Recording video on the DIVA was simple enough: we just hit the remote's Record button while watching TV through the device. We were able to schedule up to six timed recordings at once. Since there's neither an onscreen programming guide nor an IR blaster to change the channel on a cable or satellite box, box users must set the channel manually.
The problem with recording in WM9 format is that, aside from the DIVA itself, only WM9-compatible DVD players (none are available at press time) can play back the discs the DIVA creates. Once you're done recording and you've finalized, or locked, the disc, you can view the WM9 files on your PC. However, we found that we couldn't fast-forward or rewind the files from Windows Media Player, nor import them into Windows Movie Maker. That's because there's a bug in the way the DIVA encodes the WM9 files; to fix the bug, you'll have to run an included utility to patch every file the DIVA records. How a glitch like this made it into a shipping DVD recorder is beyond us.
The unit's ability to stream media from your PC, such as movies, music, and images, is decidedly limited. In our tests, the DIVA displayed JPEGs and played MP3s, but it wouldn't recognize MPEG or AVI video files in its A/V player mode (although MPEGs worked fine from the DVD player), and it even had trouble with Windows Media files despite its ability to record in that format. And while the DIVA is supposedly compatible with Microsoft's HighMAT format (a standard for DVD players that makes it easy to view images and play music burned on CDs), the DIVA wouldn't play our HighMAT-encoded CD-RWs; we had to manually burn the files on a DVD+RW to make them work.
If you have a broadband Internet connection, you can plug your Ethernet cable into the back of the DIVA to surf the Web or sample on-demand programming (courtesy of Aeon Digital). The much-touted on-demand offerings are disappointing, to say the least. As of press time, you can watch a selection of only about 20 movies (most of which are ancient black-and-white films, such as Battleship Potemkin and Reefer Madness), a handful of movie previews and songs, and about 40 music videos. We couldn't download and record any of the online content as advertised; we could only watch real-time streams. And while the streaming trailers looked good, the movies and music videos suffered from blocky digital artifacts. Malata says that better on-demand programming will be available in the fall of 2004, but it hasn't happened yet.
The DIVA's connectivity options are relatively limited. On the back panel, you get a component-video output, S-Video and composite A/V outputs, RF inputs and outputs (for direct cable and antenna connections), a coaxial digital audio output, and an A/V/S-Video input. Another set of composite A/V inputs is on the front of the recorder, but for a recorder this pricey, we'd expect FireWire input for DV camcorders and another S-Video input up front, at the very least.
The DIVA's DVD player put up a respectable image on our 32-inch Sony TV, although there's no support for DTS soundtracks. Worse, when we jumped from an in-progress DVD movie to another main menu function (such as Internet or A/V Player), the DIVA froze when we tried to return to the DVD. Abandoning the onscreen menu and using the remote's one-touch menu functions brought the DIVA back to life; still, these are the kind of bugs we expect in a preproduction model.
Web browsing on the Diva is a clunky experience. Using the five-way navigation control, you must painstakingly type URLs using a virtual keyboard, and while there are Back, Home, and Refresh controls, you can't save bookmarks. The DIVA's page rendering was fair, but don't expect Flash or Web plug-ins to work.
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