Pinnacle PCTV To Go HD Wireless
Manufacturer: Pinnacle Systems Inc. Part number: 230100169
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- The combination of built-in wireless and limited Windows Media Center integration makes the Pinnacle PCTV To Go HD Wireless one of the more promising Slingbox competitors for advanced users.
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CNET editors' review
Pinnacle PCTV To Go HD Wireless price range: $275.00
- Reviewed by: John P. Falcone
- Reviewed on: 04/25/2007
The good: Streams sources to any broadband-connected Windows PC in the world; built-in wireless networking support; integration options for Windows Media Center PCs; can accept as many as four A/V inputs (composite, S-Video, RF, and HD component) with pass-through; no host PC or monthly charges required; simultaneous streaming to multiple clients on a LAN; controls many brands of cable and satellite boxes and DVRs; excellent video quality over LAN, decent video quality via the Internet.
The bad: Only compatible with Windows PCs (so far); software and remote control options aren't as polished or thorough as those on the Slingbox; Media Center setup and integration isn't as easy and functional as it should be; recording function and Media Center streaming doesn't work outside a LAN; just one audio input for three inputs; monopolizes the attached device during viewing.
The bottom line: The combination of built-in wireless and limited Windows Media Center integration makes the Pinnacle PCTV To Go HD Wireless one of the more promising Slingbox competitors for advanced users.
When Monsoon Multimedia released its Hava Wireless HD product in 2006, the company made no attempt to hide the fact that it was largely a "proof of concept" device. In other words, they were highly interested in licensing the product to a larger company with better brand recognition. Flash forward a few months, and that's now happened: the Pinnacle PC To Go Wireless HD is essentially a clone of the Hava Wireless HD, and--as such--performs identically to its doppelganger. But the release of the Pinnacle gave us a chance to see how the product has evolved over the past few months thanks to software and firmware upgrades. We also got our first chance to test its Media Center functionality with Windows Vista.
Like the Slingbox, the Pinnacle PCTV To Go Wireless HD's primary mission is to deliver your home TV programming to your PC screen--whether it's elsewhere on the home network, or anywhere on the Internet. But PCTV To Go manages a few distinguishing characteristics from the Slingbox line. First and foremost, it has a built-in 802.11g wireless capability, so it can interface with any existing wireless or Ethernet network (Slingbox is Ethernet-only). Secondly, it integrates with a PC running Windows Media Center Edition (either the XP or Vista Premium/Ultimate flavors), allowing you to record live streaming video on your PC when you're streaming inside your home (a standalone PC viewing application is provided for non-MCE machines). And finally, the Pinnacle allows multicasting, which means that within your home network, several users can watch the stream at the same time while one person watches remotely via the Internet (Slingbox allows only a single viewer at a time).
Design and connectivity
The Pinnacle PCTV To Go Wireless HD has a slightly different enclosure than the Hava Wireless HD. It's jet-black, and actually a bit more attractive and sleek than the Hava. Still, it puts you in the mind of a slightly oversized network router, measuring 2 inches high by 12 inches wide by 7 inches deep. Except for four green status LEDs, the front panel is nondescript. Once the Pinnacle is hooked up and active, it's designed to just sit there and process bits.
The rear panel is jam-packed with more jacks than an average DVD player. There are composite, S-Video, and component inputs, along with one set of stereo audio jacks (red and white RCA connectors) and a screw-type RF input. You can feed as many as four sources to the box, including an unscrambled RF source such as an analog cable feed or an antenna, which takes advantage of the built-in analog TV tuner. But because the composite, S-Video, and component inputs share a single set of audio jacks, you'll need to purchase Y-cable adapters to feed them simultaneously. Likewise, you'll have to have the second and third devices powered off (or muted), or you'll get a mashup of all the simultaneous audio streams. Alternately, you might use the second input as a video-only security camera feed--just plug in your camcorder. (By comparison, the Slingbox Pro has discrete audio inputs for each of its video sources.)

Rounding out the PCTV To Go's rear panel is a connector for the included dual-headed IR blaster, which remotely controls the A/V sources of your choice, such as cable/satellite boxes and DVRs. To interface with your home network, the Pinnacle has both a standard Ethernet port (for wired connections) and dual wireless antennas.
