If you just want to connect your HD Media Player to a TV to watch videos from your USB Hard Disk Drive, below is a quick and easy way to pick a HD Media Player. I am assuming you either use a HDMI cable to connect to your HDTV or the RCA cable (red, white, yellow) to connect to your old analogue TV. Thus you are not concerned about the sound quality as long as there is sound coming out of your TV.
Currently the two most popular media player chipset used is the Sigma and the Realtek and they come in different models as well. As an example we will pick the Sigma 8655 and the Realtek 1073DD which is in the midrange price and some of the major HD Media Players that use them are
Sigma 8655 - WDTV Live, WDTV (mk2)
Realtek 1073DD - ACRyan PlayOn!, Asus O!Play, Apacer AL460, Hornettek Phantom, Patriot Box Office, Seagate Theatre, HDPro, Noontek A6
(There is a third chipset, the Amlogic 8626 but this cannot support WMV,VC-1 videos. Examples of media players that use this chip is the Kworld and Modeo. These are in the lower price range and usually not full 1080p but since things are moving so fast, there may be models that can output full HD. Check the specs.)
There is another group of media players and they are the high-end stuffs such as the Popcorn Hour, Dvico 6500, HDX BD1 and HDMax which has better audio handling capabilities but since we are only concerned with basic sound, these are not considered as they are more for HiFi buffs.
Anyway, from the above you can see that there are more players using the Realtek chipset than the Sigma. Since the chipset is the brain of the media player, it determines what it can or cannot do. Thus the functions of all the media players using the Realtek 1073DD will be basically the same. One major difference is that the Sigma 8655 cannot play RMVB files. These are mostly TVB serials files and other Chinese programmes so if you intend to play these files, forget about the WDTV and just pick any of the others that fancy you.
For playing the other common formats, which (the Sigma or the Realtek) has the better video quality? Based purely on measurements, the overall results seems to be in the Sigma's favour but from users point of view, many prefer the Realtek. So this is really quite subjective and depends on your eyes and your preference. This also sometimes depends on the HDTV set that you are using since some brands seems to work better than others with a particular chip. The media player itself can have adjustments for brightness, contrast, hue, saturation, etc so you can fine tune to your heart's content. (Some will have more adjustment than others.)
Thus once you know a player can support the format of your video files at the resolution that you want, just pick the cheapest one that you can find using the same chipset, bearing in mind the above points about the chipset used. Again, this is just for watching videos with sound from the TV set. But if you need other features and has other considerations, then you need to investigate further and wait for my future posts. HeHe.
Ronald Kwok
Showing posts with label Noontek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noontek. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
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