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Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080

Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080
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Sale Price: $99.99
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Roku XDS Streaming Player 1080p


Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080 Overview
Hands down the best experience on 1080p HD streaming to TV-plus motion-based gaming for an extra dose of great entertainment. Enjoy 290+ channels featuring the best movies, TV shows, live sports, games, music, and more, including Netflix, Hulu Plus, and Amazon Instant Videos. Angry Birds included FREE !!!

Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080 Features 
  • 300+ channels with movies, TV shows, music, sports & more
  • High-definition streaming up to 1080p HD
  • Works with virtually any TV
  • Enhanced remote with motion control for playing games
  • Built-in wireless (Wi-Fi b/g/n) and wired Internet connectivity
  • Enhanced remote with motion control for games
  • Angry Birds game
  • Two AA batteries
  • HDMI video output (for high-definition)
  • Composite A/V combo output (for standard-definition; works with included A/V cable)
  • Wireless (Wi-Fi b/g/n)
  • Ethernet port
  • USB port or playing videos, music, and photos**
  • A/V cable (red/white/yellow)
  • Power adapter
  • Get Started guide
  • 90-day manufacturer warranty

Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080 video Review



Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080 Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
 Smart little puck, as good as (but different from) Apple TV, July 29, 2011
By 
Jon Folkers (Silver Spring, MD United States)

This review is from: Roku 2 XS Streaming Player 1080 (Electronics)
This little player, about the size of a hockey puck, is exactly what I was looking for. It's cheap, easy, and fun. I got it to play Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Vimeo, and everything else it does is a pleasant add-on, especially motion-controlled Angry Birds. If you're in the market for a Roku 2, I think you might as well get this high-end model (there are stripped-down versions for less money) since it has a few more capabilities, including a game controller, an ethernet jack, and a USB port for playing external files. The software interface is not slick but everything fast and responsive.

I've docked one star from my review because my unit has crashed/rebooted a few times, possibly as a result of the Facebook photo screensaver I've installed on it. I hope this issue will be fixed with a software update. Waiting for the machine to restart takes a few minutes. Also, there are a few features I'd like to see (mostly things the Apple TV can do, see below), but for what this thing is, it does its job quite well.

How is the Roku 2 different from the Apple TV (which it resembles, and I also considered)? It's physically similar and has some overlapping features, but here are the main differences as I see them:

BOTH have Netflix Streaming and sports channels such as NBA and MLB (subscription required for this stuff). Both have wired and wireless network capabilities. Both are tiny, power-sipping, unobtrusive little devices that could probably be embedded in TV hardware.

AppleTV (not the Roku 2!) has tight iTunes integration, including iTunes movie rentals, streaming from a local PC/Mac with iTunes installed, and YouTube. AirPlay (stream to the box from your iOS device) is supported and works well and adds to the usability of this device if you have an iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch. At this time, you can only use the "apps" that are included with the box. The AppleTV remote is made of attractive aluminum but relies on line-of-sight infrared signals. AppleTV requires an HDTV to work and displays up to 720p resolutions.

Roku 2 (the product being reviewed! not AppleTV!) has a "channel" installer which you can easily manage via a web app on your computer. This system is a bit less polished, but a lot more open than the AppleTV system. Roku Channel choices include Amazon Prime videos, Amazon rentals, Vimeo, Hulu Plus, Pandora Radio, and bunch of streaming news and movie services. The Wii-like game remote comes with Angry Birds and more 2D casual games are promised. The game controller has built-in accelerometers and game-friendly buttons, and it works well for this game. This layout would be ideal for Super Nintendo style games, too. I like how it doesn't require an IR receiver like the Wii remote does. The tiny Roku 2 box has an IR receiver so you can use a universal remote with it, but the included remote uses RF signals and doesn't need line-of-sight to the box. Roku 2 XS can run on pretty much any TV (it includes component cables) and can display up to 1080p resolutions.

As you can see, these two machines are similar, but not the same. I chose this machine because it worked with an old SDTV, could play Amazon Prime videos (lots of kids programming on there, thanks Amazon), and offers a nice, standalone alternative to the Apple ecosystem.