|
Flat Panels
Rear-Projection TV Front Projectors Receivers HT in a Box Speakers Recently Added
Video Displays
All In One HT
Speakers
Sources
Electronics
Other Hardware
Custom Install
Software Hook Me Up HT Talks To Boot Camp Advice From the Experts Ask Home Theater Shane Buettner Mark Fleischmann Audio/Video News CEDIA 2009 CES 2009 CEDIA 2008 CES 2008 CEDIA 2007 HE 2007 CES 2007 CEDIA 2006 AV Links HT Galleries A/V Glossary Contact Us Customer Service New Subscription Digital HT Renew Give a Gift Sub Services Flatscreen TVs LCD TVs Plasma TVs HDTV AV Receivers Home Theater in a Box Digital Projectors DLP Projectors Video Projectors Surround Sound Dolby 5.1 |
Location, location, location.
Now, so far, I haven't been privileged enough to get my hands and eyes on a Slingbox of my own for a personal test drive. But if the box (and associated software) does most or all of what it claims to do, we'll witness the home entertainment equivalent of the Russian Revolution. What the Slingbox does is provide a can't-get-enough-of-my-favorite-show kind of person the ability to watch - via a broadband Internet connection - his or her can't-miss cable, satellite, or DVR-stored programs from wherever he or she is around the world (including, I suppose, on orbit in the International Space Station if you can convince the head honchos at NASA and the other international space muckety-mucks that you really need to borrow some of the uplink bandwidth so you can watch the latest episode of "Family Guy"). The DVR (and the VCR before it) lets you "timeshift" a favorite TV program. Think of the Slingbox as a "placeshifting" device. (One that doesn't require subscription fees, by the way.) Sling Media, the bringers of Slingbox's good tidings and the folks to whom we will all owe a large debt of gratitude if the advertised promise is followed by in-home (and away) performance, says the magical box is ready to use in four exceedingly simple steps.
Sling Media says they intend to make the SlingPlayer program available "in the coming months" for certain PDAs, smart phones, and Macintosh computers. The $249.99 Slingbox (and included PC software) is available now. If you get one, don't gloat or otherwise make your friends and co-workers feel bad. Not everyone can be on the cutting edge…
|
|


The SlingPlayer software includes streaming technology that, among other things, dynamically adjusts video compression ratios to match available network bandwidth. A virtual remote control function displays on your computer screen an array of buttons similar to that found on your home video source's remote control. Another feature lets you watch TV while working (yeah, right) on another application, such as a spreadsheet or word processing document.