Apple MA711LL/A TV with 40GB Hard Drive | 
| Brand: Apple
List Price: $229.00 Buy New: $205.00 You Save: $24.00 (10%)
New (11) Used (4) Refurbished (1) from $164.95
Rating: 89 reviews Sales Rank: 727
Format: Cd Platforms: Macintosh, Windows Media: Electronics Batteries Included: No Operating System: Windows & Macintosh Shipping Weight (lbs): 4 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 7.7 x 1.1
MPN: MA711LL/A Model: MA711LL/A UPC: 885909129256 EAN: 0885909129256 ASIN: B000MQNMQ6
Release Date: March 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Mac + PC | | • | 802.11n Wi-Fi wireless | | • | 40GB hard drive for up to 50 hours of video | | • | Apple Remote |
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| Editorial Reviews:
From the Manufacturer Your computer is the center of your digital life. Your TV is the center of your entertainment life. But what if you want to watch movies, TV shows, movie trailers, podcasts, and photos from your computer on your TV? For one low price, Apple TV brings iTunes to the big screen. Say you've just downloaded The Incredibles from iTunes. Instead of huddling around your computer to watch, you pop some popcorn while your computer wirelessly syncs your new flick to Apple TV. Then you pull up a seat, put up your feet, and pick up the included Apple Remote to play your movie on TV. Give yourself a hand: You've just changed the way you watch digital media. | | Getting all your favorite iTunes movies, TV shows and music from your Computer to your TV is a snap with Apple TV. | Apple TV ports iTunes to Apple TV, wire free. Apple TV connects to your TV via an HDMI port or component video and audio ports. Its built-in, superfast 802.11 wireless capability syncs your iTunes library from any Mac or PC in the house. Best of all, what's on Apple TV stays in sync: Anytime you change your library in iTunes, it changes on Apple TV wirelessly, automatically. | | Apple TV boasts a simple easy to navigate menu. | What's on TV? Whatever you want. Apple TV puts your iTunes library movies, TV shows, music, and podcasts plus movie trailers from Apple.com on your TV. And your digital photos from iPhoto on a Mac or Adobe Photoshop Elements or Adobe Album on a Windows PC appear in high definition, so you can put on a stunning big-screen slideshow. - Just add popcorn.
Turn your living room into a multiplex with Apple TV. From the Movies menu, you can choose from up to 50 hours of flicks from iTunes, home movies you made yourself, previews from iTunes Top Movies, even movie trailers that stream directly from Apple.com. - Channel you.
Be your own program director with up to 50 hours of TV shows on Apple TV. Sort shows by date or show, then watch them anytime completely commercial free. Or check out the latest TV offerings from iTunes Top TV Shows. - Musically inclined.
If the best sound system in your house is connected to your TV, why play your iTunes library anywhere else? Apple TV lets you browse and play up to 9,000 songs and watch music videos, all on the big screen (and the big speakers). - Radio on the TV.
Thanks to Apple TV, you can enjoy podcasts on your TV for the first time ever. Listen to your favorite audio podcasts through your entertainment system speakers and watch video podcasts from the comfort of your couch. - Get the big picture.
Apple TV brings photo slideshows out of the den and into the living room. Pull up the best seat in the house and view your photos in jaw-dropping high definition. With up to 25,000 photos at your fingertips, you'll never cease to amaze. - All set.
From the Settings menu, you can set up your screen saver, your network, or your TV resolution, and get more information about your Apple TV. | | Because Apple TV streams wirelessly, you can send movies or musicfrom your computer to your TV or ipod anywhere in your house. | Wirelessly in Sync Your iPod syncs seamlessly with iTunes. Apple TV does the same wirelessly, from wherever your Mac or PC may be. Your computer is in your office. Your TV is in your living room. Apple TV brings them together using its built-in 802.11 wireless capability and your existing wireless network. Pair Apple TV with your computer and your TV shows, movies, music, podcasts, and photos sync automatically. Through the air. Like magic. Sync from one
Open iTunes and Apple TV appears in your devices list, ready to sync. Set iTunes to sync unwatched video. Sync new purchases. Or manually select what to sync. Set your preferences once and Apple TV automatically updates as your iTunes library changes. Everything travels over your network to Apple TV's built-in hard drive. So once you sync, even if you turn off your computer or disconnect it from the network, you can still enjoy stored video up to 50 hours of it from Apple TV.
