Entertainment
SanDisk Sansa TakeTV and Fanfare Video Service Beta Reviewed (Verdict: Wait and See)
Posted by Wilson Rothman at 5:00 PM on October 22, 2007
Over the weekend, Buy.com blabbed on SanDisk's Sansa TakeTV, formerly previewed as USB TV. Now available, the TakeTV mobile video player will cost $100 for 4GB and $150 for 8GB. Buy.com also mentioned the Fanfare video service, now in beta. It just so happens we got to play around with both, shoot some galleries and formulate some early opinions:
It's a funny little system, consisting of a video-capable USB flash drive, a dock with S-video, AV composite connectors and a power cord, and a remote that the flash drive can hug when not in use. You dock the USB drive to a Windows PC to load videos from the Fanfare service, but you can also dock it in any computer, Mac or PC, and load DivX, xVid and MPEG-4 videos onto it as a mass storage drive.
Fanfare setup is extremely straightforward: you sign up for a free Fanfare account, download the Windows-only client software, browse the collections from CBS, Showtime and others (slated for heavy growth in the content-partner area, says SanDisk), and click the "plus" sign when you see something you like. If the TakeTV is plugged in, the video will begin loading. If not, you will be prompted to insert it.At the moment you can't download to hard drive, and need a TakeTV. In the future, SanDisk promises that other flash devices using the TrustedFlash DRM technology would be compatible with Fanfare downloads.
Downloads are encoded in DivX, and an hour of programming takes up just under 1GB of memory. Download time can be slow if your connection isn't up to it, but the experience wasn't unusually sluggish. A 4GB TakeTV can hold up to 5 hours of 720x480 programming.
Once your TakeTV is filled with good stuff—for now, most of it is free—you take it to your TV (like the name implies) and place it in the dock, which you connect to your TV via S-Video or composite, plus stereo audio.
Immediately a rudimentary menu pops up, and shows you your content:
You select a video and after a potentially long "loading..." period, it starts to play. I'm not going to lie, the video doesn't look great on a big 1080p TV. I know that's being harsh, since it's just 480i, but the Vudu box with 480p upscaled content looked damn fine, and SanDisk's Fanfare content is nowhere near that quality. Shows look blurry (as you can plainly see in the shot below), though the sound (128 Kbps) is just fine.
I had a bit of trouble with a few of the videos downloaded, but let me say that since this is a beta, I'm willing to let that slide. Of course the content on the site was sparse, and I'm willing to let that go for now, too, because I fully expect SanDisk to keep its promise of expanding options.
The beef I have now is with the hardware: the remote sucked—it was non-responsive and not terribly intuitive, and fastforwarding and rewinding were exercises in frustration. While I like the simple USB-drive technique for loading video, either with Fanfare or on your own, I think that the collection of pieces is a bit of a mess: despite the fact that the drive fits snugly in both the dock and the remote, there's no real clear way to hold all of it together in a tidy package. And if you lose the remote or leave the dock at home when you're at a friend's, you are screwed.
I branded this with a "wait and see" verdict because there's so much promise, but not enough delivered yet for a full-on gavel-banging judgment. My advice to you is to join Fanfare as a lurker, before you buy the TakeTV. If you start seeing content you want, you may consider TakeTV as it is currently the only way to make use of Fanfare video. Also, if you have loads of DivX vids and are constantly yearning for a way to shuttle them to your living room, here's your chance. But my early sense is, you'll have to put up with some growing pains before TakeTV is a mature, worthwhile product. [SanDisk's TakeTV Site]

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
Mulefire
Posted 5:29 PM 22/10/07
I was pretty excited about this product... whilst I never worry about formats, file types and what not using xbmc at home... taking shows over to a mates house is an exercise in frustration.. luddites the lot of them! bah.. being able to just pop some vid onto a flash drive and plug into a tv sounds like a nice simple solution to those ANTM marathons! ahem.
Mulefire
babaki
Posted 5:24 PM 22/10/07
i would totally buy this. right now, i download shows from torrents. then i have to convert the AVI to WMV to play on my box to the TV. this would eliminate the middle man. i think its a great idea.
babaki
pagercam
Posted 3:32 PM 22/10/07
Displays do look very nice but walking flash drive between PC and TV is so last decade. I would be much more interested if this downloaded over WiFi. I guess using PC to control web interface and then WiFi download to the STB would be the cheaper. But What people would want is a box that can connect directly to the website and download shows wouldn't even require a PC and this would be more secure for the video. S-video is pretty lame we need upscaling to 720p/1080i/1080p via HDMI. This would make it very similar to the Divx connected device that doesn't have a download source other than Stage6 (YouTube clone, mostly music videos and stupid stunts). If I could connect to a movie/TV episode site, and download to a minimalist STB this would be ideal. STB with 4/8/12 GB of $150-200 plus $30/month unlimited downloads I'd be all over this.
pagercam
strider_mt2k
Posted 10:46 AM 22/10/07
Agreed.
The hardware side isn't cool enough to carry it past the software side for which there are alternatives already available.
A small USB Hard drive with the divx files and VLC portable and you're nearly there.
Even a wimpy laptop can play those files, and scan converters are easy to find.
strider_mt2k
firesign
Posted 10:16 AM 22/10/07
meh. no interest in this at all. i can either stream divx to my 360 from the media center pc, dump it to a regular flash drive, or burn it to cd or dvd-rw and play it on the the philips divx capable dvd player or the laptop or wherever. i don't get the market for this either.
firesign
pete
Posted 10:02 AM 22/10/07
Sorry, but how can this compete with iTunes, XBL Marketplace, Cable PPV, Bittorrent, etc?
Sansa, I admire your chutzpah, but please concentrate on making your PMPs better. People will bring their own content.
pete
moveteam
Posted 8:38 AM 22/10/07
But the interface is damn nice :D
moveteam
Daversa
Posted 6:00 AM 22/10/07
I don't really see the market they are going for with this. Most techy people would just build a MMPC and accomplish a much higher level of functionality. Is the fanfare service the draw?
Daversa
Kaiser-Machead
Posted 3:38 AM 22/10/07
@Darkest Daze: SanDisk execs are antidiskites. Those bigots would never employ their kind.
Kaiser-Machead
Darkest Daze
Posted 3:30 AM 22/10/07
I would like at least component output and the ability to hook a hard drive or something else that's larger to put some decent quality video on it. Until then...eh.
Darkest Daze
dlipschitz1
Posted 12:18 AM 23/10/07
I like the idea, any way to get xvid/divx videos to a tv without having to convert it sounds awesome...I just hope they can up the video quality.
dlipschitz1