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ABS All U Can DV

ABS All U Can DV

Product summary

The goodThe good: 17-inch LCD; 100GB hard drive with 8MB buffer; DVD-RW drive.

The badThe bad: Tepid warranty; mediocre DVD-creation software.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: ABS's All U Can DV offers budding directors an opportunity to hone their skills, as long as they can get past the middling software bundle.

Specifications: Processor: AMD Athlon XP 2000+ (1.67 GHz); RAM installed: 512 MB; Hard drive: 100 GB; See full specs

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed on: 03/21/2002
  • Updated on: 01/15/2003
ABS's All U Can DV system has everything you need to capture video off your TV or download it from your camcorder. It also comes with nice bonuses, such as a state-of-the-art sound system and a big, flat-panel display. When we first looked at this Athlon XP 2000+ processor-based system with 512MB of DDR SDRAM in March 2002, we were impressed with its 3D graphics performance. Its application performance was slightly below that of other systems in its processor class, though. And what it lacks in software may dissuade those who are just beginning their DV hobby.ABS's All U Can DV system has everything you need to capture video off your TV or download it from your camcorder. It also comes with nice bonuses, such as a state-of-the-art sound system and a big, flat-panel display. When we first looked at this Athlon XP 2000+ processor-based system with 512MB of DDR SDRAM in March 2002, we were impressed with its 3D graphics performance. Its application performance was slightly below that of other systems in its processor class, though. And what it lacks in software may dissuade those who are just beginning their DV hobby.

Everything it takes
ABS stocks the All U Can DV with a long list of digital-video-oriented components, yet its price is reasonable compared to that of other DV systems we've tested. None of this would be possible without the ATI All in Wonder Radeon 8500DV graphics card, which provides a TV tuner, an IEEE 1394 port, and analog inputs and outputs that make getting video into or out of your PC a snap. For optical storage, you get a 16X Pioneer DVD-ROM drive and the Pioneer DVR-A03, a DVD-RW drive that also writes to CD-Rs and CD-RWs. Its 100GB Western Digital drive includes an 8MB cache--four times the usual amount--which is very helpful when you're streaming video to and from the drive. The 17-inch Hitachi CML170 LCD, with its 1,280x1,024-pixel native resolution, is a welcome switch from a CRT when you're staring at the screen for hours on end--and it takes up less room on your desk, as well.

The system sounds as good as it works, too. Forget the vestigial speakers located in the lower bezel of the LCD; they're tiny, and they're tinny at higher-than-moderate volumes. ABS might have thought so, too, because the company bundled an Altec Lansing 641 speaker system as part of the package. The 4.1 set tips the scales at almost the same weight as the computer, but it's worth it; the four satellites and the subwoofer pump out 400 watts of plaster-pulverizing audio power.

Conservative performance
At the heart of the All U Can DV lie an AMD Athlon XP 2000+ CPU and 512MB of DDR SDRAM. You'd think that ABS would combine that with the 64MB graphics system to blow other comparable systems out of the running, but the system has one handicap: Its gigabyte motherboard uses the AMD 761 chipset rather than one of the edgier, third-party chipsets. The result is somewhat conservative performance; while the All U Can stuck close to other DV systems we tested, such as the 2GHz Pentium 4-equipped HP Pavilion 750n, it was about 3 percent to 7 percent slower than similar Athlon XP 2000+ systems on productivity applications. Its gaming performance was strong, however, at 157.1 frames per second in Quake III.

Subpar software and support
The All U Can DV system fails its target market when it comes to its video-editing software, which is bundled with the graphics card. Ulead VideoStudio 5.0 is a competent low- to mid-level editor with a few minor quirks, such as an inability to render in AVI format a clip that's longer than about eight and a half minutes. MyDVD, the DVD-authoring software, gets the job done, but its interface and terminology can be confusing. Plus, VideoStudio 6.0 is now available. Not only does it improve upon its predecessor in various ways, but it also includes its own DVD-authoring facilities, removing the need for a separate application. Unfortunately, we don't know when the new version will filter into the graphics-card bundle offered with this system. As a stopgap measure, we recommend purchasing an upgrade directly from Ulead. Continue reading

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