Syabas To Challenge Roku With Netflix Enabled, Popbox Streaming Device
While the Popbox is very similar to the Roku with its small form-factor and fanless design, the Popbox has a couple of key features that sets it apart from the Roku. For starters, the Popbox plays just about every video format out there including MPEG1/2/4, Open MPEG-4 HD, Xvid-HD, WMV9-HD, VC-1 and H.264. On the audio side, it also supports MP1/2/3, WMA, WMA Pro, Ogg Vorbis, AAC, AC3, DTS, PCM, WAV and FLAC. It also supports a lot of image formats, Windows Media DRM and a bunch of subtitle and metadata formats as well.
Syabas says that one of the main strengths of the box is that it has a very powerful video processor and essentially uses the same processing platform as the Popcorn Hour. The box supports 1080p and can do up to 100Mb/sec video decoding, which about is two times what Blu-ray does. The company says that as a result, the Popbox can deliver better video quality than the Roku. This could be accurate, but since I have not been hands-on with the Popbox, I'm not going to state it as a fact. It would be easy to test as you could simply playback a local file on both units and compare the quality, but until Roku enables the USB port on the XD-HR unit, there is no way to do the comparison.
While the Popbox has no hard drive, it does ship with a 2GB SD card, two USB ports and one HDMI port. The ports allow you to plug in other devices like Flip cameras and external hard drives enabling users to ingest their networked media content. While some might expect the included SD card to be used for storing content, that's not supported. The Popbox SD card enables the box to store what Syabas calls "popapps" for their Popbox store (screenshot) and the main purpose of the SD card is to store those apps and the metadata. The company has announced more than twenty content partners for the Popbox store including Netflix, Twitter, Facebook, Photobucket, Next New Networks, Revision3, blip.tv, IMDB and Funspot Games have all developed Popapps for the platform. While I have only seen screenshots of the Popbox store, the UI is beautiful and clearly beats Roku's interface hands-down.
The box will only be available in the U.S. to start and is expected to ship in late March. There will be two versions of the box, one with WiFi and one without. While today's announcement says the Popbox will retail for $129, that's for the unit without WiFi. The WiFi enabled Popbox will have a retail price of $149.
On paper, the Popbox looks very similar to Roku but has two big hardware advantages in that it supports lots of different video and audio formats and allows for media extender functionality via USB. While Roku's recently announced new XD-HR unit also includes a USB port, Roku has not yet said when that port will be enabled or what it will support. I put in a request to Roku for an update on this and will post their response when I get it.
All technology aside, the real question is what's the business model for such a device and how many can Syabas realistically sell? We don't know exactly how many units Roku has sold, but I suspect that with the holidays now over, and Roku having shipped a lot of boxes during that time, Roku should have broken the one million mark for total number of Roku units deployed to date. Syabas goal is to sell half a million boxes in 2010 which does not seem unrealistic if they get marketing support from some of their content partners. One has to wonder though how much marketing support Syabas will get from Netflix, considering Netflix is an investor in Roku. Syabas said they will get the same level of support the Roku has gotten, but I want to see that take place before I believe it. The marketing push and promotion that Netfflix has given the Roku device is the main reason Roku has sold so many of them.
As we've seen with the success and rave reviews of the Popcorn Hour, Syabas strength is clearly in hardware design and video processing. But to be successful in the market with a device like the Popbox, you have to have great content partners, have a easy way to find all the content and have a good user interface. So far, from what I have seen, Syabas has all of this in the new Popbox.


Is there a way to get a preview of this box? i.e. have a look at one?
Posted by: OTT Video | Monday, January 04, 2010 at 02:01 PM
You can see it in-person if you are at CES this week. I expect to have a unit to review myself very shortly.
Posted by: Dan Rayburn | Monday, January 04, 2010 at 02:03 PM
For me the questions are related to interface. How are big movies libraries handled.
Also that Ad panel on the side, lets hope that's gone to disappear, since that will annoy a lot of people.
Was there mention of ISO support?
Posted by: Neil | Wednesday, January 06, 2010 at 01:37 PM
Nice information about pop box, I was looking for it as I am going to buy one next week.Thanks for it
Posted by: Netflix | Thursday, February 11, 2010 at 12:56 AM
It was just announced, Popbox will ship on July 24th but no Netflix at launch (see http:\\reviewhorizon.com)
Posted by: Sam | Wednesday, June 30, 2010 at 06:14 PM
Great information on the pop box. I will buy one soon. Thanks for it
Posted by: Tom | XBR KDL | Sunday, August 22, 2010 at 03:09 PM
Good luck with that I have to say - my Roku is beloved in our home! We have one in the living room, and in each bedroom I hate to say. We already have Netflix on the Blu-Ray player app menu, but the roku has so much more!
Posted by: Best Wireless N Router | Monday, September 13, 2010 at 04:35 AM