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Hewlett Packard DMR-EW5000 Digital Media Receiver for Windows PCs

Hewlett Packard DMR-EW5000 Digital Media Receiver for Windows PCs

List Price: $314.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Ultimate turkey
Review: Add on note: I have since purchased the Linksys WMA11B Wireless Digital Media Adapter, and it does everything the HP was supposed to do, but didn't. I love it, and recommend it.

SUMMARY: THE WIRELESS VERSION IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY!!! DO NOT BUY IT!!! Per HP's own admission, it will not work if further than 20 feet from the Access Point - you can run a cable this far.

Details of my experience:
Purchased the DMR ew5000 about a week ago from Amazon (shipped thru J&R). Arrived promptly, and was simple to setup. Had it up and working on my wireless network within an hour. Or so I thought.

After the first night of playing some single songs and looking at some pictures, I thought this was the greatest little home media device to come along in quite a while. Then, reality hit.

The device started periodically saying it couldn't find my server, or that it could find the server but that it had no content. A therapeutic reboot would usually fix this (difficult, because the power button is a fake - like a cable set top box, you must unplug it to actually reboot). However, the killer finally kicked in - it would stop playing an album or playlist after 2 or 3 songs. And it would do this constantly. A real party killer, let me tell you.

The symptoms are these - it starts playing normally, with the song elapsed time clicking merrily along. Then, then elapsed time stops advancing, although the music keeps playing. Alas, within the next 5 minutes, it would stop playing the music too.

HP support's script was amazing to behold. Aside from asking to reinstall the 1.0 version of the software (that's right, no firmware patches out yet...), they then ask you to run an ethernet cable to the device from your server. When I tried to explain that the server is upstairs with my cable modem, while my ew5000 was downstairs with my rather large television, the support tech insisted that unless I plugged it directly, he couldn't help me. When I further explained that I did not have the physical resources to either a) rewire the cable modem to my downstairs, or b) to move my 200 pound television upstairs, he said that was too bad, because to authorize a return I had to do this step. I think Carly Fiorino has found a novel way to avoid warranty repairs here.

Here is my setup. Cable modem and wireless router on one floor, with main server plugged into the wireless router (Linksys) via 100mb ethernet. 2 other computers in the house served via the wireless LAN, and wireless coverage is fine. The ew5000 was setup with my main TV and stereo system (where it is designed to be used), on a separate floor from my wireless router and server, maybe about 30 feet direct through one floor. As I said, one computer is about 200 feet away through one floor, and it has good wireless reception. The ew5000 itself reported a 2MB/s connection at 73% strength in its current location. Apparently, this is insufficient for the device.

One last note - the technician added at the end that the wireless version of this device must be no further than 20 feet away from the wireless access point, with no intervening obstacles!!! I asked if this was in the documentation *anywhere*, and after a bit he admitted it wasn't, but was in his tech support help screens. THIS MAKES THIS DEVICE USELESS!!! If I had only 20 feet from my server to my TV, I wouldn't need a wireless device, would I? I could just by the wired only version for $100 cheaper. But worse for me, I don't seem to have the kind of studio apartment HP must have had in mind for this device.

Bottom line: I love the concept. I loved this device the couple times it works. And the wired version may even work (I don't know, and I cannot find out). BUT THE WIRELESS VERSION IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY!!! DO NOT BUY IT!!! Per HP's own admission, it will not work if further than 20 feet from the Access Point - you can run a cable this far. I have heard good things about SLIMP3, and will probably check that out. I'll just have to wait for a future device to live up to the HP marketing hype of this one.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Wonderful idea, but wireless version doesn't work
Review: Add on note: I have since purchased the Linksys WMA11B Wireless Digital Media Adapter, and it does everything the HP was supposed to do, but didn't. I love it, and recommend it.

SUMMARY: THE WIRELESS VERSION IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY!!! DO NOT BUY IT!!! Per HP's own admission, it will not work if further than 20 feet from the Access Point - you can run a cable this far.

