Mele X1000 Blu-ray Navigation Android Box Unboxing

Beside Mele Cast S1 Wi-Fi display dongle, Mele also sent me their X1000 Blu-ray Navigation Android Box. This device is interesting as it features a new SoC, namely Telechips TCC8935 dual core Cortex A9, supports Blu-ray navigation, SATA drives, and comes pre-loaded with XBMC. You can read my Mele X1000 post to get the full hardware specifications. Today, I’ll show unboxing pictures and video, as well as photos of the PCB. In a few days, I’ll follow up with a complete detailed review.

Mele X1000 Unboxing Pics and Video

I’ve received the device in a carton box, with a sticker showing the specs, and providing a link to meleshop.com. The product is listed in this site but they don’t actually sell it there. and instead Mele X1000 can be purchased in Aliexpress for $179, including shipping via Singapore Post.

Mele X1000 and Accessories (Click to Enlarge)
Mele X1000 and Accessories (Click to Enlarge)

In the package, you’ll find the media player, an IR remote control with two AAA batteries, HDMI and AV cables, a rather large 12V/2A power supply, and a Quick Start Guide describing the ports, and mostly showing how to configure and use the device user’s interface and XBMC, after installing it.

Mele X1000 (Click to Enlarge)
Mele X1000 (Click to Enlarge)

The enclosure is pretty large (19x12x4 cm) compared to recent Android TV boxes, but it’s made of aluminum, and not cheap plastic like most devices on the market. There’s a small LCD display on the left of the panel, as well as the power button.

Mele X1000 Side (Click to Enlarge)
Mele X1000 Side (Click to Enlarge)

On the side, we’ve got one USB host port, and an SD card slot.

Mele X1000 Rear Panel (Click to Enlarge)
Mele X1000 Rear Panel (Click to Enlarge)

But most of the ports can be found on the rear panel: a micro USB port, AV out, DC-in, HDMI, optical S/PDIF, Ethernet and another USB port. On the top left, you’ll also find a the Wi-Fi antenna and a SATA connector.  Unless there are some SATA enclosures on the market (not USB to SATA), your hard drive or SSD would just be places on the furniture, and on the top of the box with some isolation. On the bottom of the enclosure, there are some logos with CCC and CE certifications, XBMC, HDMI, Android, 3D, DTS Dolby, and Dolby Digital Plus. I’m confident these last two audio codecs will be supported by the player, as Telechips actually paid for the licenses…

You may watch the unboxing video below.

Mele X1000 Board

As usual I’ve opened the box. With metallic casing, it’s usually pretty simple, as you don’t have those pesky plastic clips. I just had to remove 4 screws on the bottom, and slide the case to access the board.

Mele X1000 without Cover (Click to Enlarge)
Mele X1000 without Cover (Click to Enlarge)

We can already see some interesting features on the board. There’s no 4GB NAND flash, but instead the company used a 4GB SD card. I only see this one with HiaPad Hi802 (GK802) mini PC. They are also using a battery, most probably for the RTC. Again, it’s something I’ve never seen on the other Android media players I’ve tested.

Top of Mele X1000 PCB (Click to Enlarge)
Top of Mele X1000 PCB (Click to Enlarge)

Then I remove 4 or 5 other screws, disconnected the Wi-Fi antenna, and the SATA cables to completely remove the board from the enclosure. You’ll notice a connector at the top left of the board, that’s actually hidden when the board is fitted into the enclosure. It’s a Standard-B USB 3.0 connector. Telechips supports USB 3.0, so I suppose in theory it would have been possible to use Mele X1000 as an external USB hard drive, but the company told me they won’t solder the connector for mass production. The serial console pins appear to be available at the bottom right corner on the picture. The silkscreen reads “TCC8935-g03-v1.10-0” and “WLBM821-2530110-90”. I’m not sure what the second stands for, but the first could be useful once sources are leaked or released.

Bottom of Mele X1000 PCB (Click to Enlarge)
Bottom of Mele X1000 PCB (Click to Enlarge)

There’s not much to see on the back of the board.

That’s all for today, I’ve got some testing to do…

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23 Comments
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Galll0s
Galll0s
10 years ago

yeah cool.

Hedda
Hedda
10 years ago

Since I understand that Mele does not do any software development themselves can we assume they just took the Android APK binary builds that VidOn.Me have for their A200 (AllWinner A31) box and released that without changes as both uses Android standard OpenMAX based API for video acceleration or?

