The NSZ-GT1 provides a very basic DLNA and local file playback application. FAT32 formatted drives are recognized, but NTFS is not, so usefulness is limited primarily to photos and music files. File type support is also very limited; MKV and MP4 files with AVC/H.263 and AC-3 or DTS will play, but M2TS (while recognized) either did not play or in one case, actually crashed the player. On the audio side, MP3 and M4A files work well, but WMA does not. The DLNA browser was tested with Windows Media Player 12 with very limited success. Only photos really worked properly. Videos were listed but none would play and the browser did not find any music in the library. With such limited support for local file playback via attached or network storage, the device is clearly not intended as a replacement for a media streamer or home theater PC.

Besides the HD audio issues noted earlier with “BD Mixing” disabled, the Blu-ray playback experience was quite good. It is worth noting that the Blu-ray application is not as integrated into the player as the other applications. It will launch automatically when a disc is inserted but cannot run in the background, so features like PiP will not function during use. Unlike some other players, disc ejection is properly implemented as a background task, so it will not disrupt the focused application’s experience when pressed.

During disc playback video levels were correct, but both blacker-than-black (BTB) and whiter-than-white (WTW) are clipped at 16 and 235 respectively with YCbCr or RGB output, but interestingly, BTB/WTW were not clipped for file based playback when the player was configured for YCbCr output. BTB is only useful during calibration so this is not a significant loss, but WTW content does exist in real titles so clipping above 235 is less than ideal.

Generally, other audio and video playback was pretty good, but occasionally a strange issue was noted during video podcast playback (HD Nation—left/Engadget Show—right) where a white rectangle overlaid the content—each time the issue was resolved by rebooting the player (press control+alt+delete).

User Interface and Apps Miscellaneous Observations
Comments Locked

20 Comments

View All Comments

  • vshah - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    is it nsx-gt1, or nsz-gt1? it varies in the title/article.
  • ganeshts - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Editorial mistake :) Fixed, thanks!
  • piroroadkill - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    I'm not entirely sure who this is aimed at: the setup process looked pretty long-winded for most people who sit infront of a TV, being spoonfed content while drooling. I mean, seriously, a question whether you want the thing to boot slowly or quickly? It should make the best guess for defaults in the majority of cases, and give you the option to fuck with it later: look at how the Windows installation process has been streamlined over the years.

    Then the tech savvy guys? They already have an htpc and are more than willing to play around to get it right, using xbmc or some such...
  • bji - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Sony consistently makes the worst remote controls of any major consumer electronics manufacturer. It's likey they don't employ even a single user interface person to help design these devices, they just either rely on out-of-touch engineers or dumb marketing people to design their remotes.

    The ultimate example was the Playstation 2 remote. It was a grid of buttons with the DVD controls (ffwd, play, rewind, etc) placed fairly randomly and with no tactile distinction whatsoever between the keys. So totally lame.

    Ever since the Playstation 2 remote I've been paying attention to Sony's designs and every time I see a Sony remote I am reminded that they still have the suckiest remote designers.
  • nutmac - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    I would love expand HQV 2.0 benchmark comparison against popular players, such as PS3.
  • babgvant - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    That's a great point; I've never seen a media centric review of the PS3. As hard as it gets pushed as the ultimate BD player, it would be really interesting to actually test that.
  • Voldenuit - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    Andrew,

    while I found your review well-written and informative, I can't help but feel that you were a little too lenient with it in your final thoughts.

    A google device that has no universal search? Fail.
    A media streamer that has no worthwhile codec and container support? Fail.
    A remote that is unusable by anyone without an IT degree? Fail.
    A consumer device that you have to press Ctrl-Alt-Del to reboot when it hangs? WTF?

    At the $300 asking price with the level of functionality and robustness out-of-the-box, the NSZGT1 deserves to be publicly lambasted, if not downright ridiculed.

    Even Apple's RDF wouldn't be able to disguise this Thanksgiving turkey.

    Also, any chance AT will revisit the Boxee Box with the revised firmware?
  • ganeshts - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    Andy will respond to your comments on his leniency towards the NSZ-GT1 :)

    We will take a look at Boxee Box again as soon as TrueHD bitstreaming is enabled or December 15th, whichever is earlier.
  • babgvant - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    GTV is a CE device targeted at mainstream users, so the abysmal container support is forgivable; otherwise, those are all valid points. That said, I think the platform's potential outweighs the teething issues; so while the current implementation is clearly unfinished, and I worry that Google doesn't understand the difference b/w the TV and mobile user experience, it is still too early to get out the pitchforks and torches. Six months from now will be another story.

    IMO the current MSRP for this player is too high (Sony even dropped the price $100 a few days ago, so they must also recognize this); it's crazy that we can buy a better BD player (faster, quieter, more power efficient and has 3D) from Sony for $140 less. Between us, unless the apps platform gets exponentially better real soon I think they will need to knock another $100 off the top to be competitive in the mainstream. I could have made that clearer in the FT.
  • Aloonatic - Wednesday, December 1, 2010 - link

    Grrr, lost my comment with FireFox crashing, so my reply in brief...

    Re: $300 - This is a BluRay player too, let's not forget.

    Then the rest of my rambling comment was mostly a complaint about Sony controllers, when they will invest in people to sort out this problem? They haven't produced a good controller/remote since the original PS controller, and that was a less than subtle copy of the SNES controller (and they are just copying Nintendo again with Move) which was OK at the time, but now is very old and tired but still they persist with it with the PS3?!?! Sort it out Sony! It's not like you are a corner/cost cutting budget brand for Jebus' sake!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now