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by Terry McGil with Miami Broadband and Remote Services, Inc
It's a little strange that the Boxee Box by D-Link feels like a late entrant in this year's crowded smart TV market -- the core Boxee software
has been around forever, and the Box itself was announced
way back in January at CES. But a platform switch
from NVIDIA's Tegra 2 chip to Intel's Atom-based CE4100 platform cost Boxee and D-Link valuable time, while the Boxee software went through a dramatic UI transformation from the
beta to 1.0. What's more, Boxee's gone from being an upstart rock'n'roll rebel to a legit market player, with a Netflix deal
on the books and -- wonder of wonders -- an agreement to bring Hulu Plus to the Boxee Box sometime next year.
That's a lot of changes, and, quite frankly, a lot of hype
-- Boxee's dedicated fans are expecting the small company and its asymmetrical Box to show up no less than Apple and Google. So have
Boxee CEO Avner Ronen and company pulled it off? Is the Boxee Box the ultimate connected TV device? Or has a punk rock media
revolution turned into just another polite New Wave streamer? Read on for the full Engadget review to find out!
Hardware
Unlike most other connected TV devices,
the Boxee Box is designed to stand out -- it's a cube sliced sharply across the bottom, with a glossy fingerprint-magnet front
and a glowing green logo, lending it a decidedly futuristic appearance. The asymmetrical shape makes sit larger than it really
is -- although it's not much bigger in footprint than an Apple TV, it can't be stacked or hidden away too easily.
The bottom is made of a bright green rubber, while the back houses Ethernet, HDMI, optical and composite audio-out jacks,
two USB ports and the power socket, all slanted downwards at the odd angle dictated by the case. It's a polarizing design
-- we have a lot of room in our A/V rack, so we rather like it, but if you're tight for space you might have different feelings.
We will say that it's much more attractive than any of the Google TV devices we've seen; the Logitech Revue looks like a generic piece of Tupperware in comparison.
Internally, the Boxee Box uses an Intel CE4110 chip, which is "nearly identical" to the CE4150 found in Google TV devices, 1GB of flash memory, and 1GB of RAM. Although
there are some differences between Boxee's board and Google TV -- we're told the WiFi chip is different, for example -- overall
the Boxee Box makes the Revue and Sony's Internet TV Blu-ray player look comically oversized for the platform they contain.
Of course, the most important part of the Boxee Box experience isn't the box -- it's the
remote! We fell in love with Boxee's two-faced QWERTY remote the first time we saw it at CES, and those feelings have mostly survived the honeymoon period. The front side holds a four-way D-pad with
select button, a play / pause buttons, and a menu button, while the rear has a very nice small QWERTY keyboard for easy searches.
It's a brilliant design that prompts appreciation from everyone who comes across it -- it's easily the best home theater keyboard
we've ever come across. You're not going to sit around writing email with it, but it's more than passable for searching and
the occasional password entry.
But it's not all roses -- in day-to-day use it's far too easy to grab the remote
the wrong way round without noticing, since the front face is almost completely symmetrical save for the raised Boxee logo,
and we also always seemed to flip over to the QWERTY side upside-down for some reason. Boxee went with an RF remote system
over IR for cost reasons, and that means the Boxee Box can't be controlled by universal remotes out of the box -- although
you can plug in a Media Center remote if you wish.
We also question the value of a keyboard
without a way to control the mouse, especially since Boxee offers a full Webkit browser with Flash. Using the D-Pad to move
a mouse arrow around has always sucked, and it continues to suck on the Boxee Box. We'd have loved to see the D-Pad serve
double duty as a trackpad -- it's an addition that would turn a pretty good remote into a great one. Of course, you can use
the Boxee iPhone app, but that's not a solution for everyone, and mouse control is still an issue, since the gesture controls
don't map as a trackpad.
