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Scan 3XS Classic Media Centre Review

Author Simon Williams
Published 12th Jul 2007
Manufacturer Scan
Price £869.57 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £1,000.00 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price Click here
Features Score 8 for Features
Performance Score 8 for Performance
Value Score 6 for Value
Overall Score 7 for Overall
Scan 3XS Classic Media Centre
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Media Center PCs for use in a living room continue to sell well and Scan has decided to add a machine which looks much more like a hi-fi component than a PC. Supplied without monitor, keyboard or mouse for £1,000, it’s designed for use with the Media Center front-end within Windows Vista Home Premium.

It’s quite possible to use a PC of this type exclusively with a Windows remote control and with it you can view photos, TV and DVD movies and listen to digital radio, CDs and downloaded tracks, as well as streaming audio and video from the Internet.


The 3XS Classic Media Centre is built into a Media Centre case (the ML02) from SilverStone, a Taiwanese supplier which produces a lot of good-looking cases for specialist builds. This one is low-profile, though with a large footprint, and the internal components are heavily ventilated, so you won’t want to put anything on top of the case. Aluminium bands at the front and back of the case act as feet and lift the whole PC off the desk by a centimetre or so.

At front right is a liquid crystal display, which variously shows the buttons being pressed on the remote or a graphic equaliser. There are also icons for most of the types of media you may want to run. It looks suitably techie, but doesn’t serve much practical purpose when you’re running Media Center. Next to the display is a mirror-fronted panel which folds down to reveal a notebook-style DVD rewriter, a four-slot, multi-card reader, front-panel mic, line out, USB and FireWire sockets and a reset button.


Round the back are S/PDIF sockets, external SATA and 5.1 sound – which sounds good despite coming from a mainboard sound chip – as well as more USB and FireWire outlets. Power is provided by a substantial ‘black block’ power supply, which will have to be secreted away somewhere.

One of the features Scan was keen to tell us about was its HD compatibility, and the company has chosen an nVidia 8500 graphics card from Asus because of its full HD driver support and quiet fan – an important factor in a Media Center system. That’s HD on the video end, with HDCP-compliant output, not on the DVD end. There’s a slim-line, 8x DVD rewriter built into the machine, but while this is DVD±RW with support for Labelflash disc label writing, it isn’t either Blu-Ray or HD-DVD-compatible. Internal storage is provided by a 750GB SATA hard drive, which should be enough for many hours of personal recording, even at HD resolutions.

The whole system is powered by an Intel Core 2 Duo T7200 processor running at 2GHz and this is coupled to 2GB of DDR2 memory - a solid specification for a machine designed to run a variety of media.

 

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