Philips MCP9350i review

The big brands have jumped on the media centre bandwagon

TechRadar Verdict

The big decider is whether you buy into Philips picture processing

Pros

  • +

    interesting proprietary software

    quiet

    great connectivity

Cons

  • -

    Strange artefacts on DVD and broadcast pictures

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Considering that media centre PCs have been around for a year or two, it's a wonder that the bigger brands haven't already saturated the market with the buggers. But it's an area of home cinema that has remained largely exclusive to computer specific companies and smaller installer friendly start-ups (aside from Sony's numerous tepid attempts with proprietary software- driven Viaos).

Until now. Philips, the Dutch consumer electronic superpower, has just entered the fray with a machine that makes the most of the company's unrivalled picture processing experience.

Rear-mounted connections are more akin to AV kit than computers too. Obvious PC additions exist, such as DVI (which can double as an HDMI out using the included adaptor) and VGA video ports, but an RGB-enabled Scart output is fairly unusual round these parts. It's also heartening to find an optical digital audio output alongside a coaxial one - usually such machines just feature the latter.

Admittedly, the MCP9350i is not without faults, mainly thanks to the fact that no matter how much you hide it with fancy bells and whistles, it's still a computer at heart and needs tender loving care. But, Philips has done a very good job of bringing full convergence a little closer to the AV world, at least aesthetically. It's near silent in operation (similar to a DVD recorder) and is ready to go from the box. The big decider is whether you buy into Philips picture processing. Rik Henderson

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