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Neuros OSD Media Center (6011000)

by NEUROS
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (78 customer reviews)

List Price: $239.99
Price: $210.95
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  • Digitally store any video content--DVDs, VHS tapes, home videos, and more
  • Get rid of bulky, disorganized cases and put your video at your fingertips
  • Enjoy at home or transfer to a portable device (laptop, iPod, iPod Touch, PSP, iPhone, Smartphones) for on-the-go entertainment
  • Digitize and share your home movies with your friends and family
  • Free downloadable upgrades
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Technical Details

  • Brand Name: NEUROS
  • Model: 6011000
  • Hardware Platform: Linux
  • Form Factor: External
  • Connectivity Technology: Wired
  See more technical details

Product Details

  • Item Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • ASIN: B000HXGIHE
  • Item model number: 6011000
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (78 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #16,630 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics)
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: July 7, 2004

Product Description

From the Manufacturer

Neuros OSD: Digitally store and easily access your DVDs, VHS tapes and video content.

The Neuros OSD connects to your TV or home theater system and allows you to archive all of your DVD and video content. Plug the Neuros OSD into your TV, connect to your DVD player or VCR, and hit play. Your movie will be safely and legally transferred into a digital library! It works with home movies too. Just plug your video camera into the OSD, push play, and your memories are digitized. With the Neuros OSD, you can store hundreds of hours of video in one location (like an external hard drive), get rid of those bulky cases, put an end to DVD damage, and instantly access any of your videos with the push of a button on a remote. You can even transfer your video content to a portable device (video iPod, PSP, mobile phone, etc.) to watch on the go, or email your home movies to friends and family.
  • Organize your digital library and put it all at your fingertips.
  • Eliminate DVD and VHS cases to free up space.
  • Watch your video content on the go on laptops and PMPs like the iPod, iPod Touch, iPhone, PSP, Smartphones, etc.
  • Digitize, access, and easily share your home videos.
  • Free downloadable upgrades: new applications continually developed with help of worldwide open source community!

Technical Specifications
  • Video Recording: MPEG-4 and ASF
  • Video Playback: MPEG-4, ASF, AVI, DivX, Xvid, .MOV.
  • Record from any standard video source (TV cable box, satellite receiver box, PVR or DVR like TiVo, DVD, VCR, camcorder, video game consoles, etc.) with RCA composite or S-Video cables (S-Video cable not included).
  • USB host to connect USB devices like USB thumbdrives, external hard drives, iPod, PSP, etc. and flash memory card slots for standard memory cards: SD (including miniSD and Transflash/microSD), Memory Stick (Pro, Duo and Pro Duo), Compact Flash (CF) and Microdrives (external hard drive and memory cards or microdrives not included).
  • Five resolution settings including QVGA (320 x 240) for playback on popular Smartphones, Sony PSP and other popular handhelds; VGA (640 x 480) for playback on TVs and PCs.
  • Four recording quality settings: Superfine, Fine, Normal, and Economy.
  • Schedule timed recordings
  • IR Blaster
  • Audio Player: Stereo MP3/WMA at 30-320kbps (CBR and VBR), Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, WAV, Stereo MPEG-4 AAC-LC, G.726
  • Photo Viewer: JPEG decoder (baseline up to 32M pixel), BMP, GIF (nonanimated), thumbnail view, zoom in/out (2x, 4x)
  • Ethernet connection: Connect to your network(Samba client support), save recordings to network storage
  • YouTube browser
  • File management option (cut/copy/paste/delete/rename)
  • Upgradeable firmware from www.neurostechnology.com for future expanded functionality.

. What's in the Box:
  • Standard A/V RCA interface cable (2)
  • 110-240V AC/DC power supply
  • Programmable remote control (battery included)
  • Stand
  • IR blaster
  • Serial connector

Product Description

Records video from any analog video source and links your PC, Portables and entertainment center.The Neuros OSD was created to connect users computer and entertainment worlds. Among many other things, this would allow users to watch video downloads and digital photo slideshows on TVs and listen to MP3s through their stereos.Previously the choices for doing this have been restricted to two approaches- all-in-one PC-based media centers and limited, closed embedded devices in various forms- PVRs, digital media adapters and streaming devices.