Details of my experience:
Purchased the DMR ew5000 about a week ago from Amazon (shipped thru J&R). Arrived promptly, and was simple to setup. Had it up and working on my wireless network within an hour. Or so I thought.

After the first night of playing some single songs and looking at some pictures, I thought this was the greatest little home media device to come along in quite a while. Then, reality hit.

The device started periodically saying it couldn't find my server, or that it could find the server but that it had no content. A therapeutic reboot would usually fix this (difficult, because the power button is a fake - like a cable set top box, you must unplug it to actually reboot). However, the killer finally kicked in - it would stop playing an album or playlist after 2 or 3 songs. And it would do this constantly. A real party killer, let me tell you.

The symptoms are these - it starts playing normally, with the song elapsed time clicking merrily along. Then, then elapsed time stops advancing, although the music keeps playing. Alas, within the next 5 minutes, it would stop playing the music too.

HP support's script was amazing to behold. Aside from asking to reinstall the 1.0 version of the software (that's right, no firmware patches out yet...), they then ask you to run an ethernet cable to the device from your server. When I tried to explain that the server is upstairs with my cable modem, while my ew5000 was downstairs with my rather large television, the support tech insisted that unless I plugged it directly, he couldn't help me. When I further explained that I did not have the physical resources to either a) rewire the cable modem to my downstairs, or b) to move my 200 pound television upstairs, he said that was too bad, because to authorize a return I had to do this step. I think Carly Fiorino has found a novel way to avoid warranty repairs here.

Here is my setup. Cable modem and wireless router on one floor, with main server plugged into the wireless router (Linksys) via 100mb ethernet. 2 other computers in the house served via the wireless LAN, and wireless coverage is fine. The ew5000 was setup with my main TV and stereo system (where it is designed to be used), on a separate floor from my wireless router and server, maybe about 30 feet direct through one floor. As I said, one computer is about 200 feet away through one floor, and it has good wireless reception. The ew5000 itself reported a 2MB/s connection at 73% strength in its current location. Apparently, this is insufficient for the device.

One last note - the technician added at the end that the wireless version of this device must be no further than 20 feet away from the wireless access point, with no intervening obstacles!!! I asked if this was in the documentation *anywhere*, and after a bit he admitted it wasn't, but was in his tech support help screens. THIS MAKES THIS DEVICE USELESS!!! If I had only 20 feet from my server to my TV, I wouldn't need a wireless device, would I? I could just by the wired only version for $100 cheaper. But worse for me, I don't seem to have the kind of studio apartment HP must have had in mind for this device.

Bottom line: I love the concept. I loved this device the couple times it works. And the wired version may even work (I don't know, and I cannot find out). BUT THE WIRELESS VERSION IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY!!! DO NOT BUY IT!!! Per HP's own admission, it will not work if further than 20 feet from the Access Point - you can run a cable this far. I have heard good things about SLIMP3, and will probably check that out. I'll just have to wait for a future device to live up to the HP marketing hype of this one.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: EW5000 review
Review: Don't even think about getting this product (unless you enjoy long romantic calls with overseas tech support). I cannot begin to state all its faults, (802.11 only works if the wind is right and Jupiter and Mars are aligned, GUI straight outta movie TRON, remote for my 1970s garage door better designed, would get better return on $... by investing in Enron), but whoever gave this product the go-ahead should be fired. If they ever release a version 2 that actually works, it might be worth it (but probably not). Feel free to ignore this advice and buy it; just block an otherwise free weekend, join a rage management group and consider yourself warned.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: EW5000 review
Review: Don't even think about getting this product (unless you enjoy long romantic calls with overseas tech support). I cannot begin to state all its faults, (802.11 only works if the wind is right and Jupiter and Mars are aligned, GUI straight outta movie TRON, remote for my 1970s garage door better designed, would get better return on $... by investing in Enron), but whoever gave this product the go-ahead should be fired. If they ever release a version 2 that actually works, it might be worth it (but probably not). Feel free to ignore this advice and buy it; just block an otherwise free weekend, join a rage management group and consider yourself warned.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Great product concept killed by poor Engineering
Review: EW5000 is great concept considering the functionality it promises to provide. I was really excited about the product but unfortunately it turned out to be one of the worst engineered products I have ever seen. (ironically from the company claiming to be the "Inventors".
Yes, the product works and does provide all the features it claims to offer but let us look at them one by one.

