MovieBeam Review

I recently got a chance to test MovieBeam without paying the activation fee. In the end MovieBeam foot the bill for shipping as well.
I will admit that my expectations were not very high and I am sorry to say that I am very disappointed. I was very excited when the package arrived and I rushed home to connect it to my HDTV and run it through it's paces. The best news is that the box worked fine with my Vonage VOIP phone. The bad news is that the Picture Quality was the worst HD I have ever seen, well maybe not the worst, but it is in contention.

The MovieBeam box is pretty cool, it is a light blue box with inviting text. It opens easily and the first thing you see is a easy setup sheet like a new PC. The box comes with everything you need except a HDMI cable, which is available as a accessory. The first thing after you connect all the wires that the box wants to do is to phone home. So I ran a wire to my Vonage box and after turning off the bandwidth saver on Vonage.com the first step completed successfully. The next step
was to adjust the antenna, the
antenna is easily assembled and kinda cool looking, I hid it behind a picture frame and the meter indicated an 85
without any adjustments. The last step of setup was a short movie explaining the service and how important it was to
not unplug the MovieBeam STB. 
Now that the setup is complete I browsed through the interface, the menu's were intuitive, cool looking and relatively fast. Keep in mind that I tolerate a HDTiVo, so everything seems fast compared to it. The movie previews start fast, but you quickly realize that the selection is not that great. There are 100 movies out of the box and only 7 are available in HD, but none of them are new movies. It reminds me of the selection of DIRECTV's HD PPV, except even older.
The biggest surprise is that MovieBeam requires HDMI to watch the HD movies. It doesn't support DVI ( I called and confirmed it wasn't supported) and it doesn't give you the option to down-rez. The HDMI to DVI cable that came with my HDTiVo works fine at 480p, but does not give me access to the HD content. The software is programmed to check for HDMI and if it isn't there you don't see any HD options anywhere. If you have HDMI you can see the "HD Showcase" under "Find Movies". Since I wasn't able to try it with my 2 year old Mitsubishi WS55813 I bothered my next door neighbor that just bought a 50" Sony SXRD 3LCD(KDF-E50A10) complete with a HDMI port, so I took the MovieBeam STB to his house to check out some HD. My neighbor is no HD connoisseur but his reaction was the same as mine; surprised at how bad it could look. Although he wasn't sure what was wrong with what he saw, I knew right away. The movie was so compressed that all the scenes suffered from compression artifacts, even scenes that were almost completely still. The compression was unbearable and even if it did work on my TV, I would be sending it back. The movie was "Deep Blue Sea", this scene was a simple profile shot before the transition and with nothing moving. The blocks you see in his cheeks were present in all skin tones. This is by far worse than any compression I have witnessed from DIRECTV or due to local affiliates multicasting their OTA feeds. I have seem some fantastic examples of WM9 HD clips on my MCE so there is no doubt in my mind that they simply cranked up the compression far too much.

In the end the review is right on par with the prediction I made when MovieBeam was first announced. The product is so close, yet so far away. If they don't start to bundle this service with other products and offer higher quality (selection and PQ) movies there is no way that they will ever acquire a large user base.





