Customer Reviews

I tried to play an MPEG on the OSD from both an SD card and a USB thumb drive. Glenn S.  |  12 reviewers made a similar statement
Using this product is very easy. Robert B. Jontz  |  7 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
136 of 138 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A B+ player May 31, 2007
By Dan
As someone who spends a lot of time on planes and subways I have been looking for a way to easily take TV shows with me. I have a Dell Axim x51v PDA and a Creative Zen Vision:M and use both to play video files.

My holy grail was to be able to record a show and be able to play it on both players without having to spend time converting these files. I also own a Slingbox and, until I bought the OSD, used Applan's At Large Recorder to record the Slingbox stream into wmv files which I then copied onto an SD card and used on my Dell. Unfortunately the At Large Recorder ties up your computer, is prone to crashing and doesn't always record the right channel at the right time, so my search continued.

Neuros OSD

The OSD is small, very easy to set up. It comes with the necessary cords and remote control. All the inputs and outputs are well marked and intuitive. This was an easy set up. The process of setting the IR blaster codes was also easy. (This makes it possible for the OSD to change the channel to the show you want to record.) Instead of wading through lists to find your cable box model, you just put your cable box remote control at it, press each digit and the OSD "learns" the codes. It detected the 2GB card I inserted and the external hard drive I connected (make sure your drive has a FAT32 file system, not NTFS as that isn't supported yet) and the navigation is like windows explorer. Using a wireless bridge, I connected it to the internet so that it can update the firmware on its own. It was easy to set the clock (which uses 12 or 24h time) and have everything up and running in no time. Strangely, it comes with a stand that is easy to knock over so after a few falls, I put the stand back into the box and do without.
... Read more ›
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48 of 50 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Quiet and legal February 2, 2008
Amazon Verified Purchase
When I tell my friends what I have, I am met with blank stares. I understand them. It is a revolutionary product whose sole function is to turn video from any source into MPEG-4

Now MPEG-4 is the format that a DVR such as TiVO uses to store all your reruns of The Daily Show. More importantly it is the very format that your iPod uses to play video. Even if you are enough of a techie to get those Jon Stewart pieces off of your TiVo and into your iPod, this is only a partial solution to a much bigger problem-how in the heck can you copy your favorite DVDs onto your iPod?

The Neuros OSD is the answer. Basically it takes video-cable TV, DVD, camcorder, and even old VHS tapes and converts them automatically to MPEG-4. Once converted you can load it onto your iPod, or play it on your computer, or just store it forever on an external hard drive.

This product is a video converter and not a storage facility. You are going to need something to store its output. My first solution was to purchase an inexpensive 500 GB external hard disk. This works fine but it is a little like using an elephant gun to bring down a field mouse. The OSD has memory card slots. since a two hour DVD turned into a MPEG-4 has a footprint of less than one GB, a 2 GB SD card should be more than sufficient for most purposes. But SD cards are coming down in price as well. I have tried using 8GB and 4GB cards without success. Stick to the 2GB until the firmware is revised to accept the larger cards.

Now your iPod can be your storage device but it is necessary to put and keep it in the manual sync mode, and for me anyway that defeats some of the great joys of iPod ownership. Once on a hard drive or memory card it requires only a simple import command to load it onto your iPod.
... Read more ›
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38 of 41 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Couch potato? May 22, 2007
The Neuros OSD promises to free your media. Why?

We all know DRM is rife, and it's not fair. Yet manufacturers still encumber their products with annoying restrictions to prevent theft of copywritten material, rather than trust their consumers. TiVo messes up recording so you can't watch them on your computer. Apple TV won't even touch your DVD rips. What has made us consumers so bloody complacent?

My OSD sits proudly on my tv, it streams all my videos from both my USB HD and computer via network cable. Different file formats (non-DRM of course) don't faze it, it just plays it. That's what I use it for, 99% of the time. Nice & simple.

I can record any input to mpeg file, so I don't need a VCR no more. I can play & edit these files on my laptop, no restrictions. Yay!

