NETWORK STREAMING
The ASRock Vision 3D 252B is covered quite nicely with respect to
networking hardware. With support for both Gigabit Ethernet and 802.11n, it
really doesn't matter if you keep the unit beyond cable reach from the router.
All our network streaming tests were carried out with a 300 Mbps 802.11n
network (currently provided in my lab location by a RT-N16 802.11n gigabit
router from Asus). We were easily able to stream HD clips of more than 50 Mbps.
HD YouTube videos and HD Netflix streaming had no issues.
While on the topic of network streaming, let us take a brief look at how
the system performs while accessing online video services. We used Flash 11.2
in Firefox with NVIDIA's v301.24 drivers for testing. The first set of
screenshots below show the CPU usage while playing back a 1080p YouTube video
with hardware acceleration enabled. This is the same clip used in all the other
SFF HTPC reviews.
1080p YouTube HD Streaming with Hardware Acceleration (Flash in Firefox)
Netflix streaming, on the other hand, uses Microsoft's Silverlight
technology. Unlike Flash, hardware acceleration for the video decode process is
not controlled by the user. It is upto the server side code to attempt GPU
acceleration. Thankfully, Netflix does try to take advantage of the GPU's
capabilities. This is evident from the A/V stats recorded while streaming a
Netflix HD video at the maximum possible bitrate of 3.8 Mbps. While the video
is definitely not 1080p, we observe that the CPU utilization of around 18% is
lower than the CPU usage for a 1080p YouTube video.
Netflix HD Streaming with Hardware Acceleration
Users of media streamers streaming online videos often have to put up
with messages of the sort 'This content is not available on TV connected
devices' or need to queue up the videos on a PC before accessing them through
their media streamer box. HTPC users don't need to worry about any such
limitations. On a side note, it is disappointing to see Netflix restrict its
1080p / DD+ 5.1 offerings to the PS3 and Roku 2. It is the PC platform which
launched the streaming business for Netflix. It would be good if they do not
relegate HTPC users to being second string consumers as their popularity grows.
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