Setup
Setting up the Pinnacle is a two-step process: you need to connect the A/V cables to the video source(s), then connect it to your network, which involves installing the included software on a PC. Linking up with your home theater components is just as straightforward as hooking up a VCR or a DVD recorder. We appreciated the pass-through outputs, which let the PCTV To Go sit innocuously in the chain between our cable box and the A/V receiver without the need for splitters or monopolizing precious video outputs. Of course, as with any place-shifting box, the A/V source you connect to the Pinnacle will determine how much you'll get out of it. A cable or satellite set-top box will let you watch all those channels on your PC, but a TiVo-style digital video recorder will provide the added value of accessing those great DVR features--pausing and rewinding live TV, watching previously recorded shows--remotely.

Once the Pinnacle box is hooked up and powered on, you have to install the setup software on a nearby PC. The PCTV To Go boasts a pretty decent setup wizard; it wasn't flawless by any means, but it did an admirable job of taking us through the process step-by-step. We installed the software on a wireless laptop (the Pinnacle software is Windows-only). The setup program logs in to the Pinnacle itself--wirelessly--and asks you to input your network's wireless encryption key (it supports WEP and WPA encryption). Thereafter, the PCTV To Go itself can access your wireless network, and you should be good to go. We installed it at least three times on three different PCs, and there were a few hiccups here and there--the process can occasionally "confuse" a PC's wireless card, for instance, and might require some manual intervention. But as far as wirelessly configuring a network device goes, it's among the more impressive and successful experiences we've had. In fact, it bested Sony's LocationFree LF-B20 in two big ways: the setup process was not only smoother but truly wireless throughout, and Sony requires its unit to be connected via Ethernet during setup. That said, if you don't have a Wi-Fi network, the Pinnacle works just as well via Ethernet.
Performance
Like the Slingbox and the Sony, you configure the Pinnacle viewing software to control your set-top box remotely by verifying the make and model during the setup process. The PCTV To Go lists most of the major brands of cable and satellite boxes and DVRs (as well as a variety of other manufacturers, such as TiVo, Sony, Panasonic, and the like), and it had no trouble controlling a standard DirecTV box, a DirecTV HR20, or a Scientific Atlanta 8300HD DVR via its IR blaster. But the choices weren't as clear and straightforward as they should be: we couldn't find the HR20 listed, for instance, and had to choose the HR15 option instead (thankfully, the codes worked fine). Unlike earlier versions of the software, there are now onscreen remote "skins" that duplicate the look and feel of your remote--but there are only nine choices, and you manually have to choose them. Still, having a matching remote onscreen lets you click on whatever control option you like--channel changing, DVR function, whatever--and have that automatically passed on to the source device.
There was also a lot to like about the Pinnacle's performance. Wirelessly or wired, streaming was--for the most part--smooth and steady. While the Pinnacle does indeed accept a high-def signal, the streamed image isn't close to HD. Nor is it necessarily close to DVD quality. But it's far better than nearly all streaming Web videos. The system uses MPEG2 streaming on a home network, and with the ample bandwidth therein, the video quality was excellent. Even when the window was maximized to full size, the resulting picture was very watchable. When accessing the Pinnacle from a remote location (via the Internet, outside the home network), the quality was ratcheted down to MPEG4, the higher compression making better use of the restricted bandwidth. As always, the quality is largely dependent on the available network bandwidth; you'll want at least 300Kbps on both upstream and downstream connections, with 400Kbps to 500Kbps (and beyond) offering a noticeably better picture.
Distinguishing features
The PC TV To Go's distinguishing features all proved to work as advertised, though they aren't without their caveats. Multicasting worked fine: we were able to watch a stream simultaneously on two different PCs logged into a closed LAN--supposedly, it can work with up to 50--plus a third PC on the outside via the Internet. Furthermore, the Pinnacle viewing software is always buffering (a la TiVo), so you can pause and rewind live video feeds and manually record programs to your hard drive for later viewing. The catch is that this function works only on a home network--not when you're watching remotely via the Internet.
Owners of XP or Vista PCs that support Microsoft's Media Center Edition (MCE) will find some additional functionality with the Pinnacle. The software installs itself in such a way as to "fool" Media Center into seeing the PCTV To Go as a built-in TV tuner card. As a result, you can use the Windows electronic programming guide and the computer's wireless remote to browse programs and record shows just as you otherwise would--but instead of being tethered to the cable/satellite box, you can be in another room of the house.
