Simple clear advice in plain English

Packard Bell Store & Play media hard disk drive

Packard Bell's media savvy external hard disk drive for your PC and TV

There are a lot of hard disk-based media devices around at the moment, and Packard Bell's Store & Play is one of the better looking ones.

Built using a 2.5in notebook computer hard disk instead of a standard 3.5in desktop model, the Store & Play is slim and portable. Its brushed aluminium slate grey shell looks both tough and stylish.

It's not just a hard disk, either. Slots on the front allow Compactflash, Smartmedia, Memorystick, MMC and SD memory cards to be inserted, offering the ability to copy files from, say, a camera directly to the Store & Play's hard disk.

Setup is simple. Plug the unit into a PC and it will be recognised as an external drive. Oddly, the device hogs two USB ports when connected to the computer using its dual-USB cable.

Load up the hard disk's 50Gb capacity with movies, music and photos from a computer and then plug it into a TV and hi-fi to enjoy your digital media in the comfort of your living room.

The Store & Play is only compatible with a handful of formats; MPEG1 and MPEG4 for movies, BMP and JPEG for photos and MP3 or WMA for songs.

Unfortunately Packard Bell doesn't supply a utility to convert your existing media collection to the appropriate file types. The only software provided is a backup program.

We noticed that storing certain incompatible file types to the unit's 'movies' folder seemed to cause the Store & Play to crash when browsing the device in movie mode. We also had a problem with distorted audio on some video files, although it's possible this issue was due to a fault in our review unit.

Audio and picture quality were pretty good on files that the unit was happy playing back. The trouble is that without any software to unify the various different formats, codecs and file types available, even files that were supposedly compatible seemed to suffer from unexpected playback issues.

The Store & Play is definitely very small, very neat and we like the memory card feature. But we've seen devices like this with bigger capacities, wider format support and better selections of audio/video connections.

Also consider
LaCie Silverscreen
Overall: A simple way to watch or listen to digital media on your TV, but there are cheaper alternatives
Rating: 3/5
Price: £164

All hard drive reviews

Reader Comments

useless

hi , brought the store and play 80 gb version. clunky to work with all the time on TV. reformatted it once - now uselss as a media player. I am currently using it as a dumb usb external drive without the bells and whistles. No support from packard bell on how to restore the firmware. My advice - dont buy it for media playing abilities.

Posted by theRainbowarrior, 20 Apr 2008

display:none  

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Our verdict

img

Good points Memory card slots Small and stylish Easy to set upBad points Narrow format support No file conversion utility Some audio and video issuesVerdict The Packard Bell Store & Play looks good and is easy to set up, but is sorely missing a utility to convert media to compatible formats.

Best price on the web

Manufacturer

Packard Bell

Latest issue & subscription deals

No matching document

Poll

Are you concerned about viruses that target mobile phones?

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

Bittorrent

A technology for downloading files. Allows even very large files to be downloaded quickly.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive