How To Install Xtreamer Live On Prodigy How Do You Start The Tour Average ratng: 5,8/10 7000votes

Xtreamer Prodigy Android navigation overview On this RAW demo video we will show you how nice and smooth the Xtreamer Prodigy can handle its Android 2.2 platform. We will demo version 3.0 of our firmware running its custom made launcher for HD TV. Navigation made by a keyboard and a mouse + Remote Control of the device. As you can see in the demo video, the device automatically adjusts the layout of the application to fit an HD screen and utilizes its native application icon to allow smooth yet clear experience on TV. The world of Smartphone Applications is now on your TV.

Users are welcome to create custom made launcher themes for ADWlauncher to fit the TV. For more info on the new device read: http://www.xtreamer.net/xtreamer-prodigy-upgraded/.

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Update on the green screen issue from an admin at their forum. Green screen issue is not a defect.

It is also not a bug. It is a lack of support of RTL SDK to certain chroma sub sampling HDMI procedures applied by some TV vendors.

As you probably noticed, many prodigy users don't have this problem at all, and that is rooted to the function their TV have. Chroma Sub sampling can be dealt on the TV or the Device. As too many users suffer from it, we decided to add this function to our device, regardless of the TV model you have. We wish this issue was never coming up to start with.

But now, as the device was launched and is relatively new, we are all learning. We means Xtreamer company, as well as RTL. We will give this issue of green screen a major focus. We should appologise of course, but in this case, this issue is not rooted to our firmware.

It is rooted to both the tv vendor + RTL SDK. Hi all, I have had the Prodigy for about a week now and just wanted to give my first thoughts on it. Overall I think its a good deal. I bought it so I could back up all my 3D titles and have them ready to play in one location so I bought a 3TB hard drive to install in the unit and so far it plays the 3D iso files that I made using the CLONE feature of DVDFab with no problems. I will reiterate what Chicken Joe has said about turning off the BD-Lite menu setting. This is absolutely crucial for most of my 3D titles. I did manage to get Despicable Me 3D and Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 3D to play with the BD-Lite menu on but nothing else would play, not sure why these two worked either way.

Anyway, it does a great job at playing 3D content and regular blu-ray content as long as the files are on the main hard drive. I did see some choppiness when playing from a USB 2.0 drive but this does not matter to me because I have found that when the hard drive is in the Xtreamer Prodigy enclosure it works very nicely with my Seagate GoFlex USB 3.0 drive base on my desktop. So I can simply pull the drive out of my Prodigy and pop it right on the GoFlex drive base, clone a blu-ray to the drive and pop it right back into the Prodigy, VERY convenient. Yes this thing has slightly slow responding menu system and some annoying quirks with trying to use and install apps but if you just want a good media streamer that will play literally anything, and play it well, then you might want to take a look at this. I actually like the playback better than on my PS3, both of which are hooked up to my 60' Sony 3D LED TV. The only thing I would really like to know is how the heck do you use the USB 3.0 port on the back of the unit.

It has a type B interface and I have not found a drive or a hub that will hook up to that. If anyone has any ideas how to use this I would appreciate some feedback, see pic.

The Xtreamer Prodigy is probably the only device in the market that currently support 3Tb size HDD. With Prodigy you will be able to enjoy the highest density hard drive, as they reach the 3TB mark with their newest, 5th generation HDD. To go along with its massive storage capacity, the 3TB serves up a super-sized.

Hi all, I have had the Prodigy for about a week now and just wanted to give my first thoughts on it. Overall I think its a good deal. I bought it so I could back up all my 3D titles and have them ready to play in one location so I bought a 3TB hard drive to install in the unit and so far it plays the 3D iso files that I made using the CLONE feature of DVDFab with no problems.

I will reiterate what Chicken Joe has said about turning off the BD-Lite menu setting. This is absolutely crucial for most of my 3D titles. I did manage to get Despicable Me 3D and Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 3D to play with the BD-Lite menu on but nothing else would play, not sure why these two worked either way. Anyway, it does a great job at playing 3D content and regular blu-ray content as long as the files are on the main hard drive. I did see some choppiness when playing from a USB 2.0 drive but this does not matter to me because I have found that when the hard drive is in the Xtreamer Prodigy enclosure it works very nicely with my Seagate GoFlex USB 3.0 drive base on my desktop. So I can simply pull the drive out of my Prodigy and pop it right on the GoFlex drive base, clone a blu-ray to the drive and pop it right back into the Prodigy, VERY convenient. Yes this thing has slightly slow responding menu system and some annoying quirks with trying to use and install apps but if you just want a good media streamer that will play literally anything, and play it well, then you might want to take a look at this.

I actually like the playback better than on my PS3, both of which are hooked up to my 60' Sony 3D LED TV. The only thing I would really like to know is how the heck do you use the USB 3.0 port on the back of the unit. It has a type B interface and I have not found a drive or a hub that will hook up to that.