This sounds like an ideal Media Center solution, especially for a laptop--a TV tuner that's completely separate from the body of the PC itself--but it's not quite as smooth as we'd like it to be. You have to jump through a few hoops in the Media Center setup in order to get things going, and it only seems to work if you have a Media Center "bean bag" (USB IR module) hooked up. But with that thing hanging off your laptop, you might as well be wired to a TV tuner anyway, so it pretty much defeats the advantage. Also, the Media Center setup gave us no option to choose the component video stream, so we were forced to run a redundant S-video connector from our satellite box. Likewise, the MCE functionality only works within a home network--take it on the road, and you're again stuck using the default Pinnacle software viewer. On the bright side, anything you record to the hard drive--in Media Center or with the Pinnacle software--can be played back anywhere.
The other problem with the Media Center implementation is that you have to follow the somewhat convoluted setup instructions to the letter. We were able to get working on a Windows XP machine, but we couldn't quite get it up and running on a Vista Premium laptop--the video streamed just fine, but the channel changing didn't quite work, even after several tries.
Pinnacle vs. Slingbox and Sony LocationFree TV
Comparing the Pinnacle PCTV To Go to the more established players in the place-shifting market yields a mixed--but competitive--box score. Sling still edges the competition in some key areas: its software and setup routine remains the gold standard for ease of use and intuitive design for these sort of devices, and its impressive device compatibility--Windows PCs, Windows Mobile phones/handhelds, high-end PalmOS smartphones, and Macs--is likely to grow in the future. Meanwhile, Sony's latest LocationFree TV products add wireless networking and PSP viewing to the mix, but they lose points for their more complex software and setup routines. The Pinnacle, meanwhile, delivers the same wireless advantage found on the Sony products, plus the addition of the multicasting features, the (admittedly limited) Media Center integration, and recording functionality--and it does all of it at a very competitive $250 price point.
In terms of performance, the Pinnacle is no slouch. With the variables of source and destination bandwidth--and the fact that Pinnacle, Sling, and Sony continue to tweak and improve their respective compression technologies and algorithms--head-to-head comparisons likely will produce seesaw results in the months ahead, making it hard to choose an outright winner for the best video quality. On a home network, the image quality (from a component video source) on a Pinnacle PCTV To Go versus a Slingbox Pro is pretty much a wash. That said, we'd still give the edge to Slingbox for remote streaming over the Web.
At the same time, it's worth pointing out that the Pinnacle suffers from the same basic problem as all of these devices: it monopolizes the A/V source to which it's attached. If you're a solo viewer, it's not a problem, but anyone who has the Pinnacle (or Sony, or Hava, or Slingbox) attached to a TV that someone else is watching is in for disappointment. Since both the local TV and the remote PCTV software are pulling from the same source--the single cable or satellite box--both viewers will find themselves watching the same thing. If one or the other starts to flip channels or watch a DVR recording, the other one will see the same thing. The one exception: if the Pinnacle is pulling its signal from an analog antenna or analog cable, there's essentially no source device, so the issue is moot.
Conclusion
At the end of the day, the Pinnacle PCTV To Go is a worthwhile Slingbox alternative. It all comes down to what features you're looking for. If you're looking for the easiest setup routine and the ability to stream live TV to viewers using something besides a Windows PC--such as Macs, Windows Mobile, Palm--then Slingbox remains the better choice. But if you're a more sophisticated user who needs built-in Wi-Fi, support for simultaneous streaming to multiple PCs, or some degree of Windows Media Center compatibility, the Pinnacle PCTV To Go HD Wireless is a worthwhile choice. Its rich feature set, low price, and impressive performance make it a credible alternative for any potential Slingbox owners.
User reviews
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Integrated wireless not as advantageous as it seems
by imagesrdecieving on December 25, 2007
Pros: great picture, easy setup
Cons: silly network integration
Summary: This products works as advertised. Easy setup and good picture.
I basically wrote this review because I felt the need to share upfront that it has a very silly integration ...Summary: This products works as advertised. Easy setup and good picture.
