Anyone see the iPlayer yet? It came out recently (I'm getting one!) And it is a different kind of Flash card: It plays most popular media formats without having to convert. This is due to a built-in CPU. The Card can also play music and homebrew (But it can't play Roms). I was checking out a review: http://raing3.co.cc/2009/07/19/ds-iplayer-review/ and it seems that the flash Card alone is more powerful than the DSi. 32MB Memory (Ram) and clocked at almost 400 MHZ. Really, this is kind of sad.
That's simply amazing...I'll be grabbing one of those if I can find them for cheap. Looks like that thing could potentially run YouTube videos (looks like it could), unlike the DSi (which sadly cannot). Too bad they'd need permission to use Flash and all that jazz.z
Wait, does that monster run on firmware 1.4? I know it's not hurting DS game sales, but the exploit it uses tmay have been blocked by the update. Anyone know?
Yes, they have released a firmware update to work on 1.4.
Here's how you update it: 1) Have an available DSi/DSL system that can still run Flash cards.
2) Delete your previous "system" folder.
3) Please copy the "system" folder & "update" file to the root of your MicroSD card.
4) Load the DSiPlayer on the DSi/DSL system. It will now load into a NDS game.
5) It'll then tell you to "ENTER YOUR NAME" (can be anything), after that, press [OK]. It will then crash into a WHITE still SCREEN.
Be cautious if you do this wrong, you may end up bricking your DS iPlayer card.
6) At least wait for 2 minutes on the White Still Screen.
7) Now, hold/Reset the "POWER" button on the DSi/DSL system.
8) Boot the DSi/DSL on and you should now see a different NDS Icon. Load it, and you will then be asked to UPGRADE the OS DS iplayer card.
9) Press YES/OK to Upgrade. After it's done upgrading, you'll now be able to load the DS iPlayer card on FW 1.4 of your Nintendo DSi system. Anyway, it looks really neat, but I already have a R4 and probably won't be getting another flash cart anytime soon, unless it's a GBA flash cart.
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I bought it because it is dedicated to watching videos, also, I have NEVER even touched DS homebrew in my life, so I wanna try it out. It can't play commercial roms but I hate game piracy.
@fudgenuts This is what the site says to update: iPlayer OS v1.1 & firmware v1.0
Readme: 1. Upgrade iPlayer firmware support NDSi firmware 1.4 [Very Important for NDSi v1.4:] If the NDSi firmware is v1.4, Please copy the upgrade firm into MicroSD. When NDSi screen display " An error has occurred Press and hold the POWER Button to turn the system off Please refer to the Nintendo DSi Operations Manual for details." *When this message displayed, please wait 2 mins, iPlayer is upgrading. (If turn off power at this moment, iPlayer will dead). *After 2 mins, iPlayer is upgraded.
2. Added extra movie subtitle. 3. Added plugin for iPlayer CPU homebrew.
This looks interesting, and the fact that it can't play pirated games is a HUGE plus... I want a flashcart for homebrew and stuff on DSi, but I don't want to support a device that supports and helps thieves (pirates) on purpose... stealing games is simply wrong!
Any idea on where to buy this, with worldwide shipping?
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This looks interesting, and the fact that it can't play pirated games is a HUGE plus... I want a flashcart for homebrew and stuff on DSi, but I don't want to support a device that supports and helps thieves (pirates) on purpose... stealing games is simply wrong!
Any idea on where to buy this, with worldwide shipping?
Thanks! gotta start saving for it, I just spent the little money I had on Street Fighter IV on Steam (hard to say no to a 50% discount on it lol)
PS: any idea if the microSD cards on that store are legit? I'm tired of fake SD cards that break within the first year of use...
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The review sample of the iPlayer was provided by 4CoolDay a great source of flash cartridges with free shipping and low prices. Unlike many other flash cartridges the iPlayer does lack commercial ROM loading however it makes up for this in its impressive hardware specifications and well designed firmware. The primary functionality provided by the iPlayer is turning any Nintendo DS console into a Portable Media Player (PMP). This is achieved through the alleged 32MB of built in memory and the built in CPU clocked at almost 400MHz and provides the DS the ability to load numerous multimedia formats which are not possible with any other flash cartridge available.
Q:What is Hardware decoding? A:Because the hardware limitation of DS console, DS can't play video directly. iPlayer has a decode chip built-in. This chip provide the powerful multi-media function beyond the hardware limitation of DS console.
We've got our hands on the new iPlayer! A new dedicated media player for the Nintendo DS. This flash cart doesn't do gaming, but its built in CPU has other plans.
