Typical price: £281
What is it: Large screen, 40GB portable video player with Wi-Fi support
What we think: An impressive big-screened portable media player with an exciting range of features but it needs some software tweaks before we'd wholeheartedly recommend it
Archos 704 Wi-Fi Review
Reviewed on: 25 May 2007
The Archos 704 Wi-Fi is the love child of a portable media player and a PDA. As you would expect, it can playback movies, pump out music and show digital snaps, but like a PDA it has a touchscreen, support for Wi-Fi and a built-in Web browser.
That may sound like a pretty quirky line-up of features, but for the most part, Archos has managed to meld them all together into an impressive portable device, which is available in 40GB and 80GB versions. We reviewed the 40GB version, which is around £280 online.
Design
The sheer size of the 704 means it's likely to act as a replacement for a portable DVD player rather than something like the video iPod. It has roughly the same footprint as a DVD case, but is about one and a half times as thick. Weighing in at 630g it's also quite heavy, but the case feels sturdy and the brushed-aluminium finish gives it an expensive look.
The large 7-inch touchscreen obviously makes it ideal for watching movies on planes, trains and automobiles, and also means that Archos has been able to dispose of many of the hardware controls you might expect on this type of player. Instead, the case is adorned with just three buttons. One is for power, the other switches from LCD to TV output and the third is used as a release button for the removable battery.
Having a removable battery is definitely a good idea on a player like this, as it's likely to be used by those who are away from a power socket for long periods of time. An extra battery can be purchased from the Archos site for €50 (£34).
Features
The 40GB hard drive on our test model is enough to store around 50 movies, 400,000 photos or 20,000 songs. A pretty wide range of formats is supported, including MPEG-4, WMV, MP3, WMA, JPEG and BMP.
To get the unit to play some other formats, however, such as MPEG-2 and H.264 video as well as AAC and AC3 audio, you have to buy downloadable plug-ins for €20 (£13.70) from the Archos site. This is annoying on a player that is already quite expensive. Also, subtitles currently aren't supported at all, which will not please the chin-stroking fans of European art-house cinema.
Almost all the features of the device are controlled via the touchscreen. Archos has improved the menu system on all its Series 4 players, of which this is one, but usability is still a long way off that of the iPod. Also, while the touchscreen works great with the stylus, it doesn't respond that well to finger presses -- often you have to use your nail rather than the tip of your finger to get it to register a button press.
The 704 can be used as a video recorder, but to get access to these features you have to shell out an extra €100 (£69) for the docking station. It has composite and S-Video inputs so you can record from a digital set-top box or a DVD player. It comes with its own remote control and also includes an IR blaster, which allows the player to automatically change channel on a set-top box when making timed recordings.
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