I basically wrote this review because I felt the need to share upfront that it has a very silly integration to your home network. I bought this device specifically because it has built in wireless access. The problem is the pinnacle box itself won't 'report' to your wireless router. Instead it communicates with a computer on your network that has a wireless connection. Where this becomes a problem is:
in my situation I have a desktop hardwired to a wireless router and a laptop with a wireless card. The desktop and the router are nowhere near my cable box - thus I can't feasibly connect the pinnacle to my router via a hardwire. Should be no problem because it has the built in wireless?
wrong! It will not connect to my desktop thru the wireless router! So where I want to bring my laptop on trips to watch tv - I can't because now my pinnacle has no way to connect to my home network! The laptop is the bridge even though the router is more than capable! Weird design flaw and I now have to spend money to get my desktop a wireless connection(either by usb or pci).4 out of 4 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Works fine (If you read the fine print)
by sunset1000 on May 7, 2007
Pros: Remote viewing from up to four video sources. Records to your PC in MPEG
Cons: resolution of 720X480 local viewing and 320X240 remotely. Four Guides to read through.
Summary: Once you realize the marketing hype is just that, and your using PC based video technology to watch something you already have in your living room with FAR BETTER viewing. ...
Summary: Once you realize the marketing hype is just that, and your using PC based video technology to watch something you already have in your living room with FAR BETTER viewing. It?s great!
After reading all four set-up and user guides in the install file, (the only paper in the box is an almost useless quick-start guide) and spending a weekend of fine tuning. I can watch, pause, rewind, and record any of four video sources from my desktop and laptop. However, I can also do that without the PCTV to go HD wireless from my TV, Satellite DVR, security camera and Cable box.
What makes the PCTV to go HD wireless different is that I can record to MPEG and then, by using Windows movie maker and DVD maker, copy the recordings to a DVD and remove them from my DVR and/or hard-drive.
Remotely, you can NOT record, but can watch anything recorded previously, locally, and saved to your laptop or recorded by your DVR or other connected device.
The on-screen remotes work well. After a little tuning I am able to use the supplied double IR Blaster to control my HDTV tuner AND Satellite DVR. One connected to the component input, the other to the composite. The PCTV box on-screen remote changes when the input is selected. I did have to configure the ?learn? remote feature for my HDTV.
Bottom line. If you think you?re going to watch HDTV on your laptop while in a hotel room in India, FORGET IT. What you?ll get is a 320X240 mpeg similar to the other video feeds from the internet.
If you want to watch ?your home? and any video source ?from your home? on your laptop in a hotel room in India, ?PCTV to go HD wireless? WILL DO IT.4 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Not as Promised
by cbkonczak on March 1, 2007
Pros: Easy to install
Cons: Video quality, IR blaster
Summary: Let's be honest-- the only reason this device would be potentially better than a Slingbox is because you can burn the MPEG files onto DVD...But, buyer beware. I ...
Summary: Let's be honest-- the only reason this device would be potentially better than a Slingbox is because you can burn the MPEG files onto DVD...But, buyer beware. I recorded a favorite American Idol performance from my TiVo and it looked good on my 24" digital flat panel. I then burned it to a dvd and played it back on my 57" screen. The video quality was awful. Whatever compression is being used is ruining the burning possibilities. This is advertised as an HD unit-- but the quality is nowhere near 1080i...not even 720I. The IR blaster did not work to control my HR 10-250-- even though it was a standard configuration option. I wouldn't waste your mony for now...wait a couple of generations.
3 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Good Value - Pretty good video
by ldetex on October 18, 2008
Pros: Bought for $49.95 which also gave me free shipping on other item so net cost was $40. Easy to set up and remote now matches my DTV HR20. Internal viewing works well and wireless signal feeds back through ethernet. Best streaming I have seen over net
Cons: Occasional loss of signal
Summary: I can view my DirectV receiver from any location worldwide, read the guide and select any channel I want. As a test I had my son in Canada download the ...
Summary: I can view my DirectV receiver from any location worldwide, read the guide and select any channel I want. As a test I had my son in Canada download the software, install and use my password to access my Direct TV in south Texas and he had no problems with setup and quality was very good. At home I can record "House" while I watch "NCIS" etc and the TIVO like features allow me to take a break and pick up where I left. Picture quality is better than VHS but not quite DVD. The unit is excellent for web streaming (MPEG4) and is even watchable at full screen unlike most web streams.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Great if you can read!!
by technicallyinclined on December 28, 2007
Pros: so easy, took me less than 5 minutes to setup stream and record
Cons: If you can't read directions you end up like the poor shmoes complaining; though it can be understandably slow among congestion
Summary: So easy I scoff and those who, couldn't or even had to, read the directions. It's really self explanatory. If it is not controlling your tuner device, then ...
