Seagate launches FreeAgent Theater+ HD media player, we go hands-on
Remember when Seagate introduced its Betamax-esque FreeAgent Theater HD way back at CES this year? Of course not -- you were locked onto the Palm Pre keynote. At any rate, the next generation of that very device somehow made it through the product development stage and now sits in our very hands, and we have to say, it's no more modern in person than it is in press shots. Equipped with the usual assortment of ports (HDMI, component, composite, Toslink, Ethernet and two USB) ports, the FreeAgent Theater+ HD media player gets all of its content from a FreeAgent Go USB 2.0 hard drive (sold separately or in a bundle) or whatever you shove into those USB sockets. You can count on 1080p output and a pretty standard UI, and while it's wired-or-die right now, Seagate's hoping to pop out a USB WiFi adapter ($69.99) for it next month.
We've yet to really put this player through its paces, but we can say for sure that it's not made for abuse. The mostly-plastic box is staggeringly light, and one drop from atop your AV rack could lead to utter disaster. Furthermore, this is really only useful for those wound tightly around Seagate's finger; the bulk of its functionality relies on having a FreeAgent USB drive at your disposal, and if you've selected any other portable HDD, you'll have to deal with connecting it the old fashion way and ditching the "clean look." At $149.99 sans an HDD, it's one of the cheaper options on the market, but it still can't beat Popcorn Hour's heralded lineup when it comes to value and format support. Those looking for an all-in-one deal can opt for the $289.99 bundle, which throws in a 500GB FreeAgent Go drive. Have a look at retro exemplified in the gallery below.
We've yet to really put this player through its paces, but we can say for sure that it's not made for abuse. The mostly-plastic box is staggeringly light, and one drop from atop your AV rack could lead to utter disaster. Furthermore, this is really only useful for those wound tightly around Seagate's finger; the bulk of its functionality relies on having a FreeAgent USB drive at your disposal, and if you've selected any other portable HDD, you'll have to deal with connecting it the old fashion way and ditching the "clean look." At $149.99 sans an HDD, it's one of the cheaper options on the market, but it still can't beat Popcorn Hour's heralded lineup when it comes to value and format support. Those looking for an all-in-one deal can opt for the $289.99 bundle, which throws in a 500GB FreeAgent Go drive. Have a look at retro exemplified in the gallery below.
























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
mchiles @ Sep 15th 2009 11:24AM
Hmmm... I wonder if this thing has the codecs to allow it to read and display native Hi-Def .TiVO files???
I have been off-loading shows recorded in Hi-Def on my TiVo Series 3 to my desktop PC via TivoToGo. I then move those shows from the PC's hard drive to a Seagate 2TB Free Agent Extreme USB/eSata external drive. I like to save the entire season of some shows before I sit down to watch them. So, when it comes time to watch a series, I have to reverse the time consuming process.
It would be great if I can just hook my external hard drive to this little unit and have it display the TiVo HiDef files I recorded and saved to the external drive and not have to copy them back to the TiVo unit to watch them. If it does, might have to find more room on the shelf for another set top box.
mchiles
lens42 @ Sep 16th 2009 3:34AM
What does this thing do with an Ethernet port if it can't play network streams?
Nicnac @ Sep 16th 2009 4:23PM
there are so many boxes from established companies (mvix ultio, popcorn hour c200) or up and coming (xtreamer, WDTV2), that beside up front specs, you have to know whether they will support codecs in the future, continue to roll out bug fixes and updates, etc.
Fred @ Nov 9th 2009 2:15AM
You are right,
I own a Blobbox and I'm happy with it. It's a digital terrestrial, dual-tuner receiver PVR with full Internet access including Podcasting and Bittorrent downloader.
They release a new software update every two months and the box is fully programmable with a free SDK called Blobkit and based on well-known HTML and Javascript,
and there is a sort of AppStore for TV applications like Youtube, Shoutcast, Weather, Reeplay.it, Gmail, Mininova Bittorrent, Twitter on TV, etc.
It can navigate websites done for mobile devices (I send money with paypal and buy train tickets).
I got the SDK on www.blobforge.com
paid the box almost 400 euros from www.tvblobbox.com
if you want more info, please reply to this.
Fred