A wireless Slingbox with an affordable price tag

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Sling Media has added a new member to its family of place-shifting streaming media boxes, the Slingbox M1. Despite its ho-hum design, the M1’s a pretty cool little box, and the noteworthy hardware feature here is the inclusion of Wi-Fi, which simplifies set-up and placement. Previously, that wireless connectivity was only available in the step-up Slingbox TV — formerly known as the Slingbox 500 — which retails for $300. The M1 costs half that, or $150. (It replaces the 2012 Slingbox 350 model, which retailed for $179 but was Ethernet only.)

As with past Slingbox models, the box digitizes video streams from your cable/satellite box (or DVR) and streams them in real time to a wide variety of devices: Windows PCs and Macs, iPads, iPhones, Android phones, Android tablets (including the Kindle Fire line of Amazon tablets), and Windows phones. There’s no monthly fee, but the mobile apps cost $14.99 a pop — and you’ll need the mobile apps to enable streaming on most home devices, such as an Apple TV or Roku, which use the apps as “remotes.” The streaming software on the PC and Mac is via a free browser plug-in, or you can opt for a $14.99 Windows 8 app instead.

To set up the M1, all you have to do is connect the box to the component video outputs of your cable or satellite box, then set up a Slingbox account and link the box to your Wi-Fi network from your computer.

It has built-in IR emitters that interface with the IR on your cable or satellite box, allowing you to turn your mobile device into a virtual remote control. If for some reason the integrated IR doesn’t work, you do get an IR blaster to stick right on your cable or satellite box. However, chances are, you won’t have to use the blaster (I didn’t have to connect it).

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The M1 connected to a FiOS cable box.
Sarah Tew/CNET

If you have a router or an Ethernet connection available near where your Slingbox is set up — yes, the M1 has an Ethernet connection — that aforementioned Wi-Fi connectivity won’t be a big deal. But if you don’t, it’s obviously a key feature. The fact that it’s dual-band (2.4/5GHz) sweetens the deal.

Like the step-up SlingTV (Slingbox 500), the M1 offers 1080p video streaming, but video performance will vary according to your Internet connection. It’s more important to have a speedy upload connection at the source — that would be at your home or where the Slingbox is installed.

(One important note: if you’re a Dish Network subscriber with a 2013 or later Hopper DVR, you already have Sling streaming built-in; there’s no need for this external box.)

I set up the M1 at CNET’s offices in New York, where we have a speedy though not exceptionally fast Internet connection. I then accessed the box from a few different locations with my computer. One location had a very fast FiOS connection and one had a fairly sluggish DSL connection.

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