LaCie LaCinema Premier

By Ty Pendlebury on 19 February 2008

The LaCie LaCinema Premier is a relatively quick and easy-to-use media streamer and external drive that won't burn holes in your coin pocket.

Editor's rating:7.4 User rating:6.4
  • Good: Easy to use • Relatively quick • One of the cheapest and largest-capacity streaming devices •
  • Bad: Boring design • Limited connections • Some fiddly interface problems • Photos in portrait mode look poor •
  • Specs: External USB 2.0 drive • USB, S-Video, Stereo audio, Coaxial, Optical • MP3, WMA, AAC, OGG, JPEG, BMP, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, PNG • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$359.00

LaCie is a company which has been making stylish external drives for many years. And now the company is turning its hand to streaming media. The LaCinema Premier is a 500GB external drive, which also includes video outputs to connect to your TV.

Design
LaCie has a reputation for design, so we were a little disappointed that the LaCinema is essentially a rectangular box. And talk about black. This thing's blacker than Hotblack Desiato's stuntship. If it weren't for the blindingly blue lights you would never find it in the dark (or in the Restaurant car park).

The front panel consists of the Power button and activity lights, a four way cursor, and an unusual rocker/menu button similar to the iPod scroll wheel but nowhere near as useful. You see, the rocker switch is also a Play/Stop button, with an awkward "OK" in the middle. And as the button is so obfuscatingly black it's sometimes hard to tell which you're pressing.

The supplied remote is pretty bog standard for a device as cheap as this. While it does include volume buttons, the play and stop aren't anywhere near the FFWD and REW controls which is confusing. It does come with a dedicated "Synch" button that is handy for audio-synching badly-encoded films.

Features
The LaCinema's biggest attraction is the fact that it's both a storage device and a media centre. After connecting the device to your TV you will be presented with a  user interface enabling you to watch movies, listen to music, or view your happy snaps.

Though the specs list doesn't name it, we found the LaCie supports XViD files (and presumably some DivX), which one-ups the Apple TV. Other supported formats include DVD iso files -- that's right, rip non-copy protected DVDs straight to the drive -- MPEG-1/2/4, Ogg Vorbis, WMA and AAC.

Unlike the Apple TV, though, the LaCie is missing some essential connections. The first is HDMI -- there is only a 1080i-compatible component output and a choice of electrical or optical digital connections. For legacy TVs the drive also supports composite, S-Video and stereo RCA. For users who want to hide the drive in a cupboard an IR port is included, though you would have to purchase the IR extender separately.

The LaCinema interface is relatively straightforward.

Also, the only way to connect the drive to your PC is via USB 2.0. Missing are the faster eSATA, FireWire and gigabit Ethernet connections. But this shows a different approach to the same problem the Apple TV tackles -- instead of relying on a home network, the LaCinema enables you to connect to any PC you choose as USB is certainly more universal. Of course, the LaCinema will also work as an external USB 2.0 drive and comes with a "one touch" backup utility.

Like many devices of its type the LaCie features updateable firmware which can add new features and bug fixes. The newest available firmware offers an "improved user interface" and added a screen saver. However, despite downloading the latest firmware from the LaCie Web site and the device recognising it, we were presented with a message telling us that the .bin file wasn't for the LaCinema and to "power off DIVX player".

Performance
Despite our updating woes, the LaCinema was otherwise as easy to use as expected. Windows detected it straight away and we were able to shift files across at a relatively zippy pace -- write speeds were 24 MB/s and read speeds 21 MB/s respectively according to the SiSoft Sandra benchmark.

Navigating the user interface is straightforward, while not as pretty as some we've seen -- including the various Windows Media Centers. Each of the various icons leads you to a menu starting from the root of the drive. Not pretty, but should be intuitive to users of Windows Explorer. One thing we found, however, was that the text quality wasn't very good -- particularly at the highest 1080i resolution -- with a rippling "heat haze" effect. 480 and 720P looked OK on our Pioneer PDP-5000EX.

Movie files looked decent, and were certainly the equal of replaying the same files on a Dell XPS M1330 via the HDMI connection. Unlike Media Center though, there is no way to skip 30 seconds ahead -- the "Next" button takes you to the next file. You'll have to resort to the FFWD button, unfortunately. We also discovered that though the specs list trumpets the device's upscaling capabilities, upscaling had little to no effect. Noisy movies looked the same regardless of which resolutions we set.

