January 8, 2009 5:07 PM PST

Iriver's Wave Home: All-in-one communications/multimedia hub gets some buzz

by David Carnoy
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Iriver didn't say when its Wave Home will be available or how much it will cost.

(Credit: Iriver)

There's been a little bit of buzz at CES here about the Iriver Wave Home, which marries a networked mulitmedia device with a communications hub to form a kitchen/home office-friendly gadget.

A 7-inch 800x480 touch screen is built into the unit along with a detachable wireless handset and speakerphone for VoIP calls (you can make calls from the phone or an onscreen virtual keypad and the device supports video calls as well). You can access the Web, photos, music, and videos, and there's an FM radio that Iriver says can be "enjoyed through Wave Home's built-in, high-quality stereo speakers."

"High quality" might be stretching it a bit, but you get the picture: the thing is basically a digital photo frame on steroids, complete with a 1.3-megapixel CMOS camera. Additional features include an Ethernet jack, SD card slot, USB connectivity, and support for digipen input.

Iriver is also touting the device's intelligent Widget, which "provides instant weather, stock and traffic updates, as well as Web and multimedia services that users can enjoy without a computer since the device is connected to broadband internet." Wave Home also supports Flash-based games and you can send and receive SMS and MMS texts.

What's missing? An iPod dock. My God, what were these people thinking?

I'm kidding. Well, sort of. Anyway, there's no definitive word on pricing or availability, but Iriver is allegedly trying to keep the cost below $400.

Hunkered down in New York City, Executive Editor David Carnoy covers the gamut of gadgets and writes his Fully Equipped column, which carries the tag line "The electronics you lust for." He's also the author of "Knife Music," a novel. E-mail David. Follow David on Twitter.
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by lbchs22 January 8, 2009 6:43 PM PST
I think this thing has everything but a toilet...good going Iriver making a half assed product.
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by gcs363 January 13, 2009 7:33 AM PST
Decent product, I could see using it in the kitchen or wherever the family gathers. However, I think the price is too high. For the same price one can get a netbook computer with more capability. For $100 more, one can get a low-end laptop. Reduce the price to $US 200 and they might have something.
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by jwhou February 2, 2009 12:36 PM PST
I would've expected at least 802.11b WiFi
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