Typical price: £1,015
What is it: Media Center PC with built-in 5.1 hi-fi amplifier
What we think: The A33 is one of the best looking and most inventive Media Center machines we've seen
Asus A33 Review
Reviewed on: 28 January 2008
Features
Asus has taken the less trendy option of using an AMD chipset and CPU
in its A33 Media Center PC. In this case it's the AMD 690 chipset and
the X2 4000 CPU. The latter is a dual-core model clocked at 2.1GHz,
which isn't so fast that it needs loads of noisy cooling, but isn't so
slow that it will cause your media to judder or skip. In combination
with the monstrous 4GB of RAM, it makes a good foundation for a PC of
this ilk.

The A33 suffers the same graphical limitations as any Media Center PC in that it uses a low-end graphics card. Again, a high-end GPU would require more cooling from a fan or cooling assembly that generates more noise, so it's understandable, if a tad regrettable, that Asus has opted for an ATI Radeon Xpress 1250. As a result, the A33 isn't capable of playing demanding games, and it's recommended video playback mode is only 1080i or 720p.
All the best Media Center PCs come with a TV tuner, and the A33 is no exception. It uses two hybrid tuners that can either display analogue or digital broadcasts. This is great because you can run them in analogue mode if your home aerial isn't good enough to receive digital Freeview TV. What's more, Media Center will let you watch one channel while you record three others simultaneously.
As discussed, the A33 has a number of video output options. The one
that will prove most popular is probably HDMI. It has just a single
HDMI port, which is compatible with the HDMI 1.2 standard and,
according to Asus, supports audio over HDMI -- although we couldn't get
this feature to work.
Storage on the A33 is modest, but acceptable given the machine's relatively low price point. It comes with a 500GB hard drive, which is capable of storing a few hundred hours of video. To give you an idea, Media Center can record DVD quality video at a rate of approximately 1GB per hour.
The A33's trump card is its integrated power amplifier. Asus initially planned to release a 500W amp, but this has since been reduced to 300W in the final version of the A33. Despite the slight reduction, the A33 is still able to drive six separate audio channels -- two front channels, two rear channels, a centre channel and a subwoofer -- without the need for a separate amplifier.
This is great for anyone that wants more choice when deciding what speakers to go for. No longer do you have to resort to dedicated PC speakers such as those from Creative or others, because you can now buy a set of passive high-end speakers and connect them directly to the PC.
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Asus A33
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Desktop Reviews
Apple iMac (27-inch, unibody, 2009)
Although not much faster than its predecessor, the LED-backlit display and spec tweaks are welcome
ViewSonic VPC100
Not particularly exciting, but it's cheap and offers a relatively large display for a nettop
Dell Studio XPS 435
Despite some missing features, it's a decent all-rounder, and it looks good for a Dell desktop too
on Desktops
Advent Centurion, Firefly and Verona: Stocking thrillers
Hold the front page: PC World's just unveiled the Centurion gaming desktop, the Firefly budget home PC, and the lightweight Verona laptop
More:






