The ITC One from SE2 Labs combines name-brand A/V components, Xbox 360s, iPod dock, AMX automation, TV tuners and more into one compact box that puts most home theater equipment racks to shame.
It’s like a six-foot-tall A/V rack boiled down to a single box measuring 18 x 21 x 19 inches, or 11 rack units high (although it’s not rack-mountable CORRECTION: Rack ears are available).
Weighing 100 to 125 pounds, the ITC is packed with everything needed to operate an elaborate home theater, including motorized drapes and lights.
Inside the snazzy console are all of the electronics that typically comprise an A/V rack, but without the extraneous cases, buttons and connectors. You get a surround-sound receiver, preamp, amplifier, video processor, video iPod dock, power conditioning, cable and satellite TV tuners, a PVR, A/V cables, an Xbox 360 + Xbox 360 HD DVD, and a control system to manage it all.
And these aren’t run-of-the-mill components. The pieces come from name-brand, high-end manufacturers like Vidikron, Bryston, Transparent Audio and AMX.
The ITC is configured and programmed to order at the SE2 Labs. Just take it out of the box, connect the speakers, a display, and maybe a couple of contacts, plug in the power cord, and go.
All of this for the low price of about $20,000 (for starters). Not bad, if you consider that all of the gear separately, plus a rack, plus the cabling could cost three or four times that much. And that doesn’t include the extra time for installation and programming, and the repeat service calls (always during holidays and in the middle of the night) that a traditional system entails.
The Little Things That Make ITC Cool
Before getting to the nitty gritty—like how SE2 can cram so much stuff into one box without it blowing up—let’s get right to the good stuff.
In his previous life as an integrator, SE2 founder Mike Pyle spent months in various home theaters researching things that drive consumers batty. “We had a list of about 300 problems concerning usability, serviceability, installation, etc.,” he says. Many of those problems are solved with the ITC.
Here are some of the little things that make the product especially lovable:
- A system-wide on/off button is located at the front of the unit so all of the gear can easily be turned off. “One issue we found is when people have a problem with something like a satellite receiver, they [tech support] tell you to unplug the receiver,” Pyle says. “If it’s mounted in a rack, how do you get back there?”
- A power outlet is located on the front of the ITC. If you want to plug in a camcorder that is probably dead because you used up the batteries on your vacation, you don’t have to hunt for a power outlet and extension cord. Duh. If the video inputs are there, why shouldn’t the power be, too?
- A plaque on the front of the unit shows the serial number and contact information. You don’t have to pull out any components to find it.
- There are four status lights on the front of the chassis monitoring connections to the Internet, telephone service, television service and the local network. If the system goes awry, you know where to look. “If Comcast loses a signal, you get real-time feedback that it [the problem] is external,” Pyle says. Not that that ever happens.
- Press a button on the front of the ITC if you lose the remote and follow the beeps.
How Does it All Fit into One Small Box?
First, a little history: Pyle has been in the home systems industry for about 14 years. He owned a home systems installation business in Salt Lake City, which eventually became Aurant, a leading integration firm in the area.
Naturally, during that time, he became cozy with many of the leading manufacturers in the home theater and automation business.
He was able to get them to supply the boards for the ITC—no cases, no individual remote controls, no fans, no nothing, just the boards.
SE2 at CEDIA
Since Vidikron supplies the video processors, SE2 will be shown at the Vidikron/Runco booth, #510.
“We went to manufacturers like Vidikron and said, ‘You have a great video processor, but I’m not going to pay six grand for it,’” Pyle says.
He thinks it’s a little silly to have piles of boxes stacked on top of each other taking up so much real estate when so much of the stuff is redundant. And it’s sillier still to have to pay for it all.
“Every component is a universal box,” he says. “Each box has to have its own user interface, buttons, inputs and outputs and remote controls. In a home theater there might be 400 possible buttons and 300 inputs and outputs. Why pay for all of these if you’re not using them?”
It isn’t the DVD player, for example, that costs so much. It’s the trappings—the case, the buttons, the connectors, the remote control.
SE2 eliminated all of that by using only the PCB boards from Vidikron, Bryston and AMX, among others. Transparent Audio built a customized wiring harness for the innards, and provides power management for the ITC. As for Xbox, Pyle just buys those and strips off the plastic and other extraneous parts. It’s amazing how small a machine you can build with a little bit of consolidation.
Read more Press Releases stories BTX Technologies Releases Catalog for Systems Contractors and OEMs
Furman Offers AC Power Training at CEDIA Expo
Colorado vNet Opens 42,000-Square-Foot Headquarters
Sunfire Names Pride of Hawaii Sales Rep
Home Entertainment Source Adds Sunfire Program
OmniMount Offers CEU Training at CEDIA Expo
More Press Releases entries
