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Linksys DMA2200 Media Center Extender

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We’ve been waiting for media-streaming devices to catch up to 802.11n, and the Linksys DMA2200 does it in style—geek style, that is. The box isn’t particularly attractive, but we dig the dual-band Wi-Fi radio inside that’s capable of operating on either the 2.4GHz or 5GHz frequency bands.

We also appreciate the built-in DVD player that’s capable of scaling our standard-def DVDs to 1080i. (Linksys’s DMA2100, the same hardware sans optical drive, sells for $300.) We tested the DMA2200 with Linksys’s WRT600N dual-band 802.11n router (reviewed above) and were impressed with the pair’s ability to stream high-definition 1080p video to a 42-inch ViewSonic N4285P television across a wireless network, even with the extender inside a cabinet inside our double-walled media room.
The wireless connection stumbled when we tried to stream HD video with 5.1-channel audio attached, however, and it broke down completely when we moved the extender into a more enclosed area of the cabinet. You’ll find photos of our test environments at http://tinyurl.com/28sjsu.

Aside from delivering the familiar Windows Media Center user interface, the primary advantages that devices like the DMA2200 offer are support for PCs equipped with CableCARD digital tuners and hooks to online media content offered by the likes of Comedy Central, Showtime, and the Discovery Channel. Unfortunately, we found the user interfaces most of those services offer to be utter crap. The ability to pause playback on one media extender and resume it on another, on the other hand, is a slick benefit.

Unlike the less-expensive (but only optionally wireless) Xbox 360, this new class of extender freezes out Windows XP Media Center users altogether: Your host PC must run Vista Home Premium or Vista Ultimate. In fact, aside from the wireless feature and the consumer-electronics formfactor, there’s not a whole lot here that would lead us to recommend the DMA2200 (or even the cheaper, driveless DMA2100, for that matter) over Microsoft’s gaming console—especially if you’re into games.
Streaming 1080p video on a wireless network is compelling; being forced to use Vista to do it isn’t.

Click to Enlarge

The Linksys DMA2200 supports PCM, MP3, WMA, WMA-Pro, AC-3, and AAC audio; MPEG-1, MPEG-2, WMV9, VC-1, and Xvid video; and JPEG, PNG, BMP, and GIF photo file formats.

Linksys DMA2200
www.linksys.com
plus
Shout at the Devil

Dual-band 1080p streaming with built-in DVD player; wide format support.

minus
The Devil Wears Prada

Vista-only; not much reason to pick one of these over an Xbox 360.

verdict:6
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avatarLinksysmediaextener?

I recently purchased one of the inksys DMA2100 Media exteders. The HDMI interface and wired and wireless-N interfaces were attracive iducement for the purchase to add media playback from my network and online video sites like HULU Right on my Flat screen TV. Unforunately, it dosn't act as a streamable interface it IS windows media center...the awful, most limited media interface devised by man. It doesn't mirror the Windows PCs desktop, it is its' own mediacenter interface. I can't figure how to access online sites and the exact purpose of a Vista machine eludes me. In short, if I can finda hack to put some other media system on the hardware it's bye bye windowsmedia center hello streaming media player, as it sits from the factory it is of little use to me.

bottom line: pass on it or plan to hack it.

 

 

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