Setup
Setting up the Boxee Box is pretty straightforward --
it took us about 10 minutes to get it out of the box, plugged in, and downloading a software update over WiFi. The biggest
improvement over similar smart TV setup procedures was the remote, which enabled us to type in account info and passwords
quickly, while the biggest annoyance was a screen-sizing task that echoes the one found during Google TV setup. We understand
that every TV handles overscan differently, but adjusting for it is a super-wonky step that only a few people care about --
there's got to be a better automatic setting that can be used here.
We did run into two repeated and supremely
annoying issues, however: first, our Boxee Box suffered from extremely slow throughput speeds on WiFi and couldn't seem to
hold a connection for very long, and when it dropped it required a restart. We've never had any problems with our router and
we're sitting on a 50Mbps FiOS connection, so slow networks speeds are a sad surprise. Making matters worse, our Pioneer Elite
receiver and Kuro TV had HDMI handshake issues with the Boxee Box on every restart, flashing static on the screen until we
switched inputs back and forth a few times to get a good handshake.
We've seen a few people in the Boxee forums
complain about WiFi issues, and Boxee tells us a new driver is coming soon, so there's hope on that front, but we don't know
what's going on with HDMI -- it could just be a problem with our setup. In any event, it's something to keep an eye on over
the coming weeks.
In addition to installing the hardware and configuring the display and network, you also need
to register for a Boxee account to use the Box. The Boxee network lets you share, post, and queue videos, as well as displaying
friend activity. You can also link it to Facebook, Twitter and other services to pull video content that your contacts post
-- just make sure to turn off the automatic sharing option to avoid spamming your Boxee activity all over everything. Your
friends will thank you for it.
Software and media
playback
Boxee's
dramatically changed its interface
from the beta that was released
at CES 2010 in January. We actually really liked the old UI -- it was engaging and different, and really highlighted the social
aspect of using Boxee. The new UI is... well, it's sort of ugly. It's like a cross between an Apple TV and Roku, all stirred
up with some cutesy graphics, and while it may be simpler and easier to get familiar with, it's also much less functional
in many ways, particularly when it comes to accessing local media -- getting to your stuff now requires many more clicks,
and some of the more robust filtering options have disappeared. We're not the only ones to dislike this change; there's an eight-page petition on Boxee's forums asking for a reversion to 0.9. We
doubt Boxee will do anything that drastic, but we are hoping some of the old UI makes its way back into the 1.0 interface
over time.
But let's engage this interface on its own terms instead of looking at the past, shall we? At its core,
Boxee is all about delivering content from multiple internet sources to you in a seamless and unified way, and you've got
plenty of options in that regard. On the bottom half of the main screen you've got a selection of featured apps and videos
-- we're quite fond of the Vevo music video app, which is really well done -- and then you've got what essentially amounts
to a source list up top.
On the far left, you can select the Friends tab, which pulls in all the video your friends
from various services have shared -- if you've got Boxee hooked into Facebook, for example, all the videos your friends post
will show up automatically. Boxee tells us this feed is refreshed every time you open the tab, but for us it seemed like it
was taking far longer -- we'd like a simple refresh button. Right now the Box supports Facebook, Twitter and Google Buzz,
and it appears there's more to come -- Netflix seems like a no-brainer, and the Boxee website lets you add yet more. Then
you've got Watch Later, which is a queue of things you've chosen to watch later, Shows and Movies tabs that offer galleries
of available content, and finally Apps and Files. We'll get to those last two in a moment, but let's just focus on Friends,
Shows, and Movies for a second.
Boxee offers a number of ways to go get content online -- in addition to a partnership
with Vudu and upcoming deals with Netflix and Hulu Plus, there's also the web itself. Selecting content from Friends, Shows
or Movies pops up a dialog box displaying all the potential sources available -- services, sites, even local media if applicable
-- and selecting one means a number of different things might happen. You might get a buffering screen while Boxee pulls down
a raw file, as with the Engadget Show.