User Interface:
In this age of sleek UIs with wonderful layouts and smooth text and buttons, EW5000 User interface seems to be a relic of 80s. Text is fuzzy on TV, there are two many scrrens for simple tasks. Even the BIOS setup UIs are better than this one!!!

Playing Audio:
Audio Quality is fine but the player seems to stop playing whenever it wants. There seems to be no logic to that. UI is not responsive at times and there is no error displayed. The track information UI stops updating after playing a track or two. Wait a bit longer and even the tracks wil stop playing till you hit the play button again and sometimes you have to pick another album.

Wireless connectivity:
Best feature but the worst implementation. The reciever often looses conection and takes forever to re-connect. Again in the year 2003, it shouldn't be that difficult to buffer 5-10 minutes of Audio so that such connection losses don't lead to moments of annoying silence for the listener. You will get many annoying pauses destroying the pleasure of Brahms symppony no. 1 or whatever you are listening to. And please do not blame the connectivity issues on my wireless access point and expect me to put EW5000 a foot away from my WAP.

Server Software on PC:
Doesn't auto sychronize the new addition to the library, takes too much CPU time and takes minutes to synchronize additions or deletions of just 1 or 2 albums.

The box itself:
The worst quality materials have been used to make this otherwise good looking box. Input connectors and the wires supplied seem to be worst grade that the money could buy. Don't even get me started with the remote control.

Bottomeline!! Well you get the picture.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: More junk from HP
Review: HP continues to live off their printer reputation by engineering over-priced products that are riddled with bugs and incompatibility issues. I spend most of my time manually unplugging the set from the power supply because the system continually wigs out and locks up, and removing the power cable is the only way to reset it. Their search feature is archaic at best. What they don't tell you is that this device can only read certain bit/sampling rates. If you've copied your CDs using the Windows Media Player's WMA Lossless format the songs will not play on this device. By an XP computer and use the Windows Media Player with a good sound card and you'll be much happier and have a lot more functionality.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Worked great
Review: I am not sure what the other reviewer was doing wrong, but I found the device simple to connect and use. I tried the SlimP3 and the SimpleFi, and they were both horrible.

The HP device automatically found all my digital music (700 CDs all ripped in WMA format) and digital pictures, and I was up and running pretty fast.

If you want a digital music player that is good for your personal collection, that your whole family can use, I highly recommend this device.

The unit also automatically organized my music by Genre, Artist, and Album - VERY handy!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Too hard to use. Check out SLIMP3.
Review: I bought and tried out one of these devices to access the sizable MP3 collection on my computer. Alas, it's really hard to set up and slow to use.

I much prefer my SLIMP3 from Slim Devices. It is tiny, has a bright and beautiful display, incredibly powerful music management software (free and open source!) and is so easy to set up and use. My wife loves it and would touch the HP product. You can build custom playlists from the remote or any web browser and the support is great! Oh, and it works on Windows 98,ME,NT,2000,XP, Mac OS X, Linux, BSD and Solaris!

Of course, the SLIMP3 is a music-focused device, so it doesn't use your TV and can't display JPEG images, that's what I have my laptop for. Also, you'll need a separate bridge if you want to go wireless or use a powerline or phone networking adaptor.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good, works great.
Review: I bought this a couple weeks ago and got it hooked up to my Linksys wireless network quickly with no problems.

I even have Panasonic 2.4 ghz wireless phones and there appears to be no intereference between the ew5000 and the phones.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Very poor network reliability.
Review: I bought this wireless media device early last year. The other reviews were right. It does not play consistently, the wireless link randomly goes up and down, and it hangs my pc as it attempts to index the media files.

I just checked HP's website and they do not have a firmware update for the media device nor an update for the server software for the PC. Run, don't walk back to the store and return this useless piece of junk.


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