Buy this item from our featured Merchant - Featured Price: $185.99 |
Product Reviews: D-Link DSM-320 Wireless Media Player, Audio/Photo/Video, 802.11g |
Rating: 1 (out of 5) Summary: Right concept, wrong hardware Comments: I purchased this media player despite the questionable reviews. I figured if they had to do with setup I could figure out.
The setup was fairly easy and I got it working in no time. I even got videos to stream from my PC even when the router was on the 1st floor and the media player was downstairs.
The problem is the hardware. D-Link needs to fire all their programmers because they do not know how to program worth anything. I settled for the awful UI however that's not why I bout it, however the devide would lock up more often than it would work and twice already I have had to return it to D-Link to get a replacement. The kicker is that they do not pay for the shipping to them so I have had to foot the bill. If I keep this up I'll spend more in shipping charges than the actual device!!
Look, save your money and do not bother with this. You can spend a little bit more and get a xbox 360 and use it as both a game console and a wireless media player. The UI is10times better and the hardware is flawless.
|
Rating: 1 (out of 5) Summary: HATE HATE HATE This !!@#% Piece of Garbage KILL KILL KILL Comments: Even my wife and kids hate this thing. Just work for once, please, without me having to call tech support, who always make you do the same 5 things and nothing works. I want my 15 hours of life back Dlink. This product BLOWS CHUNKS. I want the engineers who maked it to have to sit on the phone for a day with various tech support people from another country and be forced to repeat the same 5 steps over and over.
The beauty is that when it breaks (often), it's always something new and exciting. Of course you haven't changed a single thing since the last time you turned it on.
I wouldn't even waste my baseball bat on beating this thing hanging from a rope. I HATE the DSM-320 and hope it burns in hell forever.
*** Update ***
Uninstall the OLD media server that comes with it BEFORE trying to install the updated (1.10) version. You know, because the software engineers knew that you'd be smart enough to do that since you OBVIOUSLY have to do it with all your other software that you upgrade.
So now it works, even for videos, however I still want my 15 hours of life back, to erase the frustrated look on eone's faces who is waiting for the movie to start, etc. I still hate you DSM-320. Just a little less now. |
Rating: 1 (out of 5) Summary: Apple TV its not Comments: I purchased this when it 1st came out and was disappointed. I was finally able to play videos, and music even from my PC, however the process was time consuming and never seamlessly enough to be used regularly. skipping through videos was a total waist. often crashing the video and was too picky about just how the video was encoded. e now and then I see it in the back of closet and think. I bet they have fixed all this, so I drag it out to find out still no updates. The DSM 320 came out when MicroSoft 1st tried to strong arm the media center PC on eone, at that time you could not purchase the software or build your own. In the end I purchased an Apple TV and haven't looked back. |
Rating: 3 (out of 5) Summary: Such potential!! (however alas...) Comments: I struggled over purchaseing this thing. I wanted a turn-key solution; I am just getting too old to trial-and-error all this stuff and find the 'magic combination' to the modern-wonder of watching electronic-media on your home entertainment system.
Still - the price dropped enough I said "what the heck" and dove in. D-link has been a solid company with other products, why not? Do glean greaties from all the other reviews, however I'll highlight my PROs and CONs here:
great: * UI decent, actual playback of media not too bad. (almost allly video, I have not tried to suffer audio or music; our TIVO does that and it does it well so why mess with it).
* The machine can detect and talk well across a home-network.
BAD: * Audio is WAY OFF (too low) compared to your other input devices; etime we have to crank the volume WAY up and then remember to take it down when going back to other media sources. D-link needs to fix this.
* Playback of video was troublesome at 1st (I stream media from a Synology CS470e which did an OK job before the last firmware upgrade and does a fabulous job now with the v2 of the firmware). Playback now is hampered by no FF or REV!! You better not pause either; it's re-starts-ville. Working with D-link email support to figure out why/who/how this all happens. It's a bug that's media-agnostic and server-agnostic as well.
* Boot-up is slow; either a sluggish ramp-up or alot of start-up loading. Sugg just leave the blasted thing on when you start your entertainment system (our Harmony remote is trained to leave this puppy alone on power-cycles.)
Overall my suggestions: (do not set your expectations high on streaming video content to your entertainment system easily here. I did not try the wireless config; just pulled a CAT-5 and called it done. If I had 20-20 hindsight I'd have waited till D-link released the next firmware for this baby (with hopes it clears up alot of problems) and then give it another try.) That's kinda the story with my synology, the next version of the firmware was so much more mature and powerful it's like getting a whole new box for free.
great luck!! |
Rating: 1 (out of 5) Summary: do not waste your money Comments: D-Link DSM-320 Wireless Media Player, Audio/Photo/Video, 802.11g This product appears to be running a linux-based OS, and will "crash" on any video file that is over 4 GB in size, and sometimes on smaller files. I was able to get a full refund after sending samples to their engineers who never fixed the problems. I replaced this unit with a LINKSYS WMCE54AG, which is a real Media Center Extender (and cost about $100 more) although it will randomly crash on occasion requiring a complete reboot by cycling power.
It should be noted that none of these units is supported on WINDOWS VISTA: in the inimitable Microsoft fashion, VISTA will only support the XBOX 360 as a media center extender. This is why I still run the XP version of Media Center edition and have refused to "upgrade" to VISTA. |