The HP Media Center PC 873n

Although this review focused mainly on MCE, we would like to provide a quick look at the HP Media Center PC that we used for our tests.

The HP Media Center PC 873n comes with a 2.53GHz Pentium 4 on an 845G motherboard made by FIC with 512MB of DDR266 SDRAM. You'll also find a SB Audigy and 56K modem on the inside of the PC, along with onboard Ethernet. This particular configuration came with a DVD writer and a regular CD drive as well. The power button has a blue LED behind it that glows quite brightly, which can be a problem in a very dark room if you don't want to attract a ton of attention to the PC.

HP also bundles the system with a universal memory reader accessible from the front of the PC; the reader will accept SmartMedia, MMC/SD, Memory Stick and CompactFlash cards. It's too bad that MCE won't recognize a memory card with pictures on it and let you browse it in the Media Center interface. HP completes the package by bundling a set of Klipsch Promedia 2.1s with the machine.

There's nothing too special about the design or assembly of the PC, other than the fact that it is very quiet thanks to a large heatsink on the CPU and a large, slow spinning fan.

The system comes with a GeForce4 MX by default, which unfortunately means that the best video output you can get is via a S-Video cable; no component out here, not without upgrading the system yourself to an All-in-Wonder Radeon 8500/9700.

In order to prevent users from connecting anything to the onboard VGA connector (powered by the 845G graphics), HP covered up the port as you can see above.

Interestingly enough, HP doesn't ship the 873n with any sort of wireless keyboard or mouse. They are fully expecting you to work with the remote for anything media related and deal with a wired PS/2 keyboard and mouse for everything else.

The keyboard does have some useful controls on it, too bad it has a very short cable.

All the pretty pictures Final Words
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  • GreyMack - Tuesday, January 20, 2004 - link

    Excellent review, but I don't think it was harsh enough.
  • baboon68 - Wednesday, October 29, 2003 - link

    Well, if nothing this article shows that MCE is NOT capable of settling comfortably the living room for a variety of reasons. MCE does not do away with the windows menu and the instability/driver issues. The HP box is certainly worse than a custom assembled Shuttle SSF or Ahanix box. The latest ATI Multimedia Center software in conjuntion with an RF (not IR) control is also quite close to the MCE experience - I have one and it works quite well on a cheaper Athlon 2K+. ALso free/cheap updates to the ATI software can only make it better - never mind the HDTV capability using the 40$ adapter. And last bat not least, if I look at the additional capabilities of Freevo or MythTV (Weather, RSS feeds, MAME, etc.). Also missing - at least from the article - is a discussion of: support for people outside of the US, possible DVB-S card support, external IR Transmitter support (to control a Sat receiver box), and more.
    I think the MCE is at best another flawed attempt by Microsoft to market beta quality software at a loss or at the expense of hardware integrators to gain market share in the Tivo market.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, October 20, 2003 - link

    After reading this article I'm not clear why the author thinks MCE is preferable to alternatives like ATI All-in-Wonder, which sounds like does the same things and is more flexible what computers it will work with. In particular, the author says the MCE interface is significantly better than ATI but doesn't adequately explain why. Also, the ATI remote will work without line-of-site required and can control the computer mouse, which MCE can't. Seems like ATI is a better deal.
  • Anonymous User - Wednesday, September 10, 2003 - link

    Do the same thing for free
    www.mythtv.org
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 29, 2003 - link

    This is a great review. Will a Dual processor xeon machine combat the stuttering? i presume its compatible as its xp pro based.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 11, 2003 - link

    Thank you, AnandTech! Your review is extremely helpful, as it debunked some of the myths of Windows Media Center. Plus, it gave me inside look of the machine I'm looking to buy.

    Still, I have one question: About the "skip" function, when you skip 30 seconds ahead, does the machine record the commercials also or does it only record the areas not skipped? If it doesn't, is there some kind of software that can erase the commercials?
  • Anonymous User - Wednesday, July 30, 2003 - link

    yeah basically
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, July 17, 2003 - link

    So, the the final word is the MCE is just Xp pro plus PVR right.. ???
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, July 12, 2003 - link

    This is a great review. It explains every aspect of this Media Center PC in great detail. I have looked all over the internet to find a review like this and this is the only one I could find. Thanks alot. This will make me even more jealous to buy it since I am planning to purchase one.

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