You might get a full-screen Flash player with controls mapped to the Boxee
UI and remote from a handful of sites the software understands, as with YouTube. You might open an app and play a video from
within that experience. Or you might just get dumped on to a webpage with a tiny Flash player and left to your own devices
to make it all work. In all but the last case, Boxee does a commendable job presenting its own UI and offering a unified experience,
but it's not perfectly seamless, and the tiny little differences between playback modes seem destined to confuse non-geek
users.
Apps are a bit of a different story -- the Boxee Box comes preloaded with a large variety
of different apps, and, ah, several more can be unlocked by switching off the adult content filter in settings. (Given Boxee's
rebellious history, we can't help but wonder if D-Link knows that switch is there, actually.) Boxee apps aren't really "apps"
in the interactive sense -- they're more like custom content interfaces for various web sites, and they don't really try to
be much more.
As we said above, we're quite fond of the Vevo app, and other apps like Showtime Podcasts, The Big
Picture, Auto-Tune The News and TED all provided direct access to their respective content with no added fuss. Whether or
not you think having page after page of web video apps on your TV is valuable is up to you, but to us it feels like having
an endless amount of Blu-ray extras with no actual movie to watch. That's not to say there isn't great long-form content out
there -- we recommend a little something called The Engadget Show -- but out of the gate Boxee's app content is very "web
video on your TV," not "TV delivered by the web."
And finally there's local media playback, which
is where the Boxee Box thoroughly outclasses its competitors. Avner Ronen said at the launch event that the Box can play back
any video format with a three-letter file extension, and we were able to play back virtually every file we threw at it, whether
over an SMB network share or loaded up on an SD card. Straight from a camera, pulled off the internet in an unknown format,
whatever -- it played. The only issue we ran into was that when faced with either a slow network connection or SD card, hitting
play would result in a wait cursor that kicked us back out to the file list, and we'd have to hit play a second time. (Since
we were struggling with WiFi to begin with, we ran into this problem quite a bit.) We also agree with Boxee's many fans who
want easier access to local files with more robust sorting options -- until Boxee lines up more content deals, the Box's overwhelming
strength is local media playback, and it should be a point of emphasis on the main screen, not hidden away in a tab.
Boxee says it'll eventually add a preference to prioritize display of local content on the main screens, and the company
has also promised manual refresh and hourly scan / update options for network sources -- right now you're limited to scanning
sources daily, which is clearly not often enough.
Performance, browser, and Flash
Given our experience with the Intel
CE4100-based Google TV devices, we weren't expecting the Boxee Box to light any worlds on fire performance-wise, and we'd
classify real-world responsiveness as "acceptable." We've seen Boxee more or less fly when run on actual PCs and
even Atom-based nettops, so it's a little sad to see it chug along on the Box, but it's not a killer. Unlike Google, Boxee
doesn't think anyone actually wants to browse on the TV -- Avner says the Boxee browser is a "fallback" -- so while
you'll wait a tick or two while cueing up a video or loading a web page, the real goal is to watch video, and the Box can
certainly do that.
That's not to say we had flawless playback experiences -- we noticed that audio and video sync
drifted occasionally, and every now and again we encountered a Flash bug where the audio started and finished well ahead of
the video. We also once came back to a Showtime podcast after a long pause to find the sync so unmatched we had to quit and
relaunch the video to get it back in order. We also ran into some seriously stuttery playback of an XviD file and a DTS-encoded
WAV file -- which also led us to discover that multichannel audio files are only output as PCM, instead of bitstreamed like
video files. (We were able to send both DTS and Dolby Digital to our receiver while playing video, if you're curious -- we
weren't able to test Dolby TrueHD or DTS-HD.) Overall these are all minor issues, but they add up, and in a market this competitive
we hoped the Boxee Box would be a lot closer to perfect.
