I would really like to love the new mini-streaming device that NZXT have just launched, but as close as the bargain-priced Doko gets, it’s still a long way from being the perfect PC game streaming device. It makes me even more keen to see Nvidia make some decently-priced SHIELD Box, or for someone to deliver the perfect $100 box for Steam In-Home Streaming. The basic premise for NZXT’s Doko is that it’s an incredibly thin client which sits beside your living room TV, plugged into both the panel and wired into your home network. It will then connect to any PC on that network running the Doko streaming software. It’s genuinely that simple. It took next to no time to set up the device—after a relatively short firmware upgrade—and find my desktop PC in another room in my apartment. Once the basic OS on the Doko box finds the machine it will then stream in 1080p exactly what your PC’s GPU is spitting out. NZXT have partnered with MirrorOp and licensed their software to carry out the streaming magic. MirrorOp is fairly established in the streaming world, offering software to throw content from your PC or Mac (boo, hiss) to your phone or tablet or another PC. And it does work fairly well. The tiny Doko box isn’t exactly packing the latest hardware though, with an ARM 11-based SoC doing the necessary decoding grunt work. The Prizm WM8750 is an 800MHz chip with a dedicated 1080p decoding engine. The device has 256MB RAM inside it and 8MB of storage for its tiny OS. The best part about the Doko’s feature set: the four USB 2.0 ports on the front which act exactly as though you’re plugging directly into the remote PC it’s connected to. It uses a technology called USB over IP to get your streaming PC and USB devices talking. I used both mouse and keyboard and Xbox 360 wireless controller and dongle, as well as USB storage to watch video. But it’s the low-end internal hardware NZXT have picked off the shelf that is the problem. It’s also likely to be the reason the Doko is only capable of streaming your gaming PC’s output at 30Hz.
1/3