This slot-1 cart promises to play various video formats without the need to spend time converting them first, which means no more DPG videos. Is this a step in the right direction, or will you be better off sticking to DPGs and Moonshell? Do you really want to watch your DivX, XviD (etc) videos on your DS screen?
While we write up the full GBAtemp review, check out our quick hands-on impressions and see what we think so far!
Hands-on impressions Discuss [User is currently offline.] Profile Card [Send a PM] Go to the top of the pageUser's Wiki pageFriend Codes +Quote Post shaunj66 View Member Profile
The iPlayer is a slot-1 media player cart that, besides homebrew, doesn't have any ROM loading functionality. The iPlayer is solely intended for playing media files and homebrew, unlike other flash kits on the market that just use this marketing as a ruse to cover their other possible intentions.
Even though most flash kits on the market support media playback, their functionality is often limited to a handful of audio codecs and DPG video - a video format that is optimised for the DS. All DPG videos must be converted on the users PC using software before copying across to what ever slot-1 cart you are using. This is required because the DS CPU is simply not powerful enough to handle playback of the usual file formats you'll find online videos distributed in.
To combat this issue, the iPlayer has a built in CPU and extra RAM that enables it to decode various file formats on the fly, thus allowing the end user to view them back on the DS without prior conversion.
The iPlayer supports a variety of codecs including DivX, Xvid, Quicktime, Windows Media video, Realmedia, MPEG, ASF, VOB and Flash video. Other formats actually work, but are either unstable or just playback at a speed too slow to watch (see MP4, h264 etc.). MKV container formats are not available for playback when viewing files under the 'Video' menu but can still be loaded under the 'Files' menu, though most heavy duty formats in such containers, such as h264 for example, are simply not able to run at a decent speed. And for files with multiple audio tracks, only the primary audio track will play. You can not switch between audio tracks. Regarding subtitle support; contained and external subtitle files are not supported.
The majority of standard formats such as XviD, Realmedia etc. unless encoded at a ridiculously high bit rate actually play back surprisingly well. There are a few dropped frames and I've experienced a few sudden skips, but these are far and few between. Audio is also very good, and sound is outputted in stereo on the DS speakers, but the volume is ridiculously low when not using headphones. Fortunately you can increase the volume percentage to 200% to make it play at a level that's comfortable to listen to, but even at that volume it's still only equal to that of most DS games.
Video quality is very good and actually looks rather stunning on the DS Lite/DSi LCD screens, even with the limited colour palette. A good quality video file will look very crisp and clear (even so much that it makes the video compression artifacts so much more obvious!). Video plays back on the top screen, while the bottom screen shows the standard player controls and file info. The screens backlight turns off after a while to focus attention to the top screen. Regarding video frame size, you can choose to make the file play in its native aspect ratio (which, for widescreen movies makes it look ridiculously small), or you can set it to stretch the video window to fill the DS screen, but then this makes widescreen videos look too stretched. There is no option to view widescreen videos in 4:3 mode by cropping to the centre.
I was actually quite impressed at the iPlayer's ability to keep the video and audio synced while I watched a few sample clips. That was, until I started seeking back and forth within the video using either the d-pad or on screen slider. The audio and video then become separated by about a second and make watching quite frustrating, and will stay that way until you completely restart the video. Whether or not this is dependant on the file codec, bit rate or even the speed of the micro SD card is still unclear.
Another feature I assumed would be present, but was surprised to not see, was a bookmark feature, to save your position when watching a long film or podcast for example.
Audio playback works just as expected and is fine. The formats tested so far include MP3, WAV, OGG, Ape and WMA which all work fine.
DLDI supported homebrew is supported and is automatically patched. Soft-reset is supported.
The Settings menu allows you to change Brightness, Language (Eng/Chi), Skin, Backlight fade time, DLDI patching and soft-reset.
The iPlayer is built off of Acekard 2 hardware and firmware. The GUI is nice and clean and works well, but it would be nice if it showed more advanced details on the files you are playing, such as ID3 tags, codec, bit rate etc. The touch screen responsiveness of the GUI is less than accurate and it sometimes takes several taps of an item to get it to take effect.
Overall, first impressions are pretty good. The cart does what it says on the tin, and does it fairly well. While it may choke on higher bit rate files or certain file formats, it plays a wide variety well (Xvid, DivX, RM) and the ease of use really makes up for the lack of features. Hopefully a software upgrade could further improve file performance and fix issues such as sync-loss after tracking, audio volume and GUI responsiveness issues. The team have told me they do indeed plan to improve the software and our taking our criticism seriously.
I cannot confirm the actual CPU clock rate nor the amount of RAM, please source your info.
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Topic: The iPlayer is more powerful than the DSi. It's a Flash Cart.
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