Summary: So easy I scoff and those who, couldn't or even had to, read the directions. It's really self explanatory. If it is not controlling your tuner device, then follow the applicable directions and test each option. Slingbox is overly hyped and does not compare to this device's ability to stream and record. I do believe that slingbox intentionally hindered its ability to record content, but like ipod tries to make up for its lack of abilities by suckering schmucks into believing their cooler if they have one. Everyone laugh and point at those who can't record their streaming media, but still somehow facilitate their elitism.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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The HD Lies!
by djdikaioo on November 7, 2007
Pros: It does a great job of rebeaming an analog center...
Cons: Don't be fooled by the HD in its name.
Summary: If I wanted an analog tuner that could be beamed across the internet this wold be it... but I want to record and rebeam digital. BAH!
Summary: If I wanted an analog tuner that could be beamed across the internet this wold be it... but I want to record and rebeam digital. BAH!
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Customer Dis-service
by calejones on March 24, 2009
Pros: Innovative idea
Cons: set-up wasn't all that easy. customer service is seriously lacking.
Summary: I wouldn't buy this product again. This worked for a bit and then all of a sudden I started getting a connection error - "central server is unreachable". When ...
Summary: I wouldn't buy this product again. This worked for a bit and then all of a sudden I started getting a connection error - "central server is unreachable". When I read the not very helpful guide, I found that this was a pretty significant error and only by contacting customer support. I tried e-mail and they sent me an auto e-mail saying they got it and would respond shortly. Is 4 months and still not response "shortly"? Likewise, their hours for customer support are 0300 to 2200 EST. For a person who has a job, and lives in Hawaii, not very accommodating times.
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After two years
by eschwei on February 12, 2009
Pros: OK in the house
Cons: Pinnacle has abandoned this and all their products and Hauppauge Digital hasn't said what their plans are.
Summary: This product used to work on the Internet and in the home. It does not work with Vista and other WEB CAMs, The video drivers are very aggressive and think ...
Summary: This product used to work on the Internet and in the home. It does not work with Vista and other WEB CAMs, The video drivers are very aggressive and think they are the only thing that should be on you computer.
Also, I think the Pinnacle P2P Internet viewing servers are gone. I've made several inquiries to Pinnacle about this but, have not received a reply. However, I've changed nothing and it stopped working shortly after the sale of the company to Hauppauge. I think this is the end of a good technology.
I actually used Intel's Intelicast 10 years ago. Another good technology snuffed! -
couldn't get it working even after substitution
by roxpa on February 3, 2009
Pros: My husband wanted a solution for not to pass cables around the house to watch television everywhere we want
Cons: it does not work
Summary: We tried to set up and configure. Wizard told us the pc was not in LAN (after having downloaded the sw update from the net!). LAN was (and is) perfectly ...
Summary: We tried to set up and configure. Wizard told us the pc was not in LAN (after having downloaded the sw update from the net!). LAN was (and is) perfectly working for every device of ours but PCTVtoGO. Call center after som trial gave us a return number and changed the device (supposed to be hardware failing) with a new one. The new one behaves just the same as the old. 110 euro through the window! Avoid it.
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Crashed everything!
by kescarborough on March 19, 2008
Pros: worked for about 10 minutes through LAN
Cons: Crashed network, low quality, bandwidth hog
Summary: I'm not sure how this device managed to do it, but it crashed my entire home network--even after power cycling the router and cable modem six or seven times, ...
Summary: I'm not sure how this device managed to do it, but it crashed my entire home network--even after power cycling the router and cable modem six or seven times, I couldn't get the network back (it ultimately came back after completely removing the device from the network and waiting several hours).
Even before everything crashed, it provided very poor quality except when using a laptop next to the device and router. It also hogged a big chunk of bandwidth as there appears to be no way to keep it from streaming video when you do not want to use it. This might not be an issue for those people who can turn their cable box off entirely, but we have Dish network and our box displays the bouncing Dish logo even while off. I'm sorry, but I don't want to use up bandwidth broadcasting the bouncing logo 24-7.
Manufacturer info
- Pinnacle Systems Inc.
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Pinnacle Systems Inc. products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.pinnaclesys.com/
- Address:
280 N. Bernardo Ave.
Mountain View, CA 94043 - Phone: 650-526-1600
- Email: sales@pinnaclesys.com
- Fax: 650-526-1601