stream from many. If you want to watch video from another computer, you can stream it live to your TV via Apple TV. Streamed media travels over your network to your TV without taking up space on Apple TV's hard drive. That's perfect for multicomputer households or when the computer you sync with has more in its iTunes library than will fit on Apple TV. Just choose up to five additional computers from the Sources menu. As long as a computer's on your network, it can stream to your TV. It just fits. Easy connectivity and built-in wireless make Apple TV right at home in your home entertainment system. Got a widescreen TV? Got iTunes? Then you're ready for Apple TV. Connect Apple TV to your TV and open iTunes on your computer. iTunes wirelessly detects Apple TV and walks you through a simple setup. Relax and unwire. If you don't have a wireless network, you can set one up easily with a wireless access point like the superfast 802.11 AirPort Extreme Base Station. Newer AirPort Extreme-enabled Macs let you create a wireless network using only your computer. And if you have a Mac or PC without wireless capability, you can connect Apple TV to your network using an Ethernet cable (sold separately). What you need - Widescreen TV
- Mac or PC
- iTunes 7.1
- Wired or wireless network
- HDMI cable or
- Component video cables and analog audio cables or optical audio cable
Apple TV connects to your widescreen TV via an HDMI cable (sold separately). This simple connection delivers both audio and video to your TV no need for multiple cables. If your TV's HDMI port is occupied by another device, or if your TV doesn't have an HDMI port, you can connect to Apple TV via component video and audio. So no matter what your entertainment system looks like, Apple TV connects easily. And since Apple TV has a built-in power supply, there's no unwieldy power brick to hide. Help when you need it. From connecting your existing A/V receiver to selecting the right video mode, if you run into problems while setting up your Apple TV, help is just a click away. Get quick and simple setup and connection solutions from the Apple TV: Tips and Basic Troubleshooting guide. Apple TV works with widescreen, enhanced-definition or high-definition TVs capable of 1080i, 720p, 576p, or 480p resolutions.
Product Description With Apple TV, you can take your movies, TV shows, music, photos and podcasts from iTunes, and enjoy them in the comfort of your living room on your big screen TV! Apple TV syncs or streams your media from a PC or Mac wirelessly via 802.11b, g, or n. When syncing, files are stored on the built-in 40GB hard drive for later playback - streaming playback is done in real-time, and you can stream from up to 5 difference computers. In iTunes, you can customize how Apple TV syncs up with your media. Have it sync automatically for new purchases, unwatched media, or manually select whatever you like. Apple TV connects to your TV via component or HDMI (optional) cables, providing stunning visuals in resolutions up to 720p. Also, the Apple TV won't take up a ton of space like other home entertainment components. It's only 7.7" square and 1.1" high, about half the size of the Mac Mini! Supported Video Formats - H.264 and protected H.264 (from iTunes Store) - 640 by 480, 30 fps, LC version of Baseline Profile; 320 by 240, 30 fps, Baseline profile up to Level 1.3; 1280 by 720, 24 fps, Progressive Main Profile. MPEG-4 - 640 by 480, 30 fps, Simple Profile Supported Audio Formats - AAC (16 to 320 Kbps); protected AAC (from iTunes Store); MP3 (16 to 320 Kbps); MP3 VBR; Apple Lossless; AIFF; WAV Supported Photo Formats - JPEG, BMP, GIF, TIFF, PNG Ports - HDMI (video and audio), Component Video, Optical Audio, Composite RCA Audio, 10/100Base-T Ethernet, & USB 2.0 Built-in 48-watt Universal Power Supply (no bulky power brick!) System Requirements - PC or Mac, iTunes 7.1, Mac OS X v10.3.9 or later - or - Windows XP Home or Pro with SP2, and a 10/100 Ethernet network or an 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi wireless network. Unit Dimensions - 7.7 square x 1.1 high
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| Customer Reviews: Read 84 more reviews...