There are problems, high bitrate (DVD stardard) files result in frame drops, which is disappointing. High definition is a no no, which doesn't bother me really, I'm not buying into this fad. The GUI is not pretty & remote feels slow. Subtitles aren't supported, but I've been told (the Neuros community is very open & talkative) it's coming with a firmware update. As is an EPG and wifi support.

The OSD promises a lot, I think it already delivers about 90% - it plays & records well with no restrictions. The last 10% has to be seen, for work still has to be done.

Summary: With the OSD, you can enjoy your video from your couch. That's freedom.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Hi, I hope this review and story helps those users that are caught between a rock and hard spot in deciding on one of a couple options in MP4 video recording.

This review is for individuals like myself that are accustomed to using the combination of a DVD Recorder or VCR, PC to rip and transcode video; and any variation of these four options to enhance and enlighten our entertainment personally at home.

In second week of March 07' I ordered and received my long anticipated AppleTV. It came in a typical Apple box, pretty and polished and up-n-running within 15mins; including the time it took to upgrade the firmware.

I used the AppleTV for three days and watched a few movies that I had ripped and transcoded to AppleTV format on my hard drive. Transcoding took 45 mins each on over 20 titles I had the desire to watch.

I was delighted to have FINALLY been able to not hook my PC to the video in on my big screen, I could actually stream the video via my wireless G network at home... I know there were a few devices out there so far that were Windows based and had LOTS of Digital Rights Management issues that barred my ambitions.

I then found myself spending a few hundred dollars on a device that ONLY got me half way to where I wanted to be, to never have to buy DVD-R's, Rip, Transcode and or print labels on my printer, buy cases for my new additions to my home library of hundreds of movies and shows!

This did not make any sense for me, wasting a few hundred on a device that only allowed me not having to chain my laptop to the TV! So................... I Googled... and Googled.... and finally found a few hits (results)

Results on Yahoo, Google, Froogle, MSN, etc.
... Read more ›
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars So convenient!
Remember when you could record video on your VCR and keep it forever, if you wanted to? You didn't have to worry about whether your DVR would go out, taking your files with it, or... Read more
Published 19 months ago by JemGirl
3.0 out of 5 stars Good for its day
The Neuros OSD was an early, noble attempt to create a versatile video recorder platform out of a single, powerful Texas Instruments system-on-chip to achieve a new level of... Read more
Published on July 11, 2010 by S. Hunyady
2.0 out of 5 stars Neuros has dropped this ball
I think this DVR might have potential, but the manufacturer has pretty much stopped supporting it. I bought it based on the idea that the open source software could be upgraded and... Read more
Published on August 19, 2009 by S. Siegal
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy & Effective
The Neuros is easy to install, although the directions lack a bit. If you use a thumb drive, make sure it's 4GB+ in storage size. Read more
Published on July 30, 2009 by M. Hoops
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Digital Recorder
This player/recorder is very versatile, and after a few glitches in installation process and firmware upgrade (which is explained on the Neuros website), it has been functioning... Read more
Published on July 15, 2009 by leumas23
5.0 out of 5 stars An Amazing Device
My Neuros OSD Media Center is amazing. I was able to quickly and easily change my home VHS videos into DVDs. I must say that my computer savvy son had to set it up. Read more
Published on July 5, 2009 by Louise M. Gouge
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome device!!!!!!
If you need to get TV shows or movies off of you DVR box, this device will do it. I can affirm that it works, and fairly easily too!! Read more
Published on June 26, 2009 by K. Prokop
4.0 out of 5 stars Misunderstood
I guess it was my fault when I read about this product I was under the impression that this unit recorded and stored video in itself, it does not. Read more
Published on June 17, 2009 by ceenya65
1.0 out of 5 stars Unreliable
So I gave this thing a fair chance. I worked with it for a week and had poor results. I had no trouble getting it to recognize anything plugged into the usb port. Read more
Published on June 7, 2009 by kompewterz
4.0 out of 5 stars Great little piece of kit... but....
Let's start with the good things: it plays back practically any type of media. And hooked up (with a LAN cable) to the router I can play-back what's on my PC directly to my TV... Read more
Published on June 7, 2009 by M3
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