There are ways to turn a PC into a home entertainment center but who wants a PC in the living room? A better idea would be something smaller and simpler ? a specialized machine whose only job is to download movies and TV shows galore. Well, Netflix, Vudu, Xbox, Apple and Amazon all offer boxes that do just that. Although some of them offer only standard-definition video, they'll reportedly jump to HD content soon. Charlie White from device.com was lucky enough to get his hands and eyes on all these boxes, assessing the quality of both their user experience and downloads.
On the plus side, it?s dumb-easy to set up, letting you tap into an Ethernet connection or Wi-Fi. I also really like the excellent fast-forward controls, letting you skip to parts of the video you haven't even streamed to yet. After a few seconds, the butter-smooth, hitch-free playback resumes. As soon as this baby goes HD, it?ll be worth its $100 price (plus a Netflix membership) ? as long as there's content to go with it.
After going through an annoying setup process, where you must deal with both the TiVo and the Amazon website, your credit-card payment routine is automatic, charging you $3.99 for rentals of current movies, and $14.99 to buy. Older titles are cheaper, but most rentals require you to watch them within a month ? and if you start watching, you have 24 hours to finish. You can?t watch the video immediately, though. It doesn?t even start downloading for four or five minutes, but once it gets sufficient buffer footage after a minute or two (on our fast 14-megabit connection), you can start. Once it's on your TiVo, the process feels like watching anything on a DVR.
Apple TV is user-friendly, as you?d expect, but there?s no way to skip ahead into parts of the movie you haven?t downloaded yet, as you can do with Netflix. Still, I like the network-smart Apple TV, which links up with iTunes on my PC, letting me play all my songs from there in my home theater. But the thin choice of HD titles leaves me lukewarm.
There?s a weird currency here, called ?points,? presumably to get you to forget you?re spending real money. But 500 Microsoft points cost $6.25, and to rent a current HD hit is 480 points. A quick bit of math tells me that means you?ll spend $6.00 to rent a recent HD film. You also have to watch the rental within 24 hours. It?s a good system, but the worst part is dealing with the XBox 360's noisy fan.Vudu is slowly building up its movie-starved HD repertoire, and I noticed many of the same Oscar winners and oldsters populating its titles list that are also on most of the others. Most HD titles are renting for between $3.99 and $5.99. I wasn?t as impressed with Vudu?s picture quality, however, looking murky compared to Apple TV but a whole lot better than the underwater-like Netflix videos. Worse, the sound seems to be slightly out of sync with the picture, at least when using the separate optical audio output.

If you don?t want to break the law, nor have a pesky PC cluttering up your living room, these set-tops are works in progress that are getting better all the time. Even so, the best set-top box is still a PC hooked up to a fast Internet connection.
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