What it's designed to do, it does extremely well. March 29, 2007 Eric Pruss (Atlanta, GA USA) 92 out of 105 found this review helpful
I was a little hesitant about the AppleTV when it was first announced, with the unofficial named of iTV, back in August of 2006. However, once I got one, and have had it for about a week now, I have become convinced. It does exactly what it was was designed to do, does it extremely well, and is utterly hassle free. If only everything were this simple! Now, I have a huge DVD collection counting well into the hundreds, and I would rather own the movies I like on disc than download them. Then again, working in the Animation and Visual Effects industry, I tend to be very interested in watching all the DVD extras which are not available on the iTunes store. I don't care about watching my photo albums on my living room TV either, but what I DO enjoy immensely is being able to watch the numerous video Podcasts I already subscribe too... In fact, it is so much more enjoyable to watch them this way, I have subscribed to numerous more. Again, working in the industry, the incredible ease with which one can subscribe to video Podcasts and get them on the AppleTV really struck me. With increased resolution, and better production values, this is the future of TV! Pick your shows, paid, free or ad supported, via iTunes and watch them in your living room. Anyhow, all that aside... Here are some things to know about the AppleTV. - The Apple TV is utterly silent. - It is NOT a game console. If you want to play games, buy a Wii, PS3 or Xbox360. - It is not a DVD/BlueRay/HD-DVD player. If you want to play DVDs, but a $50 progressive scan DVD player. If you also want to watch BluRay discs and HD-DVD discs, get the LG BH100. it's the ONLY player available that plays all three formats! - It is not a DVR. If you want to record live TV and watch it later, get a TiVo (don't waste your time with those crap cable and satellite DVRs though - pure garbage) - You need to buy the cables to connect it. The best connection, because it is digital all the way, HDMI is the best option - If your set has that connector, then get an HDMI-HDMI cable. If your set only has DVI, then get an HDMI-DVI cable. If your set only has component video, get an RCA component (aka RGB) video cable. For the audio, the best connection is the optical digital interface, which is usually not present on TVs, but is fairly common on better receivers. Otherwise, just use a a standard left/right DCA audio cable. - Contrary to even Apple's own information, you do NOT need to have a wide-screen display to use the Apple TV. It WILL work with 4:3 televisions, though you MUST have component (i.e. RGB) video connections on your TV or A/V receiver (if used). However, it will not function in full-screen mode. It uses a letterboxed presentation style. - It can support any audio format that the source recording happens to have. The iTunes store programs are all encoded with Dolby Pro Logic II surround sound, which is 100% backwards compatible with two-channel stereo (such as built-in TV speakers). However, if you connect up the optical digital audio connector to a DTS/Dolby Digital receiver, AND the program has DTS or Dolby Digital 5.1 (or higher) surround sound encoding, the AppleTV will pass this through to the receiver to be output properly. Just note that it is EXTREMELY unlikely that programming with digital audio encoding will be available to download from pretty much ANY source in the near future due to it's incompatibility with analogue 2 channel stereo. - One last thing. If you are a user of a Mac that features Front Row and they are in the same room as the AppleTV, then remember to pair the remote for the AppleTV and Mac independently, so they will not interfere with one another. Anyhow, all told, I think the AppleTV is really great, and will likely help to change the face of television as we know it.
Very limited applications June 11, 2007 Edwin A. Easterby 29 out of 39 found this review helpful
First, I love Apple products and wanted to like this one. Out of the box it installed as easily as you would expect from Apple, and I had it up and running within about 90 seconds of opening the box. I then downloaded a Lost episode, and streamed a Lost episode to test picture quality on my 24" Sony HDTV. The picture quality was terrible. It wasn't "near DVD" quality, it looked like a heavily distorted 480i picture. My connection was HDMI, so I don't think anything about my particular set-up was a problem. The TV, as I mentioned, is a Sony I bought about 8 months ago. Interestingly, the graphics quality of the menus and album art was very good, so it clearly wasn't a connection issue. Bottom line for me was the picture quality was not acceptable (and not even close). Being stuck with Itunes content I could maybe live with, but not coupled with that kind of quality. I'm better off just watching the Lost episodes on my laptop and with my Shure headphones.
