Introducing the HP DV2, my new Mobile Media Center


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One of the things that has become very apparent to me over the last year is that my TV viewing habits have completely changed.  In the past, I would either watch TV shows live or DVR them and watch them later that same day or night.  Lately I have found that my wife and I often catch up with our favorite TV shows (Lost, Heroes, The Office, Lie To Me, and 24) on the weekend, when life slows down a bit.  We will either watch them on the DVR in our media room, or we will watch them using Hulu on our Bedroom TV (using a PC).   Occasionally we will even use our Slingbox to stream the shows from our media room to the PC in the bedroom.

Recently however, my bedroom PC has started to show its age, and has become a bit unreliable.  I decided one easy way for me to test out the DV2, was to hook it right to my TV and see what happened. 

I had a DV2 at the house anyway, since I was using one for AMD Fusion Media Explorer testing.  With the DV2’s nice and convenient HDMI port I figured this would be a snap.  I proceeded to run an HDMI cable between my Visio 37” LCD, and the DV2.  Within less than 5 minutes I was up and running.  While I was able to use the DV2’s integrated keyboard and mouse for navigation, I found myself missing the convenience of a wireless keyboard and mouse.  I hooked up my Gyration mouse, and it automatically loaded the driver and I was in business less than a minute later.

In addition to being able to stream content from my favorite TV sites (Hulu, Fancast, Veoh, TV.com, nbc.com, abc.com, etc.),  I was also able to watch my collection of archived movies, and TV shows, as well as Blu-Ray and DVD movies.  I like to save my movies and TV shows in either WMV or DiVX file formats.  Unfortunately, most CE devices won’t play either of these formats.  The nice thing about a PC, like the DV2, is support is only a codec install away.

Another feature I put to quick use, is the Sling Media Player, which comes preinstalled on the DV2.  I have only 1 cable box in my house, (and hoping to get to none when my Time Warner contract runs out), so I use a SlingBox to get premium content from that box to the rest of the house.  I have my DVR setup to automatically record many of the shows listed earlier in the post.  As soon as I clicked on the Sling icon, it found my SlingBox, and after entering my password, I was watching TV in seconds.  It was a very intuitive and seamless experience.

As for the video quality in each of these uses cases are concerned, here if what I found:

Blu-Ray – Excellent.  Looked about as good as my PS3

DiVX/WMV – Very Good.  While not as stunning as Blu-Ray, I was more than happy with the playback

Slingbox – Very Good.  It was as good as I had seen it on any other PC I have tried it on.

Youtube/Hulu – Good.  Youtube playback can only be as good as the content.  The DV2 seemed to play it as well as any other PC I have tried.  As for Hulu, my experience was mixed.  The visual quality was very good, but I did notice an occasional stutter.  My wife didn’t notice it though, so maybe I am just ultra picky.  It was still watchable, but wasn’t quite as smooth as it was on my quad-core “Dragon” platform system.

AMD Fusion Media Explorer – Good. Installing Fusion Media Explorer on the system was really the highlight of the experience for me.  Now I was able to surf the web while I watched TV or movies.  That is what I call “getting it done.”  Give me a 6 pack of Diet Coke and I am good for hours. 

I also really enjoyed the photo, music, and video experiences.  I found it very easy to navigate and find what I was looking for.  The performance of the ribbon isn’t as smooth as it is on higher end systems, but it was still quite usable.  I loved clicking on a song, and having it present music videos to me from Youtube.  I wasted about an hour just doing that. 

All said and done, I was really happy with my experience using the DV2 as a mobile media center.  The other nice thing is I can take it in the car and hand it to the kids in the back seat, and now they are good for hours.  As a standard notebook, the DV2 is great; but I really fell in love with this notebook’s better than expected multimedia capabilities.

Casey Gotcher is Director, Product Marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.

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  1. #1 by Surya - April 30th, 2009 at 18:03

    Hello, Casey. Sorry because this comment is not related with topic in your blog. I just want to suggest the name for the new platform if AMD bring the new light platform like netbook. I call this for the new AMD light platform, HANDBOOK. This name for PC product that is bigger than handled, but with more features like HDMI out with 1080P capability for bluray, wifi with bluetooth, wimax with 3G capability, and equipped with 8″ LCD in 1024 X 600 resolutions. This product is equipped with contacless smatcard reader/writer for secure authentication.

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