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Dave Zatz @ Mar 15th 2006 11:53AM
Send it back, send it back! ;)
Seriously that is a dissapointment, though I guess not a surprise. I guess they're forcing HDMI for copy protection reasons. Were there compression artifacts on the SD movies too, or did they look OK? Was the sound at least decent?
Adam Jones @ Mar 15th 2006 12:19PM
Good review. Sorry to hear it's not a winner. How did the HD movies compare to the WMV HD files available from Microsoft? I use those as a standard because IMHO they don't really give me that "HD Wow" effect but they come close.
As an aside (rant that is)...whenever these inferior products come out hyping up HD content but don't deliver the goods it gets me worried. If people keep getting exposed to "HD" that really isn't HD or is so overcompressed that it looks horrible, I think they might get burned out and the technology won't spread very fast.
Ben Drawbaugh @ Mar 15th 2006 1:08PM
I supposed HDMI is a DRM issue the problem is that HDMI and DVI use the same DRM: HDCP. There is no good reason why they can't support DVI. The tech I talked to admited it and said that their stance may change based on consumer demand but I guess it was just easier for them to simply support HDMI only.
The HD content didn't compare to any of the WMV content I have downloaded from Microsoft's site.
I didn't check out any of the SD movies. The few SD movie previews I saw were terrible, but it wouldn't surprise me if they use different bit rates for the perviews.
Brian Hoyt @ Mar 15th 2006 1:36PM
Do you have your HD TiVo hooked to TV via HDMI-DVI cable? Can you check in the system settings and see if it says HDCP enabled? I am guessing the moviebeam requires HDCP not HDMI. It is easy to say HDMI since I am pretty sure all HDMI devices shipped with HDCP. Where as there were a great number of DVI devices (including computer monitors still) that shipped lacking HDCP. HDCP is the encryption carried over DVI and HDMI. DVI and HDMI are the same connector other than the addition of audio, that is why a simple DVI-HDMI converter exists, all it is doing is rearranging pins and shape.
Ben Drawbaugh @ Mar 15th 2006 1:50PM
Brian,
I would tend to agree with you, but my TV does support HDCP and the adaptor I am using works fine with another HDCP STB's.
I called and talked to a very knowledgeable technician at MovieBeam. He told me that they require HDMI. I asked him why DVI with HDCP wasn't enoough and he explained that it had something to do with the chipset they were using, it actually checks for HDMI and if it sees a HDMI-DVI adaptor it will not allow HD content despite being HDCP compliant.
Feel free to call MovieBeam Tech support ask for David G., he will be happy to explain it to you.
I do know that HDMI supports additional standards above and beyond what DVI supports, but I don't think this is anything more than poor hardware support.
coldengray @ Mar 15th 2006 7:30PM
The sony KDF-E50A10 is not SXRD, it's 3LCD. just FYI.
Ben Drawbaugh @ Mar 15th 2006 7:33PM
coldengray,
Thanks I fixed it.
Brian Hoyt @ Mar 16th 2006 8:11AM
I stand corrected, let me say you learn something every day. I was reading http://www.pcmag.com/encyclopedia_term/0,2542,t=HDMI&i=44161,00.asp and HDMI spec http://www.hdmi.org/download/HDMI_Specification_1.2a.pdf. HDMI devices do detect if it is DVI or HDMI and can determine what they want to do. I just have never heard of a device forcing HDMI. New wrinkle that hopefully will not spread.
Ben Drawbaugh @ Mar 16th 2006 8:43AM
Brian,
It is certainly concerning considering that HDMI has been out for about a year. There are over twice as many people with DVI than only component. This could be realy bad if it catches on.
Thanks for the resources, I think this topic warrants its own post.
oldschool @ Mar 16th 2006 10:28AM
I have watched allot of OTA HDTV and know that it will look terrible without a quality antenna that is reletive to the distance of the broadcast location.
Greg Wishart @ Mar 16th 2006 12:26PM
Hold on a sec before you send it back. Maybe the movies it came with are old because the hard drive was filled months ago. Maybe they filled it with low-quality versions but to get the high-quality versions, you have to wait for them to be downloaded. See if you can erase some of them and let it download a new HDTV movie over the air and see if it's any better. Also, let us know approximately how long it takes to download a two hour movie.
Ben Drawbaugh @ Mar 16th 2006 2:06PM
Greg,
That had accured to me as well, but it's too late now since I already mailed it back.
As for the download time, you can't see the movie until it is done downloading. MovieBeam has said that they only have 1.2Mbs and they estimated 8 hours for a HD movie.
Buzzcut @ Mar 17th 2006 11:34AM
How pissed are people that DVI has been supplanted by HDMI so quickly? I sure am.
I didn't care when I mistakenly believed that DVI and HDMI were essentially the same. Now I'm ready to start a class action lawsuit against the entire consumer electronics industry (okay, myabe just Zenith/ LG and Moviebeam at this point).
rich644 @ Mar 28th 2006 5:28PM
Quote: "How pissed are people that DVI has been supplanted by HDMI so quickly? I sure am."
How pissed are the millions of people who have only analog inputs on their HD displays. There are millions of us. My $17,000 front projector has several quality input options,(component, RGB, VGA, RGB,H,V) but none of them are digital.
And remember an analog to DVI converter box would be against DMCA law.
I hope Moviebeam is dead on arrival just for this very reason