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Apple TV
Own an HDTV? Well, get ready for the age of ATV. Let's recap: Al Gore created the Internet, and, on the seventh day, he rested. Immediately, entrepreneurs began selling pornography, and the World Wide Web had a purpose. Before long, people started posting videos of their dogs belching the national anthem, and, yet, an entertainment-hungry globe craved more. A bunch of other stuff happened, and now Apple has been selling songs, music videos, TV episodes, and feature-length movies via the iTunes Store,embedded in the free iTunes application for Mac and PC. While digital-rights management protects purchased video and audio (although this may be changing), you can enjoy it at the computer and upload it to various iPod portable devices. Still, a growing contingent yearns to relocate its premium content to the comfort of the living room with due ease and elegance.
Beyond the Desktop
You can connect the Apple TV via the built-in Wi-Fi antenna or via Ethernet. An 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi antenna is hidden inside the Apple TV, or you can connect the Apple TV via Ethernet to a wired home network. This method will get you the fastest data transfer, but it's the least convenient, as most people simply do not have a network cable that runs into their living room. Wi-Fi is easy, it's cool, and, with the dawn of 802.11n, it can also be extremely quick, with potentially five times the throughput and double the range of the previous champ, 802.11g. Not coincidentally, Apple has also introduced their newest router, the AirPort Extreme 802.11n Wi-Fi wireless Base Station ($179). It installs fairly easily, thanks to the bundled utility software. It also performs swimmingly, although any B, G, or N router should work. (Wireless video streaming demands a G or N network; B is fine for music streaming.) The host computer requires iTunes 7.1 or later to work with the Apple TV. Once you've connected the Apple TV to the television—and a home theater receiver, if you want—and you've specified a network connection, you need to walk a five-digit code back to the computer and input it into iTunes, which by now recognizes Apple TV as a connected device. Apple TV starts synchronizing, or copying, your iTunes library automatically, but you can easily customize it while it's running, so you can painlessly select which files to duplicate to the hard drive. Such transfers will not eat up one of your five preset FairPlay usages allowed under Apple's DRM; rather, this is the same type of unrestricted sharing to an approved device as with an iPod. A friend can also bring over his iTunes-equipped laptop, connect to the network, and stream his latest movie download to the Apple TV. The USB 2.0 port on the back of the unit is for "maintenance and diagnostic use only," a claim that I immediately challenged by plugging in my iPod. It powered up and eventually charged, but the Apple TV menus in no way acknowledged that it was there. It only took two minutes and 45 seconds to sync a two-part Grey's Anatomy episode. That's a 1-GB file in a relative wink of an eye compared with the hours it took to download from the iTunes Store. Some songs copy in less than a second, which is pretty amazing over a wireless connection. Even though I could hear my hard disk drive grinding away, my PC did not take a performance hit during the transfer, although your mileage may vary depending on the speed of your computer. Apple TV also streams movie trailers directly via broadband Internet without the need of a computer. When I tried this, it just took a few seconds to buffer, and there was nary a hiccup. It was a smoother experience than on my PC, frankly. You can also stream 30-second clips of iTunes music, although you can't download content from the iTunes Store directly to the Apple TV. Using Apple's standard tiny white remote control, a novice can easily navigate the familiar iPod-style scrolling menus with their crisp white text against a black background. Further graphic enhancements note as-yet-unwatched programming with a blue dot, for example. An active screen-saver mode prevents burn-in on the plasmas or CRTs to which many users will surely connect this device. Component video is the lowest-quality output here, and the Apple TV is a widescreen-only device; it adds vertical black boxes to the left and right sides of 4:3 content to fit 16:9 displays. To warm the cockles of the missus' heart, you can display your personal photos during periods of nonuse. Images of flowers and such are preloaded, should you not wish to put your kids' mugs on display. Or you can display album-cover art to show the world how cool and eclectic you are. The album art and info flips over when you play a song, which further safeguards sensitive screens. You can also configure slide shows with music.
In short, Apple TV is a joy to use, its contents handpicked by yours truly, displayed on a big, sharp screen, and with the option of after-the-fact audio enhancement like Dolby Pro Logic II by my receiver, all from the comfort of my sofa. The whole approach is a bit of a paradox, though, with the incongruity between these state-of-the-art connections and the fundamentally limited technical quality of iTunes downloads. The hardware supports high-definition playback up to a native 720p/24 frames per second. But you'll have to convert your own DV-camera footage in the Expert Settings of QuickTime or download from elsewhere if you crave video that will flaunt the Apple TV's top-end resolution. Unless the fruitmeisters have some worthwhile high-definition programming standing by. . .?
Highlights
Article Continues: At A Glance & Ratings »
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How Many Movies Can You Squeeze in There?