Typical price: £200
What is it: Upscaling DVD player with HDMI 1.2 output
What we think: It has a way to go before it's perfect, but the concept is brilliant and it does its job as advertised
Linksys KiSS 1600 Review
Reviewed on: 22 August 2007
Features
The KiSS 1600 has a features list longer than the queue to buy a Harry
Potter book on release day, which makes it an attractive deal, even for
around £200.
With such a cornucopia of features, it's hard to know which ones to highlight as most worthy. Certainly the ability to connect it to your home network and stream files from any PC is cool. It's also nice and easy to use, and the provided app is as simple as they come and doesn't install a load of associated nonsense on your computer. It's certainly a more lightweight option than iTunes, which can really bog down slow machines with large music libraries.
The KiSS 1600 will play Windows Media, DivX, MPEG-4, MPEG-2, DVDs and H.264. For some reason, it doesn't specifically support QuickTime, and won't see files with the extension .mov. That said, it will play the files if you name them AVI. We didn't get the best performance out of them, though, with all the trailers from apple.com we watched having problems with motion judder. Perhaps a future update will help fix this.

Getting the player on the WiFi network was actually fractionally less difficult than with Apple TV. The remote makes it a bit of a pain but once you enter the passcode and SSID name, you're pretty much all set. Using a wired network is even easier, and you'll need to do this for streaming HD material, as Wi-Fi can't really cope with the bit rates involved in that.
Performance
We hooked the player up to a Sony Bravia TV via component in and were immediately impressed by the results. Most of
the files we had stored on our test PC played with no problems. We had
the occasional problem with a file that wouldn't play but that was down
to a different code being used in its creation, rather than because of
anything the player did wrong.
There is one enormous problem, and Linksys is at least partially to blame. The KiSS 1600 will not play DVDs upscaled over the component output. This is a copy-protection issue, and is intended to prevent high-quality copies being made of DVDs. It's kind of ridiculous, though, and isn't helped by the fact that the KiSS 1600 is also locked to DVD region 2. If you have a large collection of imported discs, this probably isn't the player for you.
We loved the quality of the KiSS 1600. Even when it was outputting via Scart, the quality was great. Most things played incredibly smoothly, even WMV video at 1080p.
Conclusion
Overall, this player is exactly the sort of thing we want from a media
centre. It offers playback of most files, especially the ones most
commonly found on the Internet. It's well priced, considering the
rivals, and it offers loads of great features.
If you want a rival, Apple TV is it. Obviously, the Apple adds a hard drive but doesn't have a DVD drive. We don't think the Linksys needs a hard drive, and we think a DVD player is a lot more useful. We aren't happy that DVDs won't play upscaled via component, though. Given the ease with which DVD copy protection is broken, it seems a bit like locking the stable door when the horse has already done a runner.
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
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