![]() ![]() The Shield TV is ready for the newest TVs with 4K output and high dynamic range to make your content look its best. It packs a punch with 256 processing cores and 3GB of video RAM. The X1 is based on Nvidia’s Maxwell architecture, which most recently powered Nvidia’s 900-series of video cards. The X1 has been out since the original Shield IN 2015, so it isn’t new newest APU on the market but it’s no slouch. The brain of the unit is Nvidia’s Tegra X1 processor. Inside the paperback-size box, we find enough horsepower for just about anything you would want to do. It streams as well as anything else, which is mostly what that I expected to be using it for, but it’s the additional features that really sold me and push the Shield TV over the top. In the several weeks we’ve been using it in our home, it’s become on of the key players in our TV setup and when the family’s away, I get to play. This little package offers all that I could want from a streaming box and then some. Now, almost three years later, I’m kicking myself for not buying in sooner. When the first Shield TV was first revealed to the world, I wrote it off. ![]() NVIDIA GeForce Now streaming service NVIDIA GameStream IR Receiver (compatible with Logitech Harmony) Storage: 16GB (expandable via flash drive)Ĭonnectivity: 802.11ac 2x2 MIMO 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.1/BLE, Gigabit Ethernet, HDMI 2.0, Two USB 3.0 (Type A) High-resolution audio upsample to 24-bit/192hHz over USB High-resolution audio playback up to 24-bit/192kHz over HDMI and USB NVIDIA Tegra X1 processor with 256-core Maxwell GPU with 3GB RAMĤK Ultra-HD HDR Ready with 4K playback and capture up to 60 fps (VP9, H265, H264)ħ.1 and 5.1 surround sound pass through over HDMI ![]()
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