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SkipJam iMedia
Increasing droves of con-sumers are installing networks in their homes to accomplish boring feats such as sharing printers or perhaps more diverting applications like music sharing. But, not until I reviewed the offerings from SkipJam did I fully understand how much entertainment a home network can provide. SkipJam has designed a platform-agnostic networking system in which a single wholehouse configuration can work seamlessly with an existing CAT-5 (Ethernet), Wi-Fi, coaxial cable, or power-line network—or any combination of these different standards. You will need a properly functioning network in place, independent of the SkipJam installation. But, if you want to add one more location wirelessly, for example, it's no problem.
The SkipJam iMedia Center slides into your home theater, or anywhere you have one or more source components you want to stream. You wire the outputs of, say, your DVD player, TiVo, and satellite-TV tuner into the back, and the iMedia Center passes them along to the TV. The iMedia Center can then encode these analog audio/video signals to either MPEG-2 or MPEG-4 at selectable bit rates to best balance quality and available network speed. It sends these signals via the home network to an iMedia Player that is connected to a viewing location elsewhere in the house. There is also an in-wall player for professional installations, as well as an audio-only player.
Naturally, to ensure the best quality and performance, you should connect via whichever type of network offers the highest data throughput. CAT-5 is the best all-around option, with an effective throughput of approximately 60 megabits per second, followed by about 30 mbps for coaxial, 8 to 15 mbps for Wi-Fi, and 1 to 4 mbps for power line. (Improvements for power-line networking technology are reportedly in the works.) My house came extensively wired with coax. With the addition of some high-grade splitters and a modem at each termination, plus lots of testing and troubleshooting, SkipJam president Michael Spilo and I officially established a coax home network. For optimum reliability, we also drilled a single hole between the office and the home theater to connect my PC via CAT-5 to the primary iMedia Center.
Intrepid consumers may wish to tackle the SkipJam installation themselves, but most will want professional support due to all of the details. During installation, the SkipJam creates specific power-on/-off macro commands for each device, taking into account the necessary inputs and outputs, startup times, etc. Each box comes with three wired IR blasters, which are mandatory for manipulation of IR-controlled electronics. Tucked away, they aren't too much of an eyesore. But, in one instance, the signal from the SkipJam IR remote to the iMedia Center confused one of my nearby IR source components.
SkipJam's program guide offers unique features. For example, it can filter programs of a given genre by length. So, hour-long drama TV shows won't appear when you are searching for dramatic feature films. You can also share music and pictures. Since you are linked to the Internet, wholehouse Internet radio is a snap. You can browse lots of free channels at various bit rates under the Music menu. An FM tuner is built in and requires only the addition of an antenna. You should be sure that the system works before your installer leaves, and then you should expect some troubleshooting, either by yourself, over the phone, or on a return visit.
To get the most out of SkipJam, you need to use it fully and properly, which requires some education. Kids often learn the technology faster than adults do, but your spouse might be the big obstacle, if mine is any indication. She tends to work around SkipJam and operates our TiVo/DirecTV tuner with the original remotes. She sometimes leaves a device powered on, which screws up the all-important sequencing. Take a tip from a pro: Convince her of the benefits, i.e., "what's in it for her," be it the wealth of movies now accessible from any TV or wholehouse playback of every song she's ever heard.
For a product like this to succeed, it needs to work painlessly, nigh-invisibly: Press play, and it plays, quickly and without incident. In my home, that was often not the case, from the bandwidth issues that I encountered to problems with remote-control buttons. It would be a boon if SkipJam could detect the power status of connected gear, but it would also greatly raise the complexity—and the price. In the meantime, the underlying software is evolving rapidly, so my complaints today might already be history by the time you read this.
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Blasters, Blasters Everywhere
The SkipJam software installs on the PC. It easily controls the entire system from the desktop and lets you watch absolutely any connected source on your PC monitor. I've long lamented the dearth of DirecTV tuners for the PC while antenna and cable are so well represented, but I can now watch DirecTV on my computer screen to my heart's content. I can even burn CD or DVD copies of programs that SkipJam's PVR captures. For the PVR mode to work, your PC has to be powered on. It demands a good deal of bandwidth, as data travels from the source component, to the computer, and on to the final destination, instead of using a more direct connection between the source component and the networked viewing location. The PVR's buffering function creates a digital file of everything it "sees," including channel changes.
Wow!