MP3 playback was quite listenable as well, though the interface could use some work. Unfortunately, there is no playback screen for MP3s -- just a miniscule timer in the corner. This could be a concern for plasma users, as you may want to turn off your TV or risk burn in. But the latest update promises to fix this problem. Another niggle we encountered was that you also couldn't change the screen while playing back music. You needed to press stop to browse your media collection or look at photos.

Though movies and MP3s were replayed with some finesse, the same didn't apply to the Photo function. In particular, how the device handled images in the vertical Portrait mode. While Landscape mode pictures were reproduced well, photos in portrait scaled really badly, with huge jaggies. Happy snaps looked like lo-res photos no matter which resolution we set the LaCie to.

Topics: lacie, streaming, usb, divx, premier, 500gb, external, hdd, lacinema, drive

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Comments (9)

  • tommygun gave 6/10 on 22/01/2009 14:35 Report abuse

    • Good: Really easy to use.
      Perfect for films (Although I only have about 15 on there at the mo!)
    • Bad: I have a music library of about 100gig, and this unit takes about 30 seconds to view the music library (once plugged in to TV). Whenever I play an album, I can't view other files (so I can't cue up another tune), and I can't set up a playlist unless I do it through my PC.
      VERY FRUSTRATING.
      Picture quality is **** and the menu looks pretty dated.

    I needed an external 500gig hard drive for my music, films, and pics. This does the job fine, and it allows me to view them all without a pc.

    Sounds brilliant. So I bought one.

    Remember I'm mainly using this as an external hard drive, and only occasionally using the media player.

  • Cashy gave 5/10 on 14/01/2009 12:47 Report abuse

    sounds ...ok. does it support MPEG-4 with H264 codec? all my movies are in this format, ecluding a few divx. Tried otehr styles of this type of unit - very very repeat very dissatisfied. none support good musc playing none support good phot display.

  • bjwoody gave 6/10 on 27/11/2008 10:10 Report abuse

    • Good: Simple for Movies
    • Bad: Lousy for Music, will not play newer video codecs.

    Had this for 6 months now, is great for movies but forget about playing music on it. Can't believe there is no firmware update to address the codec and music issues.

  • Yair Levi gave 9/10 on 22/08/2008 04:49 Report abuse

    • Good: small, easy to connect
    • Bad: couldnt find yet the option to run music & pic on the same time (but i didnt yet dive in to look for it)

    Great product, replace my pc in the living room and up til now do what its should do

  • Raverz gave 10/10 on 13/06/2008 18:26 Report abuse

    • Good: 500GB is a nice amount of storage, offers many options for connectivity to your TV except HDMI. This though is not a problem really since the unit doesn't upscale to 1080P for one and two standard DVDs arn't even in 1080P.
    • Bad: Could have supported LAN

    I don't know why another poster said this is noisy, the unit is very quiet. Perhaps he had a dud or something.

    In comment to another poster, you CAN transfer files over 4GB but this requires reformatting the drive in NTFS format. Instructions are provided in the user manual on the disk included I believe but you could also just do a google search on how to reformat any external Hard Drive.

  • YGakis gave 2/10 on 25/05/2008 10:03 Report abuse

    • Bad: very very very noisy...unusable for movies and music

    easy to setup etc etc all above true.

  • Carl gave 10/10 on 06/04/2008 23:48 Report abuse

    perfect that is all that needs to be said

  • nyngan gave 3/10 on 26/02/2008 08:51 Report abuse

    • Good: Quick downoal
    • Bad: Quality of images reproduced
      User interface to reproduce images
      remote control

    used only for photos... it was very easy to transfer them to the unit, but everything else was terrible. The remote control is poorly designed, the menus frustratingly cumbersome, the user interface is time-consuming and the quality of images shown is terrible. Buy something else

  • carlhudson gave 7/10 on 19/02/2008 23:57 Report abuse

    • Good: Great price media centre. Very plug and play (for computer & TV). Small & portable. Comes with a decent full function remote control. Large storage. Mac/PC/Linux (etc)
    • Bad: Will not allow transfer of single files (ie. ISO) more than 4GB (although transferring a list of files/folder of any size is fine-but slow). Slow USB files transfers. No network. LEDs stay on during video playback. The backup software is too basic for serious use.

    Does what is says it does, though the slow USB only transfers can be tedious for large files (or a large list of files at once).

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