Acer MG3001-P review

Acer's latest networked multimedia client goes hi-def

TechRadar Verdict

It does a lot of things right but some minor niggles annoy

Pros

  • +

    Smart design

  • +

    Wide format support

  • +

    HD Ready

Cons

  • -

    Search modes

  • -

    Unreliabe software

  • -

    No 5.1 passthrough

  • -

    Some bugs

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Networked multimedia clients - or 'media gateways', as they're often known - are becoming increasingly significant.

These devices stream video, audio and photos off PCs on your home network, and feed the content of your choice to an AV system. Perhaps the best-known example to date is the Pinnacle ShowCenter range, although other companies including Philips and Hauppauge sell these useful yet affordable devices.

Performance

Picture and sound quality are both good - with standard-def video expect pictures akin to a decent budget DVD player. Subject to encoding, the reproduction of DiVX and WMVs also impresses; lip-sync problems are thankfully rare. 720p and 1080i HDTV clips also shine; with my Hitachi PJ-TX100 1280 x 720-resolution projector, natural details and colour rendition were simply sublime. But there are some caveats. Firstly, digital audio passthrough is not, unlike the ShowCenter, supported.

In other words, it's incompatible with 5.1 Dolby Digital and DTS soundtracks from ripped DVDs (which will play if the VOB files are renamed to MPG). Indeed, such files are eerily silent; the MG3001-p will only handle stereo audio. There are also anomalies with the 720p/1080i video outputs. The output is 50Hz, even with standard-def 60Hz material, and as a result 60Hz video, whether standard or hi-def, is juddery. The only get-around is to switch to one of the standard-def output modes, and then the output matches the refresh rate.

Do this, though, and the benefits of upscaling 480p material to hi-def are lost - and you're forced to choose between high resolution/lots of judder or standard resolution/less judder when playing HD material! Acer should also know that the MG3001-p's search modes also need attention. 'Reviewing' (reverse-searching) doesn't work with MPEG-2 or MPEG-4 - all you get is a 'prohibited' on-screen graphic. Cueing (i.e. forward-searching) does work, but only at 2x (even if 4x/8x is selected).

Sometimes, you can't get out of the cue mode and so you have to exit playback and start again. A useful get-around is a percentage-based skip' function (which uses the the left/right arrow keys). This works much better, and in both directions to boot! Note that photos are only displayed in standarddef, even when the device is working in its 720p or 1080i mode. Another annoyance is that you can't turn off the front-panel fluorescent display, the scrolling glow of which can be quite distracting in a dark media room.

There's quite a lot to like about the MG3001-p, but it's spoilt by some bugs and idiosyncracies. And until these are sorted out, Pinnacle's ShowCenter 200 will remain our media gateway of choice. Martin Pipe

TOPICS

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