Sling Media Slingbox Pro
Verdict
Ideal for streaming TV around the house and on the internet, but it's pricey.
Review Date: 10 Oct 2007
Price when reviewed: (£180 inc VAT)
Overall Rating

If you've ever wanted to watch your home TV when abroad, or just in a different room, the Slingbox Pro is for you. It's an update to the original Slingbox (web ID: 88750), which we recommended when launched almost 18 months ago. Essentially, it digitises a video source and streams it onto the internet, which you can then access on PC client software either locally or remotely.
There's a new case and some extra inputs, with S-Video, composite and a proprietary HDMI look-a-like connection, to which the component video cable attaches. Each also has a passthrough so as not to disrupt your existing setup. While you can hook up an HD source (up to 1080i), the maximum resolution for streaming remains 640 x 480.
Sling Media has cranked the bit rate to 8Mb/sec; up from the Classic model's 2.5Mb/sec. With an HD DVD player, the full 8Mb/sec was soon saturated, whereas the built-in Freeview tuner never required more than 2Mb/sec. The difference in quality between the two was clear, with the former appearing much sharper and more detailed.
Most broadband connections have an upload speed of around 256Kb/sec, which hamstrings video quality when you're connecting via the internet rather than your local network. Fortunately, optimising algorithms can turn this low-bit rate stream into watchable video.
Setup is simple. Connect the video devices you want to be able to watch remotely - a Sky+ box, a PVR or even a home security camera - and point the infrared emitters at a receiver. Popular models are pre-programmed - even down to an onscreen version of the remote in the PC software.
The SlingPlayer software's wizard connects to the unit on your local wired network (there's no Wi-Fi) and helps you open the port on your router for remote access. You're then given a 34-digit code to identify your Slingbox over the internet. If you know your WAN IP address, you can use this instead to connect directly.
If you travel regularly, or just want to stream channels to a different room in the house, the Slingbox Pro is an attractive and flexible choice. But, at £180, it isn't cheap. You can still buy a Slingbox Classic for around £90, so if you can live with an S-Video input and 2.5Mb/sec streaming, it's a better value choice until the Pro's price drops. We'd also suggest looking at the Orb software (www.orb.com) to see if that will suit your needs.
Author: Jim Martin
advertisement
- Can Palm stay alive?
- Security expert breaks into TV star's Facebook account
- Government puts biologist in charge of broadband
- Viacom accused of polluting YouTube
- HP censured over faulty laptops
- Palm "deeply disappointed" by financial results
- Windows 7 SP1 to deliver "minor tweaks"
- Facebook draws line under Beacon debacle
- Windows 7 XP Mode now runs on all processors
- Browser ballot "boosts Opera downloads by 85%"
- How to fix online surveys
- What's that eggy smell in the server room?
- How to change the default template in Word 2007
- Book review: Rework by Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson
- Panorama parents deserve their file-sharing fine
- Google and BT offer free website service to British businesses
- Lords' last chance to protect broadband customers
- Extreme handwriting recognition on the Dell Latitude XT2
- 12 surprising things that Wolfram Alpha knows
- Nokia N900: phone or pocket computer?
- On test: the hidden seven browsers in the Windows ballot
- The dark side of the web
- Is the CPU dead?
- Five GPS games to play with your smartphone
- The Complete Guide to Office 2010
- The complete guide to Office 2010: OneNote
- The complete guide to Office 2010: Business
- The complete guide to Office 2010: Web Apps
- The complete guide to Office 2010: Word
- The Complete Guide to Office 2010: PowerPoint
- The ease of hacking a WEP network
- Delving into the Norton 2010 line-up
- Banish your Wi-Fi woes
- How to commit Facebook suicide
- Which smartphone keyboard is the best?
- We can beat the botnets
- Paying for code doesn’t mean owning it
- Cracking the iSCSI conundrum
- The perfect open-source task scheduler
- Exploring Microsoft Office 2010 beta
advertisement



Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk