NEC this morning prepped the final launch of its Lui media streaming devices. Essentially more advanced versions of today's media extender devices, all four models provide a network connection to the music and video of a DLNA- or Windows Media Center-capable PC in a reportedly more elegant way than with traditional extender hubs. The Lui RP (pictured) is considered the standout with a UMPC-like handheld design; users are given enough control with a directional pad and QWERTY keyboard to find and play media from its four-inch LCD. The Lui RN offers the same formula in a 10.6-inch notebook that reaches a very thin size by depending on its media source for storage.
Two fixed devices also make up the initial line. Resembling a conventional stereo, the Lui SX both catches networked media and also fills in the role of a media hub itself, tuning up to two over-the-air digital TV broadcasts at once and including a Blu-ray drive as well as a hard drive for recording shows. HDMI output displays content up to a native 1080p. A full-featured desktop PC, the ValueStar R Lui, includes an internal card to pick up and share content between networked devices. NEC is short on specs but explains that the ValueStar ships in a slimline tower case and can be configured for more demanding users.
Every system ships first in Japan on April 24th. Prices start at the equivalents of $494 and $888 for the Lui RP and RN portables respectively, and scale up to $3,754 for the top-end Lui SX. The lone ValueStar desktop can be customized up to $2,110. NEC has no public plans for an international launch but says it will expand Lui to include support from other companies, including Buffalo and Microsoft. [via Impress]
Lui RP
Lui RN
Lui SX