As for browsing, well, we can certainly understand why
it's treated as a fallback -- it's serviceable, but as with Google TV, it's slow enough to make you immediately reach for
your phone or laptop, and if the speed doesn't bother you, moving the mouse around with the arrow keys will make you run screaming
for the hills. (We'll say it again, though: add a trackpad to this remote and it would be perfect.) We also found that Boxee's
Flash implementation is just as video-centric as Google TV's -- while it'll play 1080p video without breaking a sweat, a simple
Flash game like Canabalt runs at maybe half speed. There's a huge market out there for Flash games on the TV just as soon
as someone figures it out -- and we can't for the life of us understand why Boxee's 1.2GHz Atom-based CPU can't run Flash
games as well as any netbook or most high-end Android smartphones.
Netflix, Hulu Plus, and content blocking
We'd be remiss
in our review if we didn't mention Netflix and Hulu, which are both coming to the Boxee Box. Netflix is due "by the end
of the year" and will be in HD, although it sounds like surround audio will remain a PS3 exclusive for the time being.
Boxee's even making a special
Box remote with a dedicated Netflix button, which sounds crazy to us but apparently makes perfect sense for the huge numbers of people out there who just want
Netflix on their TV. As Boxee said to us, "Netflix is different."
As for Hulu, well, first let's just
commend these two for working things out. It's an impressive achievement for Boxee to have gone from scrappy underdog rebel
to full-on media platform, and getting Hulu to play along is confirmation of the company's newfound status. That said, it's
not Hulu on Boxee -- it's Hulu Plus, which'll cost you $10 a month. Visiting Hulu.com pops up a note saying Hulu Plus is coming
at some undefined point in the future, and that's it. Same with various other network sites -- just as with Google TV, lots
of content is blocked from the Boxee Box browser, and that kills much of the product's value. Boxee is aggressively out there
trying to negotiate deals with content owners, and Avner is sincerely passionate in his belief that they'll eventually come
around, but don't expect any of this stuff to be resolved when you plug this thing in on Christmas morning.
We
should also note that while Vudu is technically on the device at launch, we weren't able to test it -- we just got a dialog
box saying it's "coming soon."
Wrap-up
Man, we really want to
love the Boxee Box. On paper it's exactly the right blend of streaming content from online services and robust local playback
support we've been dreaming of for years -- and having a Webkit browser with Flash as a fallback seems like a perfect compromise
to the PC / TV interface dilemma. It also lines up perfectly price-wise: at $199 it offers vastly more features than the $99
Apple TV, but it's cheaper than the much more ambitious $299 Logitech Revue while offering a similar browsing experience.
Plus we're pretty much stupid for the remote, save for the lack of trackpad.
Unfortunately, in practice the Boxee
Box just isn't polished enough to be worth the hassle right now. The ideas are all there, and our experience with the Boxee
team has us confident in their vision and ability to execute, but the Box as shipped feels like less of a finished product
than an excellent rough draft of the future. Yes, it's nice having a ton of web content easily accessible on your TV, but
that stuff isn't a replacement for the high-quality linear TV content most people want, and Boxee doesn't do a great job of
delivering that. Netflix and Hulu Plus will go a long way to filling that gap, but they're not here yet, and while Vudu sounds
nice it's just not enough on its own.
What you're left with, then, is an extremely nice media streamer with amazing
codec support and tons of potential for the future. That's not a bad purchase if you're in the market for a streamer, and
we'd imagine plenty of people will pick one up just for that. We'll just say it: this is the best nerdy streamer box we've
ever used. But streamers are almost by definition niche products, and we don't think that's what Boxee's going for here --
hell, if you're nerdy enough to want a streamer, you're nerdy enough to grab a $299 Ion nettop and run Boxee on it, and you'll
get better performance with no network content blocks. No, the Boxee Box has to deliver on all that latent potential if it
wants to challenge Apple and Google and shake up the staid TV industry, and we just don't think it's there yet -- it lacks
both content and polish, and that's a deadly combination.
Boxee says it wants to do major updates twice a year
with "many, many" small updates in between, so we're certain many of these issues will be dealt with -- and the
content deals feel almost inevitable, given the Boxee team's undeniable charm. Until then, however, we're still waiting for
the TV revolution to finally arrive.