The problem with most Media Center PCs is this: they're too loud. Nine out of ten MCE systems are based around muscle processors like the P4, and these have a tendency to run hot and need constant cooling.

The whine of overworked fans means that they make better Media Servers (stuck in a cupboard where they can be as noisy as they like) than Media Centers (which should be small, silvery and about as rowdy as a DVD player).

This XC Cube offers a different approach. It's one of only a few desktop PCs fitted with an 855GME motherboard, rejecting the gas-guzzling P4 in favour of a lounge-friendly Pentium M running at 1.8GHz.

While this Pentium M makes the XC Cube much quieter, it's not entirely silent. When TV is showing there's an incessant hum on the very edge of hearing, but no fan noise to speak of. Consequently, it's nowhere near as distracting as a Media Center based on an Athlon 64 or Pentium 4 processor. There is, however, a small trade-off in terms of speed - flicking between the options in Microsoft's entertainment OS often feels a little sluggish. Once the 200GB hard disk is chock full of videos, music and photos, this could get worse.

Size isn't everything

Despite its size, the XC Cube isn't light on features. In this Media Center incarnation, Hi Grade has opted to fill the 5.25-inch drive bay with a slot-loading DVD-RW/DVD-RAM drive, while a memory card reader occupies the 3.5-inch bay. This is vertically mounted and hidden behind a plastic flap to the left of the drive. A similar flap below the power button (which has a blazingly blue LED backlight) conceals an array of handy front connections.

The AOpen chassis looks like a traditional Shuttle, albeit with the top-third sliced off, and it boasts the same elegant black finish and silver trim as the fashionable Shuttle XPC. Hi Grade has fitted out this particular XC Cube as a full system, but it's worth noting that AOpen also supplies the MZ855-II case as a barebones option. As a guide price, Microdirect (www.microdirect.co.uk) are currently offering a Pentium M-ready version for £229 (£195 ex VAT).