I received the Roku player yesterday, and it's pretty impressive. Not in appearance (a plain black box about the size of a stack of 3 or 4 CD jewel cases), but the setup, connection options, and performance are all amazing - at least to me.
Lately, my satisfaction level with new devices is inversely proportional to the size of the manual. If I ever get a new A/V toy that works perfectly out of the box with no manual at all (and such obvious operation that it never needs one), I'll have reached nirvana. This thing is pretty close. I got it set up in about ten minutes using their
one page instruction sheet with no surprises - Well OK, it's a pretty
BIG page, but that's because of all the pictures.
Basically, I connected an HDMI cable to the TV and power to the Roku, went through the on-screen prompts to get it connected to my wireless router, logged on to the Netflix site on my PC to activate the box, and in a couple minutes it was ready to play whatever movie was in my Netflix
Instant Queue.
Instant Queue? I'd never used that feature before. Until now, when I wanted to watch an Instant movie on the HTPC, I just picked out a title and selected PLAY. So... I went to the PC and loaded a few movies into the Instant Queue, and when I went back to the TV they had appeared as selections on the screen. When I picked one with the remote, it loaded for about 20 seconds and started playing.
I don't know why I was expecting some sort of browser to select movies directly from Netflix, but I never really gave it much thought when I ordered the box. It's not a big deal to use a PC to populate the Instant Queue with several titles, and then pick from them when I want to watch one (you don't need to watch them in queue order - you can pick any of the shows on the Roku on-screen list), but I'll keep using a PC in the theater room so I can "channel surf" through the available movies.
Picture and sound quality on the half-dozen shows I've watched (on a 50" plasma) are about the same as premium channels (HBO, Showtime, etc.) on cable, and a little better than SD channels on Dish Network.
I've tried it on the network both wired and wireless, and since the performance is equal, I just kept it on wireless. Also, no picture difference between component and HDMI.
Very handy service. I'll probably get another Roku for the bedroom.