George Graves, April 27, 2006 HDTV Solutions OK, you bought your HDTV and you love it. You're watching PBS nature programs in HDTV and marveling at the color and detail. You had a bunch of your buddies over for the Superbowl and they were bowled over by the picture quality. You're finally enjoying the "progressive" part of that new DVD player you bought last year, and you're looking forward to HD movies from HD-DVD or Blu-Ray this year. Lately, you've been wondering what else can you do with this glorious display device. Got a computer full of pictures from your digital camera? How about using your new HD monitor to show a digital-picture slide show? How about being able to access all of your digital pictures in your TV room from your computer without actually having to move your pictures off of your PC? Well, there is a great way to use your big-screen HD monitor to run high-definition slide shows over a computer network from your PC. It's called a Roku PhotoBridge HD1000 and it's fairly easy to set up and network to your PC and gives great results. The Hardware The back panel looks more like a piece of lab equipment than it does a consumer appliance with the following inputs and outputs:
At the moment, the only picture format supported is non-progressive JPEG, but it shouldn't be a problem as this is what most digital cameras output anyway. RAW format pictures are not supported at this time. Supported video formats include full hardware MPEG2 Transport streams in MP@ML and MP@HL. Currently, the PhotoBridge software decodes and displays all 18 DTV ATSC MPEG2 formats only. At this writing, only the NTSC format is supported, but PAL support is coming with the 2.0 software that is currently in public beta and available to any PhotoBridge customer. 2.0 also adds MPEG2 Program stream (DVD-style support). Software updates are free, downloadable and installable by the user. The Roku also has audio outputs to play most music file formats that you have stored on your computer. Audio output is analog left & right or digital S/PDIF coax which supports 5.1 surround sound. Supported audio formats include MP3, WAV, AIFF (AAC support coming soon with the new v.2.0 software upgrade). A TCP/IP RS-232 control port is also available for automated computer control. Rounding out the back panel I/O is a 10/100MBit wired Ethernet RJ-45 connector and a USB port to accommodate a supported USB wireless Ethernet adapter. Networking protocols include DHCP and Windows file sharing (SMB or "Samba"). The Roku is compatible with Windows XP and Macintosh OSX v.10.2 and above. It might also work with the Linux operating system, if that distribution supports SMB. Setup and Operation All adjustments and all navigation on the Roku are accomplished via the remote control or front panel controls. The remote is convenient and easy to hold, but it's easily swamped by ambient light sometimes making navigation frustrating. It's best to operate the PhotoBridge HD1000 in dim light. Networking to your PC Viewing Camera Memory Cards To view pictures from a memory card simply insert it into the appropriate slot and the contents should pop up on the screen. Select it with the remote and any pictures on it should show up in the folder that the camera creates on the card. Opening that folder will reveal thumbnails of all the pictures. You can then view them individually or as a slide show just as you would with images from your computer. You can rotate vertical shots or zoom-in on portions of the picture. I have been amazed at how much I can zoom-in on digital pictures of 5 megapixels or greater before they start to "pixelate." If your JPEG picture has camera information on it like date and time, shutter speed and f-stop, hitting the info button on the remote will display it as well as the image title. Art Packs Conclusion Editor's Update |
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