Skip to main content

D-Link Boxee Box Hands On First Impressions

boxee-box-1
Image used with permission by copyright holder

To a casual onlooker, the hype and excitement that D-Link’s Boxee Box generated at CES 2010 must have looked almost inexplicable. It’s another media streamer. It sits by your TV and plays content off a network. And the case looks like something ripped straight from a first-year industrial-design student’s notebook.

All valid observations. But it also plays Hulu, costs less than $200, and sports a slick user interface that makes most DVRs and cable boxes look like relics from 1993 – with a remote that does the same. These features alone probably explain why the quirky little Box is now the darling of home theater nerds everywhere.

Let’s start with that remote. As we explained at the beginning of CES, many streaming media boxes have made a stab at the ultimate remote and failed miserably, including Boxee’s promising but ultimately disappointing iPhone app, which we tried when we switched to an HTPC. Make it full of hard buttons, and it’s easy to use, but typing “a boy and his dog” into a search box will take you 45 seconds with an on-screen keyboard. Make it touch screen, like that Boxee app, and it entering text is a breeze, but you need to stare down at the screen for every little adjustment.

boxee-box-2
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Boxee’s two-sided remote suffers from neither. On the top, you get a directional pad, home and play/pause button – all you need to navigate Boxee’s simple menus. On the bottom, you get a full QWERTY keyboard for tapping out text with ease. And amazingly enough, they don’t seem to interfere with one another at all. Since the slim shape of the remote forces you to grip it by the edges, you never really accidentally press keys on the bottom while working the top.

The on-screen interface glitters with the same amount of polish. Every nugget of content is filed into six categories: photos, music, movies, TV shoes, apps, and files. All of them offer an intuitive overview of content within, and the QWERTY keyboard on the remote makes it simple enough to bust out a search if you don’t feel like browsing. All the icons, menus and graphics whisk around on screen like a well-oiled machine, too, thanks to Nvidia’s Tegra 2 graphics processor under the hood.

boxee-interface
Image used with permission by copyright holder

While some of Boxee’s quirks when running on a PC still have us hesitating to call this the box that will get HTPC owners to finally trash the mouse and keyboard for good, we’re confident they’ll be resolved by the time the Box launches later this quarter. And we can’t wait to kiss the noisy Compaq in our living room goodbye.

Check out our Hands-On Video with the Boxee Box and the Boxee Remote from CES 2010.

Editors' Recommendations

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
Crazy! This 75-inch 4K TV is under $450 at Walmart right now
The onn. 75” Class 4K UHD (2160P) LED Frameless Roku Smart TV is a living room with orange walls.

Walmart continues its reign of great TV deals with the option to buy an Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV for just $448. A 75-inch TV for under $500 is pretty impressive and this TV usually costs $498 so you’re saving even more than usual. If you want a great new TV to add to your home for less, this is the perfect opportunity to do so while saving plenty of cash. Let’s take a look at what it has to offer.

Why you should buy the Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV
Onn. is nowhere to be seen in our look at the best TV brands but it’s still pretty respectable for anyone seeking a budget-priced TV. The most obvious benefit here is the hefty 75-inch 4K screen with 2160p resolution. It looks great with a crystal clear picture which is an excellent upgrade compared to an HD screen. The Onn. 75-inch Frameless 4K TV might lack the finer features of the best TVs but it has the essentials arranged well.

Read more
Tubi teams with DAZN for sports as free TV service continues its takeover
The Tubi app icon on Apple TV.

Not that Tubi was exactly lacking for anything to watch, but the free (as in ad-supported) streaming service just added a couple more reasons to keep you glued to your couch. The Fox-owned FAST service (that's short for free ad-supported television) today announced a partnership with DAZN that brings a bevy of sports to platform.

The tentpole addition is DAZN Women's Football. It'll be available 24 hours a day, with "a compelling mix of live and classic soccer matches from prestigious tournaments." Those will include the UEFA Women's Champions League, Liga F, and the Saudi Women's Premier League, among others. It'll be available in the U.S. and Canada.

Read more
Hisense’s PX3-Pro Laser Cinema gets AI, a bigger picture, and better sound
The Hisense PX3-Pro Laser Cinema.

Hisense's PX2-Pro Laser Cinema ultra short throw projector made all kinds of best projector lists for its excellent picture, big brightness, and accurate color. Today, the Chinese electronics maker announced the popular projector's latest model, the PX3-Pro, a $3,500, premium triple-laser projector that improves on its predecessors with better sound, a brighter light source, and AI smarts to further enhance its image.

The PX3-Pro sees some improvements over the PX2. For one, it's brighter than the PX2's 2,400 ANSI lumens at 3,000 ANSI lumens, which should mean a significant boost, especially in brighter rooms. But one key improvement with the PX3 that Hisense is certainly hoping will make an impact is its integration of "real-time Pro AI Algorithms" that Hisense says will "enhance brightness, fine-tune contrast, and eliminate noise." Using AI to enhance picture quality, color, and more, has been showing up in all the best TVs over the last year or so, so it's no surprise to see it start making its way into the best projectors now, too.

Read more