The NVIDIA SHIELD Android TV was launched back in May with the intent to dominate the over-the-top set-top-box (OTT STB) landscape. Premium features such as full HDMI 2.0a support and HEVC Main10 decoding enabled the coveted Netflix 4K certification. No other set top box (including the recently announced 2015 Apple TV and the Amazon 4K Fire TV) has anything close to the SHIELD Android TV in terms of advertised hardware and software capabilities. Our review, however, pointed out a few missed opportunities. Aside from the experience with Android TV as a software platform (something for which NVIDIA is not directly responsible), we had indicated that NVIDIA could have done a better job of codec licensing and configurability to cater to HTPC enthusiasts. Today, NVIDIA is announcing an OTA update to address some of those issues.

Today's OTA update (v2.0) brings a notable set of features for local media streaming

  • Expanded codec and container support:
    • Adds pass-through support for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio lossless audio*
    • Adds MPEG2, VC-1, and WMV9 hardware-acceleration
    • Adds M2TS, ASF, and WMV container support for VC-1
    • Adds WMA audio support (including WMA Pro, and WMA Lossless)

Currently, the above set of features are available for use in the native Android Video and Photo apps. NVIDIA is working closely with third-party app developers (including Kodi and MX Player) to ensure that these media players will also be able to take advantage of the newly added features.

The other important feature that is being made available is the ability to set the display refresh rate to 23.976 Hz. Currently, it is a static setting available under Settings > Device > HDMI > Resolution. Only 60 Hz (US) / 50 Hz (Europe) and 23.976 Hz are currently available, and the UI is also set to the selected refresh rate. However, NVIDIA expects third-party app developers to be able to dynamically alter the display refresh rate based on the content frame rate using the new APIs. This will be important since consumers should not be playing games or actually be navigating the user interface at 23.976 Hz. Syncing up the display refresh rate to the content frame rate should hopefully turn out to be a transparent exercise with the third-party apps.

The new firmware also brings support for overscan adjustment (particularly useful for display sinks that tend to overscan, resulting in a cropped view of the interface). Most TVs don't need this.

Other enhancements include native 4K rendering for select Android games (Beach Buggy Racing, Bombsquad, Hardwood Solitaire IV, Riptide GP 2, Kosmik Revenge, Video Poker Duel, Leo's Fortune, Machinarium, Meltdown, Never Alone, Samurai II, and Sky Gamblers: Storm Raiders), ability to transfer data between USB storage and a microSD card, ability to manually turn off the SHIELD controller and lowering the audio latency by as much as 40ms compared to standard Android. The last aspect is especially important for gaming, and it will be one of the prime reasons to pick up the update before checking out the GeForce NOW cloud game streaming service that is getting launched today.

NVIDIA has also updated the table comparing the SHIELD Android TV to the competition. The latest version is reproduced below. As usual, these are NVIDIA's claims and need to be taken with a pinch of salt.

We did go through the various aspects with concrete 'yes' or 'no' answers and the table seems to line up well with the actual specifications of the competitors' products. The SHIELD Android TV continues to justify the premium flagship tag despite recent entrants such as the 2015 Apple TV and the Amazon 4K Fire TV. NVIDIA's willingness to also focus on local media playback is good news for the general consumers as well as HTPC enthusiasts. For this reason alone, we can and do recommend the SHIELD Android TV over competing OTT STBs.

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  • wuzelwazel - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link

    I watch HBO GO on my Shield just fine. Of course I cast it from my phone, but it does the trick.
  • schizoide - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    For gaming, sure-- although there aren't many android games that exploit the ShieldTV's GPU power, and they're all in nVidia's separate store on the box.

    For playing media, the differences simply aren't important.
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    "For playing media, the differences simply aren't important." - Please qualify that with 'for my use-case'

    Imagine having a library of TV shows recorded in wtv or dvr-ms containers - The SHIELD Android TV can / will do a better job of playing them back compared to the Apple TV or Fire TV - without needing a Plex server doing transcoding in the background - better power efficiency all around.
  • schizoide - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    Kodi can play both of those formats, if not encrypted. Are you saying the fireTV doesn't have the juice to play them natively? I don't have a windows media center PC, so I actually don't know the answer to that question.
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    I am just saying that Kodi can't play it efficiently in the case of the Fire TV because, Amazon, with their streaming focus, refuses to license hardware decode for a bunch of codecs and Kodi would have to fall back to software decode. Software decode of video streams is inherently not power efficient.

    Also, without the proper feature set enabling from Amazon, the Fire TV will also not be able to passthrough HD audio from Blu-ray backups. T

    My take on the changelog for the OTA update is that the SHIELD Android TV caters to the local media playback enthusiasts with features that are not supported by the competition.
  • schizoide - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    Who cares about power efficiency? These aren't 2006 Xeons, these are modern ARM SoCs. Running full blast they consume vanishingly little power.

    It's true that the fireTV won't passthrough HD audio. If that matters to you, it's a point in the shieldTV's favor.
  • fivefeet8 - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link

    For my use case, the Shield TV is miles ahead of the other devices. There are a few games on Android that will exploit the Tegra X1, but where the device really shines is in PSX/N64/Saturn emulation. None of those other devices will come close to it.
  • schizoide - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link

    Ahh-- good point. Another one in the ShieldTV's favor, if you care about emus.
  • Aftershocker - Friday, October 2, 2015 - link

    Also the fact that it ships with a good quality gamepad is advantageous if you intend doing any gaming on it. All in all I'm exceedingly happy with the Sheild TV.
  • Aftershocker - Friday, October 2, 2015 - link

    It also emulates PSP games very well and more reciently the Gamecube/Wii emulation is starting to come together. I played Zelda wind waker for several hours at full speed without any issues. Check out freemulator on youtube for some good examples.

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