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Hardware Review: Rio Central

My ongoing quest to find the perfect MP3 playing stereo component continues this week with the Rio Central. This is a $1500 box with a 40 gig hard drive that aims to do everything audio, from feeding reciever units, burning CDs, and populating portables, and of course, providing an interface to manage your tunes and play them on your stereo. And it's built on Linux- a USB keyboard is all you need to get to a command line!

I'll be frank- I was excited to see this box. A 40 gig drive makes this thing on the right side of the space curve since it means I can store a large enough portion of my CDs to make it useful. Of course as anyone who has designed or even used a large scale MP3 player knows, with great gobs of disk space comes the burden of attempting to create a UI to do manage great gobs of music.

What's the first thing you do with a 40 gig MP3 player? You plug it in and start ripping CDs. The unit is physically nice looking- it seems a bit big, but most of that is the large screen (which is unfortunately kind of dim). It has USB ports on the front and back. Optical audio connection is available but I tested it with standard RCAs plugged into the stereo in my office since I was familiar with the audio quality of this system having been listening to both CDs and MP3s for a long time here.

The box has a copy of a big chunk of CDDB on it, so it doesn't really need net access to rip a lot of CDs. However it does have a modem port, and an HPNA network connection for people using phone lines in their house as a sort of poor mans ethernet. I'm seeing a lot of consumer electronics with HPNA connections and it looks like a good compromise. Unfortunately the unit doesn't have a built in ethernet adapter, and it only supports a handful of USB ethernet adapters, so I had to order one in order to get this thing on my office network (to review the Rio Reciever which is a seperate device: review forthcoming).

Allright with all of that out of the way, it was time to rip a CD. The drive tray is white which is a minor nitpick, but it really is a sore thumb on the smooth looking black case. But hey, thats just my anal retentive side. Ripping CDs is trivially easy: stick it in and confirm the title. I ripped several discs without trouble (Gorillaz, Daft Punk, Ben Folds), but one had a problem (Blink 182's Dude Ranch). It just hung and there wasn't much I could do about it except eject.

Playback and navigation is a mixed bag. Doing common operations is pretty easy but constructing elaborate playlists is obviously going to be more work. Several nifty random options exist, like playing your most played tracks, or your least played tracks instead of going purely random. Very cool. I will say that this has the best UI of any stereo component MP3 player I've seen, but you need to get up close to do complicated stuff just to read the screen.

The audiotron allows a web interface. The ZapStation lets you use the TV to control playlists. Both devices have shortcomings, but at least there are ways to control your playlist without pulling your ass out of the recliner. The Rio's Remote and screen just don't cut it from more than 6-8 feet away.

The gee whiz stuff that is worth mentioning- having a hard drive in your stereo adds that plesant whirring sound. I'm sure that bugs people besides me. You probably won't notice it at a reasonable distance, but its there. The audio fidelity on the whole is as good as can be expected. We all know what MP3 encoding does to your tunes if you have a reasonable speakers. There are also silly little visualization things on the screen if you are into that. Its fun, but obviously its not the reason someone would buy this thing ;) But I know people who buy an EQ just to have the fancy lights in their stereo, so obviously some people dig it.

For those of you who are interested in getting under the hood, throwing in larger hard drives should be relatively easy. And with 100 gig drives at $200, you could really make this thing sing. If you plug a USB keyboard in, you can ease navigation in the UI... or hit ctrl-alt-delete, and suddenly the Rio Central's screen gives you an honest to god Linux Shell Prompt. There are a few games too, but thats just a nifty bonus, you won't be spending any quality time on them.

Getting audio onto the box through methods other than ripping CDs (or letting it read MP3s off a CDR) is tougher. The box has FTP, so getting MP3s onto the hard drive is easy... a little command line program to import a directory of MP3s would be swell. There's also an open source java application under development called jempeg which should eventually support the Central since it is based on the Empeg car player. That will Greatly ease the annoying process of getting your gigs of existing tracks onto the box.

There are a few other features that I didnt' really test. You can burn CDs or feed a few different MP3 portables. The UI to do this is pretty simple but I didn't have any CDRs or a portable MP3 player to test it out with.

Summary: Ethernet should be built in. Buying a $40 adapter for a $1500 unit is just silly considering the target audience for this thing. At $500-$750 the Rio Central would be a much easier recommendation. Maybe $500, and you add your own hard drive. But I know full well that such a thing currently isn't economically possible for a vendor. I still feel like the home MP3 player is over priced and can't imagine it catching on until it gets a bit closer to the price of big CD changer. But in terms of usability, this is the best one I've tested yet, and the standard 40G hard drive is probably enough for most people.

Coming Soon: the review of the Rio Reciever- this little baby connects over your network to the Rio Central and brings audio to any room you have an ethernet connection. This is what makes the Rio Central stand out. But you'll have to wait a few days to read about it here ;)

11 of 203 comments (clear)

  1. cool box by laserjet · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here are the features of the box:

