


Lately, the INOi MH720 that we use in our living room to watch movies has been showing its age, having trouble with new audio/video codecs and subtitle formats. I had been considering getting a new media player, but after looking into, figured it might be a better deal to get a nettop to use as a media center and as an additional family computer.
I finally settled on the AspireRevo 3610 and got lucky picking up the last one from our local Fry’s. It came equipped with 2GB RAM (enough for basic needs), 160GB hard drive (no big deal since using externals for storage) and an NVIDIA ION chip for graphics (hardware acceleration for HD video), along with an HDMI port out for both audio and video (easy HD connectivity to home theater).
The nettop came installed with Windows 7, which has and once again turned out to be a good upgrade. At first the network folder sharing was throwing me off because I was used to the previous Windows method. But after I got the hang of using HomeGroup [how-to geek], everything came together nicely. No more long USB cable running along the floor to transfer shows
For the media player application, Boxee came out with their latest beta, which does a nifty job of integrating local and web content to make a more complete browsing and watching experience. Basically, Boxee scans local folders and then displays the multimedia files with additional descriptions from the web, along with web-based episodes. It can even grab subtitles directly from opensubtitles for both movies and TV shows. Also, to keep from drowning in kids’ cartoons, I created a separate Boxee account to manage their content.
As for the remote control, the nettop came with a wireless mouse and keyboard, but that’s not very user-friendly for regular media use. I wanted to stick with our trusty universal remote URC-200 which has worked fine all these years, even with the different component upgrades. Unfortunately, the nettop didn’t come with an IR port. So I got a cheap media center remote with an IR receiver included. I used the media center remote to program my universal remote with the basic functions. Then, I found a program called Intelliremote which allowed me to control multiple applications with customized functions for each.
On a side note, I got to try out AmazonBasics when I ordered an HDMI cable. It was a good deal, came quick with Prime, and nice not having to wrangle with clamshell plastic packaging.
Of course, not everything is perfect particularly when on the “bleeding edge”, so here is my list of issues with the current setup:
- Boxee’s latest version does not have the ability to manually add, correct or update media files and descriptions.
- There’s some occasional strange resolution behavior when turning on the HDTV with Boxee already running in background.
- Annoying ads on web episodes, but nothing to be done about that.
- Flickr App on Boxee has been running slow, hopefully just a beta glitch.
- BBC App limited by geo-location (what’s with cold-war era borders).
- Easier customization of Boxee Homepage.
- Latest Boxee beta broke support for embedded subtitles (i.e. anime not working)
- Stronger parental controls on Boxee to limit content access.
- The current remote setup has limited mouse and text input ability.
- Windows 7 Homegroup folder sharing not backwards compatible with previous Windows versions.
Acer + Nvidia ION + Boxee rocks!