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LightningCrash
Smile like Bob, order your free LC today
Joined: 03 Apr 2003
Posts: 5020
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Nikola wrote: Why wouldn't you just buy a PS3 and have the networked media support, better blu-ray playback support than a $100 player and the obvious plus of having a PS3.
Things may have changed, but in the past you would end up having to run TVersity or Orb or something to feed the PS3 transcoded video.
I have a Sony BDP-S570 and the DLNA video format support sucks! No DivX, no XviD, pretty much no AVI at all. As long as it's in DVD, VCD, or SVCD, you're good. APEX $50 crap from 2002 could play DivX :rolleyes:
From what I understand the PS3 has a little bit better support, but still nothing great.
The LG BD570 is a much better player in almost every way.
In fact pretty much all of the Samsung and LG units are great. Sony has just lost their frickin mind.
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Sat Feb 05, 2011 11:02 pm
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Sevnn
Candy Cane King
Joined: 22 Mar 2003
Posts: 7711
Location: Kyrat
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LightningCrash wrote: With the way Sony has treated George Hotz...
Just read up about this on wikipedia and it looks like an interesting bit of drama. The reversal of OtherOS was something I wasn't aware of and is a pretty shitty move by Sony. I own a PS3 and have never had the desire to run OO but it would be fun to do and was one of the factors I considered when buying the device. I was impressed by the company's initiative to allow customers to use the device in whatever way they intended.
As for the PS3 as a media device, it plays some video formats without issue but gives up on mkv containers so most HD content is difficult to handle. There are transcoding packages out there and I played with TVersity for a little while but I don't like that approach. I've done a bunch of codec installs and other hacks to try and get Windows Media Center to stream HD content to the PS3 but didn't have much luck and I hate jacking up my desktop to make it work.
My brother-in-law has owned most of the major network media player devices (including the WD) and has settled on the Boxee. He speaks very highly of it and says it has been the easiest to use, best performing, and most flexible of all the devices he's tried. I've set up the software on my wife's laptop for playing HD content to the TV and I've been very impressed with it. I fully intend to buy a retail Boxee in the very near future. If you aren't familiar with it, its the XBMC project gone retail. You can download their software for Windows/Mac/Linux or buy their hardware. They have an iPhone remote that works pretty well and it has played ANYTHING I throw at it. XVID, MKV, MP4, VOB, ISO, DVD folders, and the list goes on. Check it out at www.boxee.tv.
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Sun Feb 06, 2011 1:18 pm
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