PCs are generally all about raw power rather than their suitability for your living room. Switch on the latest and greatest systems, and your ears will be assaulted by the sound of air being drawn through the system to keep the innards cool. In other words your average PC is uniquely unsuited to the task of acting as the PC at the centre of your digital home. They tend to look bloody awful at the same time.

Watford, however, is clearly aware of these shortcomings and so has gone back to the drawing board in order to create the Aries Media Experience, discarding everything that is generally taken for granted with PCs in the process.

And this is definitely a good thing. The very fact that this resembles a DVD player more than a PC is clearly a move in the right direction. You certainly won't have any doubts about its compatibility with the other components in your system when sliding it into your rack.

There are a few tell-tale signs that this isn't your standard piece of audio visual equipment - the grille above the processor is designed for functionality rather than for aesthetic styling, for instance.

The flap on the front of the machine concealing four USB ports and a Firewire socket is a slightly bigger indicator when it's open. And if you peer around the back of the machine, it will give the game away completely. Keyboard and mouse ports are fairly rare on normal kit, but saying that, dual TV tuner cards are fairly scarce on PCs too.

When you first turn the machine on, the sound of the fan spinning up is quite alarming - it feels as if the whole camouflage thing is wasted, but then the system quietens down completely before Windows has finished booting. And in fact we never heard the fan reach anything close to the initial volume while in operation, even under the most exacting test conditions.

The AMD Sempron 2800 processor at the heart of this system isn't exactly a cutting edge chip, which means it does run cooler than most of the competition anyway, yet despite that it should be powerful enough for anything that you would want to do with MS Media Center 2005.