WD Config
HDMI Yes (v1.4)
Component Yes
Composite Yes
VGA No
SPDIF Yes (Optical)
Stereo Yes
Optical Disk Drive No
USB Yes (2 x 2.0)
eSATA No
LAN Yes (1000 Mbps - GbE)
Internal HDD Yes (1 TB)
WiFi Supported (Not Included)
Card Reader No

In usual reviews, the teardown section would be up next. However, I am going to save that for the last, so as to take readers through the same path of discovery that I went through in the process of evaluating the unit. The next section will deal with the UI of the WDTV Live Hub.

Introduction User Interface
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  • fingaz - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    Would love to know both of these things too. Also would be eternally grateful for a screenshot or two of a sample movie sheet!
  • virtual_one - Saturday, November 6, 2010 - link

    Hello!
    Does WD Live Hub really have remote control over HTTP or DLNA? I can not find any possibility to drive this media-center via those interfaces..

    Thank you
  • ganeshts - Tuesday, November 9, 2010 - link

    Yes, there is a remote control over HTTP. You can find details in the product user guide available on the WD website.
  • Kitno - Tuesday, November 9, 2010 - link

    Hi,

    In the LiveHub test the7th stream that did not succesfully played was the Panasonic 1080/60p stream.

    Since you test for this, does that mean that there are players out there that play these streams?

    tx

    Kitno
  • ganeshts - Tuesday, November 9, 2010 - link

    It plays back fine on most HTPCs. We will have to dig up our other streamer reviews to see if someone else was able to play it back properly. In any case, I think it is more of firmware issue with WD and the chip itself should be capable of playing it back without problems.
  • Kitno - Wednesday, November 10, 2010 - link

    I have the PCH A200 and it can't deal with the 1080/60p stream.
    I saw the Nixeus Fusion HD and in the specs it says 1080/60p.

    But it seems only available in the US.

    On a HTPC is is indeed no problem.

    I am not sure it is just a firmware issue. 1080/60p is double the information.

    tx

    K
  • Markomaani - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    Hi!

    I was thinking of buying this but now it doesn't sound that good anymore :/
    If I don't get this what would be better choice in this price category?
    I don't need to hard drive so it can be one without a hard drive.
    The wifi would be plus but not all has that either.

    Make
  • obxman69 - Sunday, December 5, 2010 - link

    does this unit have any parental controls to keep kids off of Facebook for example?

    thanks
  • michsxx - Thursday, December 9, 2010 - link

    Hi

    I'm new and I want to just say Hello.

    My nick is: http://www.25mbits.com">michsxx

    I hope to write many of posts in this forum...

    If it's wrong thread to say Hello, please move to correct one.
  • zickk - Thursday, January 13, 2011 - link

    Hello, is there a way of opening the remote control?
    i have some buttons that are not working.

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