Nor-Tech Voyageur Viiv Home Theater System
For customers with significant amounts of stored digital content, integrators should look at the Voyageur Viiv Home Theater System ($2,999) from Northern Computer Technologies of Burnsville, Minn. The product includes a 1.81-Tbyte RAID array, the largest storage amount of any system in this review. Assuming that an hour of 1,280x720p-resolution HD video occupies 11 Gbytes of space, the array can store 168 hours of recorded video or 926 hours of standard video. The array is RAID 0 and lacks the fault tolerance of RAID 5 arrays. Integrators should therefore offer clients a separate backup solution.
Voyageur includes one TV tuner; additional tuners are $59 each. The PC is housed in a large black case from Bach Media Lab and includes blue lighting on the front for extra style. The Nor-Tech, ZLife and Digital Home PC units reviewed all use large cases, an impediment to acceptance in the home.
The Nor-Tech PC has the best collection of front connections in this review, including a 15-in-1 media card reader, three USB 2.0 connections, one FireWire connection and inputs for computer-style microphones and headphones. The rear includes four USB 2.0 ports as well as optical, radio, PS/2 and Ethernet connections. The case is secured by three thumbscrews and removes quickly. The inside is spacious.
Nor-Tech needs to improve the quality of its shipping materials. The front door on the Voyageur that hides the connections broke during shipment; another unit from Nor-Tech reviewed last year was also damaged during delivery and was DOA.
The Viiv edition includes the official Media Center remote control, which works well but requires an external receiver. This is surprising, because Media Center PCs include a built-in internal receiver for the official Microsoft Remote Keyboard for Media Center Edition but not for the official Media Center remote control. The Nor-Tech unit also ships with the Logitech Cordless Desktop MX3000 wireless keyboard and optical mouse. The keyboard includes many useful features, such as a media playback buttons, volume control wheel and buttons that automatically launch particular applications. The receiver for the keyboard and mouse is slim and black and blends into the unit.
The system includes a 16X DVD-RW drive, a dual-core 2.8GHhz Pentium D 820 processor, 512 Mbytes of DDR2 memory, a 500-Gbyte 7,200-rpm SATA hard drive and an Intel D945G motherboard.
ZLife M4 Digital Entertainment PC
For customers hooked on TV, integrators should consider the M4 Digital Entertainment PC from ZLife, Tempe, Ariz., which was spun off from system builder Elite PC last year. The M4 Digital Entertainment PC ($2,999) boasts two AverMedia high- definition tuners and an AverMedia dual analog tuner, so users can watch and/or record up to four channels simultaneously, more than on any other Media Center PC reviewed here. But the ability to watch and record lots of television is fruitless without a way to store the content. Thankfully, the unit includes a nearly 1-Tbyte storage array running on RAID 5, which offers speed and fault tolerance to protect data. The array can store around 55 hours of HD video or 207 hours of standard video. But with four tuners feeding it, the array can fill up quickly so integrators should think about adding a networked storage device.
The M4 is housed in an LC16M computer case from Silverstone. The LC16M is designed for multimedia PCs, and the display, playback control buttons and volume knob on the front of the case help it to fit into the home. The volume knob is useful but feels flimsy.
The screen uses Ahanix's iMon software to display system data, CD or DVD stats, and information downloaded from the Internet. Behind a door on the front of the case is a 7-in-1 card reader and an archaic floppy-disk drive. There are no USB or FireWire ports on the front, which is a serious omission because it is difficult to access the PC's rear ports, especially if the unit is racked. The rear of the case includes four USB 2.0 ports, one FireWire connection plus Ethernet, VGA, DVI, S-Video and Composite In and Out, PS/2 and optical out. The cover is secured by a few screws and is simple to remove. Maneuvering inside the case is easy.
The M4 includes a dual-core 3.2GHz Intel D 940 processor, an Intel 945G motherboard, 1 Gbyte of DDR2 RAM, a 150-Gbyte 10,000-rpm hard drive and a DVD-RW drive. The unit can be controlled by the included Media Center remote control and wireless Microsoft Remote Keyboard for Media Center Edition, which Digital Connect engineers reviewed previously and found to be overall well designed but had several flaws. An external receiver is included for the remote control.
Digital Home PC FUSION Model 2
Digital Home PC, a spin-off of system builder CDI, Wichita, Kan., offers the Fusion Model 2 for $2,200. The PC is housed in a silver version of the large Silverstone case. It lacks a memory-card reader, which is indispensable for any multimedia PC. Instead it includes four USB 2.0 ports, a FireWire port and connections for computer-style headphones and microphone. The rear of the PC includes four USB 2.0 ports, one FireWire connection plus Ethernet, radio, VGA, DVI, PS/2 and optical out. The bottom is illuminated via changing neon lights, an additional $199.
Fusion includes two television tuners and the Media Center keyboard. It comes with an iMon remote control from Ahanix, which is a poor choice. The remote control is a general multimedia PC remote control and was not designed for Media Center PCs, so it has a painfully slow response time and often causes the screen to flicker when a TV control button is pressed. During testing, the PC frequently emitted a loud tapping sound loud enough to be easily noticed over audio being played.
The Fusion includes an Intel 945G chipset motherboard, a dual-core 2.8GHz Pentium D 820 processor, a 250-Gbyte SATA hard drive, 1 Gbyte of DDR2533 RAM, a 16X DVD-RW drive, and an ION media backup/recovery package.
