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ZeeVee ZvBox

ZeeVee Product Details - Ratings and reviews for zeevee zvbox.

ZeeVee ZvBox


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$499.99
$499.99
Sales Rank: 4355
ZeeVee
Released: 2008-08-03

Avg. Customer Review: 3 Star
Media: Electronics

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Product Features
ZeeVee ZvBox
  • Watch anything you can get online or on your computer from all your HDTVs
  • Avoid new subscription fees
  • Access ANY computer application from your HDTVs
  • Enjoy the same great resolution you get at your computer
  • Use existing cable wiring to reach all HDTVs in the house


Product Review
Product Description

ZvBox allows Internet TV watchers to move from the small-screen of their computers and the discomfort of the home office to the superior viewing experience of their HDTVs and the comfort of the couch. ZvBox is the first device that allows consumers to watch anything they can get online or on their computers on all the HDTVs in their homes. By simply connecting to the monitor output of the computer, ZvBox turns the computer screen into a new high-definition TV channel called Zv, which it then "localcasts" across the existing coaxial cable wiring to all HDTVs in the home. Since it uses the video/monitor output of the computer, ZvBox has the most extensive compatibility with all forms of Internet content and local media, without adding any additional processing load on the computer. In addition to video content, ZvBox extends any computer application to the home's HDTVs, including email, web browsing, photos, and music. Because ZvBox is installed at the computer and uses the HDTV's embedded tuner, there is no set-top-box or wiring clutter in the living room. Inputs/Outputs - USB V2, full speed and high speed, Type B connector, High Density 15-pin male DSUB VGA1, High Density 15-pin male DSUB VGA2, F-Type female cable TV Cable, and HDTV with digital-cable ready tuner System Requirements - Microsoft Windows XP with Service Pack 2; Microsoft Windows Vista, 2-Ghz CPU Processor, 2GB DRAM, 50MB Free Space, Two free USB 1.0 or 2.0, high-speed or full speed ports, and Broadband with 6 Mbps download speed Dimensions - Width 11.41 x Height 1.38 x Depth 4.02 (290x35x102mm) Weight - 550 grams



Product Details
ZeeVee ZvBox
  • Electronics: 0 pages (2008-08-03)
  • Publisher: ZeeVee
  • Label: ZeeVee
  • Studio: ZeeVee
  • Average Customer Review: 3 Star based on 4 reviews
  • Sales Rank in Electronics: #4355


Customer Reviews
Avg. Customer Review:3 Star

6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 4 Star
Summary: Works..but setup is just not easy.... 2008-08-16
Comment: First of all, I am very excited that after 2 hours of hard working I finally got it to work on one of my HDTV..

Pro: The concept is awesome and it does work.
Con: Try to make it work takes a lot of patience and time...
According to the manual, you supposed to know where your main cable comes in..and put a filter there... and here is my problem, my home is brand new and I have over 20 coax cables in the little cable box that corresponding to different wall plugs in the home, and I had to dig hard to find the one that actually comes from outside.... But now, I can't get it to work with my old 37' HDTV monitor. I bought a Samsung DTBH260F as an external tuner, hoping it would work with zeevee box, but no luck yet.....it would really suck if zeevee box can't work with those hold HDTV-ready monitors

Support is great by the way.


1 of 15 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 1 Star
Summary: I dont get it 2008-08-15
Comment: I dont get it. Why I should spend $400 to buy this instead of connect my laptop/PC to my HDTV via DVI cable which only cost me $40 or less?


4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 4 Star
Summary: ZvBox 2008-08-13
Comment: What could I say, this product rocks. I got it fast and it was very easy to setup. Blu-ray and Hulu look great but there are few bugs with software. Also the support is excellent they have told me that they are working on a software fix and will be out soon.

