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CNET editors' rating:
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Excellent
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Product summary
The good: Plays, rips, and records CDs; high-end design and sound quality; refined TV-based user interface; streams music to DLNA/UPnP-compliant network digital audio receivers; streams music to and from networked PCs and Macs; mountable as a network drive; integrates with some CD megachangers, home automation systems, and other Escient products.
The bad: Very expensive; no built-in wireless networking; not compatible with DRM-protected audio files or Rhapsody.
The bottom line: The Escient FireBall E2 offers sophisticated home-integration capabilities for your digital audio--but its assortment of high-end features come with a price tag to match.
Specifications: Product type: Digital audio server; Sound output mode: Stereo; Digital player supported digital audio standards: WMA, FLAC, MP3; ; ; See full specs
See all products in the Escient FireBall E2 Digital Music Server series
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 06/15/2006
- Released on: 09/15/2005
The Escient FireBall is a sophisticated network digital music server with a built-in hard drive and a CD player/recorder. The E2 series is available in three capacities: the E2-100 (100GB, $2,000), the E2-200 (200GB, $3,000), and the E2-400 (400GB, $4,000). In addition to storing and streaming digital music files, the FireBall can also control and access music from a variety of compatible CD megachangers from Sony, Pioneer, and Kenwood. The changers can be daisy-chained, allowing access to as many as 1,200 CDs--not counting the music the FireBall can access from its hard drive or other networked storage.
Aesthetically, the FireBall is high-end all the way, featuring robust metal construction, an unusually thorough assortment of front-panel buttons, and a bright blue text display. And at 4.45 by 17.45 by 11.9 inches, this slick component is perfect for your A/V rack. Around back, the FireBall offers an impressively large connectivity assortment. With one component-video, as well as two S-Video and composite-video outputs, the FireBall's onscreen display can be shown on virtually any TV--you can even optimize the video output for 4:3 (standard) or 16:9 (wide-screen) displays. But it's on the audio side where the FireBall really shines, offering a bevy of inputs and outputs that would put some A/V receivers to shame: two digital (one optical, one coaxial) and one set of RCA (red and white) analog stereo outputs are flanked by three sets of analog ins and six digital inputs--three each of optical and coaxial.
Escient targets high-end home installers and system integrators with additional back-panel connectivity: one IR minijack input, three S-Link ports, and four RS-232 connectors. The FireBall hooks into your home network via a single Ethernet jack--unlike many of today's competing devices, it doesn't have 802.11b/g Wi-Fi capabilities. Once it's networked, however, the FireBall can be controlled via a Web browser from any standard PC or handheld on the same network. In comparison to its predecessor, the old FireBall E-40, the newer E2-100, E2-200, and E2-400 models no longer have a front-panel USB port--but that's not much of a drawback because it wasn't really used for anything.
The Escient FireBall includes a versatile CD player/recorder. Using a single onscreen menu, you can rip audio CDs to the internal hard disk as MP3 or FLAC (lossless) files at bit rates varying from 128Kbps to 320Kbps, burn audio and MP3 files to audio-type CD-Rs or CD-RWs (copyright laws forbid the use of the more-affordable PC-type data discs), and record from external sources through the analog inputs (the digital ins are for pass-through playback only). The FireBall organizes hard-drive-based music in easily selectable category tabs on the main user interface, displayed on an attached TV. CD metadata is automatically imported from the online Gracenote database, but you can add your own information with the included PC-style wireless keyboard. Basic control and navigation is accomplished with the universal remote or an optional touch panel. The remote's directional keys make navigation easy.
The FireBall E2 series plays MP3 and WMA files as well as MP3 CDs. Because we don't like to see features evaporate, we're not thrilled that the FireBall no longer supports WAV files, but with the addition of the lossless FLAC format--which is your best bet for CD-quality sound--it's a worthwhile trade-off. As with every non-Apple network media player, the FireBall can't play protected AAC files purchased from the iTunes Music Store. What's more, it can't play protected WMAs, such as those purchased from most other Internet music stores or downloaded as part of a subscription plan; for instance, those available from Napster or Musicmatch. The lack of protected-WMA support is more notable than the AAC issue, because numerous sub-$300 digital media receivers can play purchased WMAs. On the plus side, the FireBall supports WMA and MP3 Internet radio streams. Numerous radio streams of varying quality are preprogrammed into the player, and you can manually add stations to its database.
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