First Impressions of the Neuros Link
DeviceGuru writes "Having recently constructed the BoxeeBox, DeviceGuru blogger Rick Lehrbaum naturally was eager to check out Neuros Technology's somewhat similar IP-TV set-top box. Lehrbaum's first-impressions review of the Neuros Link describes the device's hardware and Ubuntu-based software, shows screenshots of its functionality, identifies a handful of weak spots, offers some specific suggestions for improvement, and shares a few hacks (including adding an HDD and Boxee). All in all, he concludes, the Link's hardware is more than worth its minimal $300 pricetag."
I'm not one to normally hold a device's physical appearance against it, but if something is going to be sitting near the TV in plain view, it has got to be better looking than the Link.
Features Shmeatures. This thing is ugly!
But the builder in me would rather build something out of a nice hardwood or plexi-glass. (Depending on the decor of the house).
I found some nice art deco examples here.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
I have a LINK, too.
If you want a small, cheap media center that has no future, you go right ahead on and buy that POS thing that HP is flogging.
I've had my LINK for two weeks. It rocks. It plays any file I throw at it. MKV, Dixv 3-6, DVDs.
Expansion slots? Yeah, it has slots. It also has an active hacking/mod community that's experimenting and enjoying the chance to contribute and have some fun with a cool toy.
If you prefer "appliances" to computers, that's fine. Buy what lets you sleep at night. I'll stick with something that lets me make it work the way I want it to, not the crap that HP and Dell are flogging, thank you very much.
When you get your new appliance, see if you can run Elisa, MythTV, and Boxee on it. Let me know if you can manage to add a SATA raid to it, too.
And get off my damn lawn, too. Damned kids.
If you want a small, cheap media center that has no future, you go right ahead on and buy that POS thing that HP is flogging.
Just let me say here and now that I will never again buy anything from HP. While after much wailing and gnashing of teeth they replaced my complete lemon of a laptop with a substantially upgraded model, the price I paid in agony (mostly time on the phone, lord spare me from overseas technical support) was not worth the difference. It's sad because eCost has a TON of stuff from HP that looks sexy as all get-out but I know that if I have even one problem (and I probably will) then I will regret ever even looking at the fucking stuff.
When you get your new appliance, see if you can run Elisa, MythTV, and Boxee on it. Let me know if you can manage to add a SATA raid to it, too.
I've actually been buying used, sort-of-appliance-class computers lately with super-low-power consumption in mind. I bought two DT Research machines based on the Geode LX 800, a WebDT 360 and a DT168. Both are fanless and diskless (flash storage, and I have more on the way) and I put Debian Lenny on the DT168, then attached my XFS-formatted MyBook 1TB that was formerly attached to my laptop, when it ran Linux. My firewall/AP is a WRT54G with DD-WRT v24sp1 micro. My media player is currently an Xbox running XBMC, but I am looking into putting together something running Linux to do the same job at HD resolutions. I also have a Rokubox and I'd love to figure out how to use that to stream the video, but I'm not sure it can handle all the codecs I want and my server has too little CPU to transcode.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"