Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 13, 2026

Boxee Box

Boxee Box by D-Link was a Linux-based set-top device and media extender that first began shipping in 33 countries worldwide on 10 November 2010. Designed to easily bring Internet television and other video to the television via Boxee's software, it came pre-installed with Boxee media center software. The hardware was based on the Intel CE4110 system-on-a-chip platform, 1 GB of RAM, and 1 GB of NAND Flash Memory. The DM-380 featured an HDMI port, optical digital audio (S/PDIF) out, an RCA connector for analog stereo audio, two USB ports, an SD card slot, wired 100BASE-TX Ethernet, and built-in 2.4 GHz 802.11n WiFi. The Live TV dongle, which started shipping in February 2012, enables users to watch digital OTA or Clear QAM cable television channels with EPG.

Last revised
Jul 13, 2026
Read time
≈ 2 min
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478 w
Citations
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Source
Boxee Box
Boxee Box and remote
DeveloperBoxee
ManufacturerD-Link
Typeset top box
ReleasedNovember 10, 2010 (2010-11-10)
Introductory price
US$ 199
DiscontinuedOctober 16, 2012 (2012-10-16)
Linux
CPUIntel CE4100 SoC
Memory1 GB RAM
Storage1 GB NAND flash memory
Display1080p
GraphicsPowerVR SGX535
SoundDolby Digital 5.1, DTS
Controller input
D-Link Boxee Box Remote DSM-22
Connectivity
Online services
Boxee

Boxee Box by D-Link (officially "D-Link Boxee Box DSM-380") was a Linux-based set-top device and media extender that first began shipping in 33 countries worldwide on 10 November 2010.12 Designed to easily bring Internet television and other video to the television via Boxee's software, it came pre-installed with Boxee media center software. The hardware was based on the Intel CE4110 system-on-a-chip platform (that has a 1.2 GHz Intel Atom CPU with a PowerVR SGX535 integrated graphics processor), 1 GB of RAM, and 1 GB of NAND Flash Memory.345678 The DM-380 featured an HDMI port (version 1.3), optical digital audio (S/PDIF) out, an RCA connector for analog stereo audio, two USB ports, an SD card slot, wired 100BASE-TX Ethernet, and built-in 2.4 GHz 802.11n WiFi. The Live TV dongle, which started shipping in February 2012, enables users to watch digital OTA or Clear QAM cable television channels with EPG.

The Boxee Box also shipped with a small two-sided RF remote control with four-way D-pad navigation and a full QWERTY keypad as standard. This remote was also sold separately with a USB receiver as "D-Link Boxee Box Remote DSM-22" that could be used with Boxee installed on a computer (so that one could use this remote without owning D-Link's Boxee Box).910 The look of both the case and remote prototypes for the Boxee Box was designed by San Francisco–based Astro Studios, the designer of the Xbox 360 and Microsoft Zune.1112

On 16 October 2012, the Boxee team announced its intention to discontinue distribution.13

See also

See also

References

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