Review: D-Link MediaLounge Extender -- Like Apple TV For Windows PC

D-Link DSM-750 MediaLounge Extender Go ahead and bash Windows Vista (it’s fun!), but don’t knock its sweet, sweet Media Center app. Bundled with Vista Home Premium and Ultimate, MC serves up tunes, photos, videos, DVDs, and, if you BYO tuner, DVR-style TV. Just one problem: Who wants to gather ‘round the warm basking glow of […]

Dlink_dsm750
D-Link DSM-750 MediaLounge Extender

Go ahead and bash Windows Vista (it’s fun!), but don’t knock its sweet, sweet Media Center app. Bundled with Vista Home Premium and Ultimate, MC serves up tunes, photos, videos, DVDs, and, if you BYO tuner, DVR-style TV. Just one problem: Who wants to gather ‘round the warm basking glow of the PC? Ballmer, maybe, but not you. Solution: living room-ready media extenders, which leverage your home network to bridge the gap between PC and TV.

The sleek, glossy, component-style DSM-750 rocks Draft-N (802.11n) wireless, so if you pair it with a similarly advanced router, you can cut the Ethernet umbilical cord and still stream high-def content. That’s the theory, anyway: Media merely dribbled between our Netgear router and the extender, even with only a single physical wall separating them. It was only when we synced the MediaLounge with D-Link's GamerLounge router (hmmm), that we got video flowing like an avalanche. Able to operate at a higher frequency (5 GHz) we were able to use the router to easily stream even high-def TV.

The DSM-750 does connectivity right with its HDMI, component video and optical audio outputs, making it a good fit with high-falutin’ home theaters. It can stream most video and audio formats, including DRM-protected tunes. But what’s the deal with DVDs? The extender lacks a player, and dumb-ass copyright restrictions prevent you from streaming DVDs from your PC. If you want movies, you’ll have to download them from Media Center staple CinemaNow or rip your disc library.

As extenders go, this one works pretty well, though smart shoppers will look to the Xbox 360 instead. Yep, Microsoft’s game console doubles as a media extender, and it can download both movies and TV shows via Xbox Live. Plus, it plays DVDs. You’ll need a wired connection to stream video, but at least you won’t need a new router. —Rick Broida

WIRED: Cinchy setup. Streams content from PCs and NAS drives. Supports live TV viewing, recording and timeshifting, provided your PC has a tuner. Front-mounted USB port lets you play content from flash drives.
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TIRED: __Video tops out at 1080i. Menus look a bit muddy. No volume controls on the extender remote. Can’t play DVDs. Wireless streaming demands high-end Draft-N router. Xbox 360 works equally well and plays games and DVDs to boot.

Price/maker: $320, dlink.com

6 out of 10

Photo courtesy D-Link