Buffalo LinkTheater Wireless A&G
A MEDIA SERVER FOR PEOPLE WHO KNOW WHAT THEY’RE DOING
March 2007 By Brian PloskinaUltimately, however, you’re either spending 10 minutes setting up the connection or asking everyone to crowd around your computer monitor to see all the pixelated goodness.
It just makes sense to get yourself a device that will grab the content from any computer in the home and display it on your home theater setup. And the Buffalo Technologies LinkTheater is definitely a step in the right direction.
The LinkTheater Wireless A&G Network Media Player connects to your home theater just like any other A/V component, through analog or digital high definition connections. Before you start, however, you need to install some software on the PC or Mac that will essentially turn it into a media server. This part was especially easy and useful. One thing I haven’t liked about other systems of this ilk is they essentially force you to broadcast everything that’s on your PC to the world. The Buffalo LinkTheater lets you choose the folders you want to broadcast. We chose My Pictures and My Music.
Back at the LinkTheater, setting it up to work on our network was nearly a breeze. The interface is clean and the included remote control is just as intuitive as a DVD remote. The LinkTheater is souped up to allow you to connect it to Intel Viiv platforms with relative ease. It also includes both 802.11a and 802.11g antennas, using the “g” for data and the “a” for media, if it’s on a network that includes both protocols. Ours did not, so we only used the “g” band. The only frustrating part about setting up was inputting the wireless security key. Instead of having a box of letters and numbers on the screen to select from, like when you put your initials in for the high score on a video game, the LinkTheater makes you type it in like a text message over a mobile phone.
While all of our videos and pictures were available once we connected the LinkTheater, the music folders were incomplete. I would select certain albums that were complete on my PC, but only three or four songs from the album showed up on the LinkTheater screen. I haven’t figured out why this is the case. The LinkTheater also wouldn’t play videos that I recorded using my Samsung Digimax digital camera, which unfortunately stores those videos in Xvid. While I can fix this problem on the PC side, by downloading the Xvid codec, no such solution seemed to be available on the LinkTheater, outside of converting those videos on my PC to a more common format, like MPEG or Windows Media.