A very good Version 1 March 25, 2007 David Stephens (Texas) 24 out of 31 found this review helpful
This is a very well-done product and the best Version 1 that I've ever seen. It will do what it says, and without fuss and with the smallest of setup. Out of the box, it's two cables and three clicks away from entering your network password, if you have one enabled. It then starts to sync with iTunes--all your ripped and bought music, your purchased videos, television shows, movies, from an ever-expanding list. It also syncs your photos from iPhoto. Like a good maid, it does Windows too. If you have more media than its 40GB drive will handle, and I have a great deal more, it fills up with photos last, which is shame for they make a really nice screen saver--your life in photos, rising from the bottom of the screen, large pictures in front and fast, smaller ones in the rear and slower, nice false perspective. It can be set to stream all your content from up to five iTunes computers at a time. You can control the syncing to limit it so the photos stay on. Syncing is important only if the computer(s) with the iTunes are off, for Apple TV can play anything stored on it and stand alone. You could schlep it along on a vacation. Problems and suggestions. Three times the living room one has lost contact with Orpheus in the office while it was syncing but streaming from the playlist, and I couldn't get it to download the playlist again without surgery. This is a software problem and this is Version 1. Suggestion. Allow the user to specify the priority of things to be kept, giving photos higher priority if you wish. Even better would be a different sort of syncing. Order all the playlists from all your iTunes, or even just the computer you're syncing with, and let Apple TV load as much as will fit, and use it as a disk buffer. This might cause thrashing of the WiFi though. But it would give access to everything when the computer was on and the most important things when not. And you could take your most important stuff on vacation. It's a small box. Also every playlist has as its first option "Shuffle." The second option ought to be the repeat option stored on the iTunes playlist instead of having a system-wide option. This is a model of very complex technology made very simple indeed to use; I don't think that anything, except possibly the iPod, even comes close, and that's not nearly as complicated a thing to do. I predict that this will do to DVDs what the iPod did to CDs. Neither will die but both will have to think. And cable companies will, I suspect, start to give more attention to faster download speeds and hasten Internet2 and perhaps lessen the number of channels flogging crap. Do you think? This may be the killer app/box. After all, if music is now sold as being the number one album on iTunes and then CD sales as an afterthought, and the iTunes store was launched in April of 2003, can you imagine what Apple TV might do? Death to dial-up.
Watch iPod video on your TV, Use your TV as an iPod March 23, 2007 Jeffrey Heaton (St. Louis, MO) 14 out of 16 found this review helpful
Think of the Apple TV unit as transforming your television into a large-format video iPod. All of the menus are very similar to how you use an iPod. It comes with a "front row" type remote control that allows you to select what you would like to play. The remote control is very simple, and uses an interface very similar to the standard iPod. The Apple TV is capable of playing from either its internal hard drive, or streaming from your computer. The beauty of it is that you rarely know which it is doing. After syncing with the computer all of your titles are immediately available. If the title you choose has not been copied to the internal hard drive, then it is streamed. The hard drive only keeps what you frequently access. If your computer is off, you will only be able to play what you have downloaded. Make sure that your television is compatible. There is no coax or s-video connection! Your TV must support either HDMI or component. You can also use optical audio if desired. This is not a replacement for a Tivo or your DVD player/recorder. This device only supports playback from iTunes compatible files. If you would like to record or play DVD. But if you would like to watch your iTunes video at HD resolution, this device is great!
Mainly for video from iTunes May 27, 2007 Robert L (Honolulu, Hawaii) 14 out of 26 found this review helpful
Why spend $300 on a hardware device that really is only good for playing video content downloaded from the iTunes store? Right now the quality of that iTunes video is not even as good as DVDs. Personally I own a few hundred DVDs. Although one can convert individual titles from DVDs to Apple TV compatible files using Handbrake, this process is very time-consuming and fruitless. The quality is not as good as the original. You lose all the menus, subtitle options, (true) surround sound, and director's commentaries. When I converted a dance DVD made from a telecast, the frame rate was decreased to 24 fps and the dancing became very jittery. When I used the 29.97 fps of the original, iTunes would play the file on my computer, but refused to sync it with the Apple TV. Although glitches like these may be fixed in time, they are very frustrating right now. I returned my Apple TV for a full refund.
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