    * Digitally records and stores your entire music collection in a single location.
    * Powerful 40 GB hard drive can store more than 650 CDs or 6,500 individual songs.
    * Write standard audio CDs or MP3 data CDs using the integrated CD-RW drive.
    * Move your MP3 music collection off of the PC and into the living room (use either a network connection or USB to transfer MP3's from your PC to your Rio Central).
    * Create an unlimited number of customized playlists based on personal style, taste, or mood. Or, let the Rio Audio Center determine what you want to hear based on your listening habits.
    * Large display, intuitive interface and advanced search features make it easy to find the music you want instantly.
    * Frees your home of bulky CD collections and saves you from the hassle of searching through stacks of CDs to find a favorite song or album.
    * Shares music with Rio portables via convenient USB ports in front and back of unit.
    * Encodes at a bitrate of up to 320 kbps for high-performance digital sound quality. Provides an optional, lower bitrate encoding option for downloading to portables.
    * Quickly record digital audio files from your personal CD collection. Just load a disc and Rio does the rest.
    * CDs are automatically cataloged as they are recorded. Artist, album, song title, and other relevant information is instantly assigned to each file to make future searches quick & easy. Built-in 56 kbps modem will dial out to retrieve information from the Internet if necessary.
    * Built in 10 mbps home PNA connection for streaming music to one or more Rio Receivers.
    * Supports common audio formats like MP3 and WMA, and can be upgraded to emerging digital standards so your home audio system is always up-to-date.
    * Engineered to the highest quality standards with stereo RCA and optical outputs.

    now, here is what the comments will be:

    1) I can do the same thing for $xxx with xxx hardware and linux

    2) this is cool, but no one will buy it

    3) how long will it be till it runs linux...

    4) etc. use your imagination.

    I for one, think it is a very nice looking box. People buying this probably are not too concerned with money, and it would be a VERY nice looking addition to my home stereo. I myself can not afford it, but it looks like they put a lot of effort into making it look nice and fit in with the rest of your stereo equipment.

    true, you can do the same thing with a computer, but sometimes that just doesn't matter.

    --
    Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
  2. Re:Bad reviewer, no doughnut by Loligo · · Score: 4, Informative

    >Give me reasons why it should be bought!

    Because some people don't want a big ugly beige box sitting next to their stereo rack?

    Because some people have $1500 but not the skills to assemble, configure, and install their own components, OS, and software?

    Because some people want a single person to call when the box up and dies, instead of having to diagnose whether to call Asus, Creative Labs, Micron, PC Power & Cooling, or Nvidia?

    I dunno. Why should a lawyer buy one of these to put into his office when he can simply take a slew of billable hours out of his time to save $700 building a Frankenclone box that doesn't match his decor?

    I just can't come up with anything.

    -l

  3. Re:Bad reviewer, no doughnut by batkiwi · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think this IS way overprices.

    I bought the sonic blue reciever for 99$, and felt it was a great deal.

    This is not aimed at someone who would dream of having a computer with their REAL audio equipment. This is for an audio junkie who wants a nice looking, nice sounding, high quality mp3 storage/playback/burning station to go with their other components.

    But for a concrete list of reasons:

    -it's already set up. No cobbling together hardware/software with a remote listner to try to get it to do stuff. This already does it OOTB

    -it will feed rio recievers. Sure you could hack apache to do it (i have it running at home) but it REALLY is a chore if you're not computer inclined. audio junkies can rip there, and listen anywhere in their house that they have a rio reciever.

    -it looks nice. Your computer would not fit in with audio equipment, This does. It has a nice lcd screen, a nice remote, and a nice looking (non computer looking) case. You can get those tiny shuttle cases, or other plastic cases, or make your own, but they still look like a computer.

    -it has high quality audio parts. Your soundblaster live/etc can not compare to solid state parts. It's the same reason that professional musicians buy a 1000$ audio input card that "does the same thing" your 90$ sb-audigy does.

    It's like the tivo debate... sure you can hack something together that does it all, but a tivo looks nice, works nice, and is already set up for you.

  4. Re:Audiotron? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    www.audiotron.net

    "Price: $299.95"

  5. Re:Couple of things by pdh11 · · Score: 2, Informative
    What kind of security is this thing running on its FTP server?

    It doesn't, in fact, have an FTP server. There is a Windows program supplied for storing existing MP3s onto it; this access can be password-protected.

    What bitrate does it rip at?

    You get to choose, off a menu. By default it rips twice, once at high bit-rate for playback, once at low bit-rate for downloading to portables.

    Peter

  6. Deal running now by Mr.Intel · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you click the link and look at the ad in the lower left corner it says, "Free RioReciever plus $100 off when you buy the RioCentral". Since the reciever rocks more than the Central (it has ethernet) then this deal might actually make it worth getting. I get the whole enchilada for $1400. Need to cash in 401k... ;)

    --
    ASCII tastes bad dude.
    Binary it is then.
  7. Re:No source code !!! by pdh11 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The source is available but the link is wrong. Try ftp://ftp.diamondmm.com/pub/rio/radac/

    Peter

  8. Re:Couple of things by pdh11 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Do you have any idea what underlying protocol this software uses?

    It's more-or-less the same as the empeg-car synchronise protocol, for which GPL source is available (search for "emptool"). There is already a rather nifty Java re-implementation (www.jempeg.org), which I believe can (or soon will) synchronise to Rio Centrals just as well as to empeg-cars.

    Peter

  9. Re:No source code !!! by phrenzy · · Score: 4, Informative

    *DOH* I've asked the web guys to fix this ASAP.

    The source also ships with the product on CD, and our stuff is passed back into the ARM Linux chain from time to time so most of it is in the standard distribution by now.

    --
    -- Freddie Starr ate my empeg
  10. Cmdr Taco Needs Help! by filbo · · Score: 2, Informative

    This "MP3 stereo component" obsession has gotten out of hand. I know someone who specializes in OCD. Please, for the sake of the /. community, I think Cmdr Taco needs to seek help dealing with this issue.

  11. Nice try, but no dice by Patman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Turtle Beach is not only still producing the Audiotron, but still supporting it via addition of new features.
    The last month has seen the addition of a full API to go with the web interface and Shoutcast streaming ability. AT users also can join a mailing list that enables them to help Turtle Beach develop new features. In short, it's probably the BEST supported piece of hardware I've got.