If anyone has any ideas how to use this I would appreciate some feedback, see pic. Click to expand.You won't be able to stream 3D video wirelessly, thats for sure. I think the only way that streaming 3D might be possible is if you have a gigabit router with CAT6 cable running to your source computer as well as to your prodigy. I don't have ethernet cable running throughout my house, but I do have coaxial cable in every room. For me the only practical solution for streaming HD media is to use the netgear adapters that allow you to network your devices through the coax cable wires.

This works much better than any adapters that use electrical lines because the noise is just too great to get good transmission over any distance with power line networking. I have tried a variety of different solutions and so far the coaxial cable networking has been the best.

I can stream regular blu-ray with out any problems for the most part but can't do 3d video so the only thing I can see working here would be direct ethernet wires to all your devices from the router but even that may not be enough. I would like to know if anyone has had success with this. Perhaps I'll test it but I would have to go purchase a spool of cat6 wire long enough to get from my router to my 3D TV. If I do this then I will let you know the result. I think the best way is to just get yourself one of those Seagate GoFlex drive bases and a large internal hard drive to put into your Xtreamer Prodigy.

Omnisphere Challenge Code Keygen For Mac. As I said previously, once you screw the internal drive into the Prodigy enclosure it will fit really nicely on the GoFlex drive base, then you can just clone all your 3D video to that drive on your computer and quickly move it back over to your Prodigy. Its a very handy thing and if you get the usb 3.0 version you can back up the video quickly to other computers if necessary. Click to expand.I pretty much came to the same conclusion and yes it does come with the USB 3.0 cable. For me then, that port is pretty much a waste of usb 3.0 because its much easier to just pull the hard drive out and attach it to my computer rather than move the entire Prodigy unit over to my computer. I wish they would have just put a standard USB 3.0 type A connection on the back of the unit.

Then at least we could have attached additional usb 3.0 external drives to the Prodigy in addition to having the internal swappable drive. I don't understand why anyone would want to hook the unit directly up to a computer to copy files, unless they want to transfer files from the Prodigy to a laptop or something, but since I have a Macbook pro the USB 3.0 doesn't help me at all. You won't be able to stream 3D video wirelessly, thats for sure.

I think the only way that streaming 3D might be possible is if you have a gigabit router with CAT6 cable running to your source computer as well as to your prodigy. I don't have ethernet cable running throughout my house, but I do have coaxial cable in every room. For me the only practical solution for streaming HD media is to use the netgear adapters that allow you to network your devices through the coax cable wires. This works much better than any adapters that use electrical lines because the noise is just too great to get good transmission over any distance with power line networking. I have tried a variety of different solutions and so far the coaxial cable networking has been the best. I can stream regular blu-ray with out any problems for the most part but can't do 3d video so the only thing I can see working here would be direct ethernet wires to all your devices from the router but even that may not be enough.

I would like to know if anyone has had success with this. Perhaps I'll test it but I would have to go purchase a spool of cat6 wire long enough to get from my router to my 3D TV. If I do this then I will let you know the result.

I think the best way is to just get yourself one of those Seagate GoFlex drive bases and a large internal hard drive to put into your Xtreamer Prodigy. As I said previously, once you screw the internal drive into the Prodigy enclosure it will fit really nicely on the GoFlex drive base, then you can just clone all your 3D video to that drive on your computer and quickly move it back over to your Prodigy.

Its a very handy thing and if you get the usb 3.0 version you can back up the video quickly to other computers if necessary. Click to expand.Thanks for info, my home network is all hardwired as well as wi-fi so i might just try the 3d streaming and see what happens.

I did intend to watch the 3D iso files from my external WD essential drive which leads me to a question about the Seagate go flex mentioned. You seem to be putting the Seagate into the prodigy enclosure will i get the same results in picture quality ie smoothness and no choppyness with just plugging my external drive via the prodigys usb 2 port on the back of the unit. Click to expand.With regular DVD files you will certainly be fine and probably with most blu-ray was well. But I think you will see some choppiness trying to stream 3D from the usb 2.0 port which is why I wish they would have given us a USB 3.0 type A slot instead of the type B. So my solution was to just purchase the the GoFlex usb 3.0 desktop drive base, without the hard drive, here is what it looks like. I am actually using a Western Digital bare drive, not a Seagate.

The GoFlex base let's me to connect any internal drive to my computer quickly and easily, but when you connect a bare drive to it, its a little flimsy when it stands up in the vertical position, but with the Prodigy enclosure on the drive it fits on the GoFlex base much more securely. Using this method is better all the way around because the internal Prodigy drive will perform much better and its actually easier to pop into the Prodigy than trying to reach around back to hook up a usb 2.0 drive and then hook up any power adapters that might be necessary if you are using a desktop external drive. The GoFlex desktop base with a bare internal drive is the best way to go, not only for speed and convenience but it will also be cheaper to buy a bare internal drive than one with an enclosure. Well I finally got around to testing the 3D streaming ability of the Prodigy via direct connection to my router using 200 feet of CAT6 cable and am happy to report that it worked flawlessly without a single hiccup. I wish that I had a way to actually run the wire so that it would be hidden, for now I'll have to stick to coax networking which only gives about 1/3 to 1/2 of the practical transmission speed as CAT6 wire, at least according to what the Prodigy shows as the streaming speed in each case.