Rakesh



20 of 24 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 3 Star
Summary: Not ready for primetime. 2008-08-08
Comment: The positives:

* This is a very creative approach to getting around the issue of streaming HD content (actually, VGA content) throughout the home. ZeeVee's paradigm is to broadcast your content from a PC over an unused cable channel...this is a great concept since it doesn't rely on any of the host of other transmission conduits that have have either not been reliable enough or deliver the adequate bandwidth necessary to get the job done, e.g. wireless, powerline, etc...

* When all is said and done, the product DOES work.

HOWEVER...(the negatives)...

* The installation guide just casually expects you to find the root source of the cable signal coming into your home and to hook in a little signal "reflecting" device to ensure your personal channel doesn't transmit all over the neighborhood. Otherwise, conceivably, your neighbor could watch your movies with you, watch you do your banking online, etc... If you install this device anywhere else on your cable line inside the house, you risk cutting off parts of your home from receiving your personal channel.

Now, perhaps in Massachusetts where these guys are based, that's no big deal since cable TV service was patched onto homes that were already decades old. Here in California, the cable connection is relatively embedded...it was installed when the home was built. While it's possible that I could go outside and open up the TV service panel and figure out some way to do all of that without losing signal fidelity, I'm less than excited about actually doing the deed. For many, I'd expect that this is far beyond their technical capability.

* Software stability issues. I installed the requisite driver software on a Vista PC, and my PC seems to be running into technical issues on a pretty regular basis. This is a "clean" PC--i.e. there's hardly anything installed on it to interfere--so I'd simply point out that you might expect to run into some software glitches initially.

* Image issues. I'm not going to nitpick the quality of the image transmitted (which is fine within all reasonable standards), but more about how its configuration is absolutely frustrating. First, the assumption is made that you'll simply patch their box onto the existing VGA line running from your PC to monitor. I hate to tell the manufacturers this, but it's 2008 and folks who are buying a device such as this probably are not living in a world of analog video signals. Nonetheless, I hooked it up to a laptop and found the software messing absolutely everything up on PC...screens going blank, resolutions being changed, etc...

In terms of usability, the problem ultimately was that even with the device's "calibration" capability, it was impossible to properly frame your PC's screen on the TV. For example, you're supposed to properly position a picture of a flower on the TV in order to ensure your video output will fit similarly. The first problem is that the image of the flower isn't 16:9...it's off somewhat, so you're fighting a battle of trying to figure out whether to crop off the top/bottom of your screen image or have black vertical bars on either side.

Ultimately, it seems to be impossible to get back to the point of trying to re-calibrate the Flower from Heck...the software keeps crashing (see earlier feedback), so in my case, I simply had to live with the minor issue of having no ribbon bar or start menu on the bottom of my screen.

* Fidgety remote. Again, I like the concept of having a single remote control that can command the host PC into opening windows, launching videos, etc... The problem is that there is a serious lag issue...you move the mouse on your remote, and about 3/4 of a second later, the mouse spurts around on-screen, somewhat uncontrollably. The remote, which is wireless, was only about two feet from the included receiver, so signal strength shouldn't have been an issue.

* Thou Shalt Be Channel 125. On a separate aside, you are "forced" to being on a single, pre-selected channel, all of which is dependent on which "reflector" is packaged in your box. (I guess 125 and 135 are the two models they're shipping out.) Unfortunately, both 125 and 135 are "real" channels on my cable system, so you effectively have to forfeit the content delivered by your cable provider. Theoretically, you can ask for a different reflector on a different channel, but I suspect they're going to give you the choice between...channel 125 and channel 135.

CONCLUSION

This is a cool technology to try out, but unless you're just a real nerd who likes the idea of creating his own TV channel and possibly hijacking neighbors' TV sets, I'd sit out this generation of product and wait for 2.0.

Wait for:

* the software to become more stable
* for some easier implementation of "reflectors"/filters (possibly like how DSL does it...a different filter available for each cable connection throughout the house.)
* for a DVI connection, not VGA (duh!), which should also lead to fewer "calibration" issues.



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