If so then Mele too is violating the GPL license if they don’t resource the source code for the version of XBMC that they use, which is something that VidOn.Me have not yet done either.

Someone from the other side
Someone from the other side
10 years ago

How do we know this is not using libstagefright? Or even externalplayer?

Dan
Dan
10 years ago

Yeah this is a strange one indeed, BD menu support is a complicated topic. Officialy XBMC supports libbluray the open source BD playback system, but this system can barely display the menus on only a handful of movies. Any fully working BD menu system must be coming from another source, I’ve not seen the Videonme in action or it’s claimed BD menu system actually work so I’m very curious about the whole thing and this unit too. Also be aware that an officially licensed BD menu system these days requires Cinavia DRM so whatever BD menu system is in action… Read more »

Hedda
Hedda
10 years ago

What we do know is that a VidOn.Me developer have posted on the XBMC forums that for their A200 (AllWinner A31) hardware they have with the help of Fengtao Software (of DVDFab fame) developed their own in-house internal video player for XBMC that supports Blu-ray menus. This developer from VidOn.Me claimed that what they developed is a new internal player for XBMC, and not an external player. Because of that being an internal player for XBMC and not an external player, VidOn.Me’s new in-house developed internal player for XBMC is bound by XBMC’s GPL license. I think that we can… Read more »

Galll0s
Galll0s
10 years ago

Does Samba really dont work? Cant believe..
I will get my device soon

Hedda
Hedda
10 years ago

, you need to either install a XBMC 13 “Gotham” Beta or Nightly Builds

http://mirrors.xbmc.org/releases/android/arm/
http://wiki.xbmc.org/index.php?title=Development_builds

either that or get XBMC build from VidOn.Me from their A200 from their forums.

XBMC Frodo 12.x does not support hardware acceleration on Android at all.

Hedda
Hedda
10 years ago


FYI; XBMC Frodo 12.x is over a year have never supported VPU off-loading.

XBMC 12.x “Frodo” really just had initial experimental support for Android.

XBMC 13 “Gotham” will be the first version to properly support Android

Galll0s
Galll0s
10 years ago

Yeah, but is hardware decoding for telechips included on XBMC 13?

Harley
Harley
10 years ago

Galll0s : Yeah, but is hardware decoding for telechips included on XBMC 13? Yes because XBMC 13 now support both both Android’s libstagefright API and Android’s Media Codec API. So as long as the hardware manufacturer supports one of those standard APIs on Android then XBMC 13 will support it. You see those two APIs acts as a man-in-the-middle between the XBMC and the VPU hardware, translating all calls between them. So XBMC does not specifically need to support Telechips proprietary VPU, as instead XBMC only need to support Android’s libstagefright API and Android’s Media Codec API, and as long… Read more »

Harley
Harley
10 years ago

You can kind-of compare this translation API concept to how OpenGL API and DirectX API works for graphics. Modern game engines and graphics doesn’t speak to the hardware directly, instead the games have a rendering engine that speaks to OpenGL API or DirectX API, and that in turn speaks to the hardware device drivers which is the actual thing that talks to the hardware. That way the game developers does not really need to care what kind of graphics hardware is underneath as the OpenGL API and DirectX API hide and translate it all for them, and all you sacrifice… Read more »

panagiotis
panagiotis
9 years ago

Recently acquired the male x 1000 … had installed the xbmc..to problem is that trying to add channels tells me could not play the media file please cheek IT what’s wrong;

Martin
Martin
9 years ago

My MeLe is using Kodi 14.2 and goes fine. I have not any problem with this equipment. In 1080p all goes charming. I deleted Frodo 12.3 to was installed from original and then I installed Kodi … No problem. The SD you can remove it and installed.

Noticiero
Noticiero
8 years ago

How can you upgrade the memory sd 4gb class 4 to a sd 16gb class 10 in this box?

Martin
Martin
8 years ago

The firmware haves two files: .rom and .fai, but when you make the firmware using some software the melex1000 dont start.

Martin
Martin
8 years ago

Update works only on the original internal microsd but if you wish change it, melex1000 dont start, go black screen http://androidpc.es/blog/2014/04/03/mele-x1000-firmware-v4_00-20140305-19-y-manual-actualizacion-soc-telechip-tcc8935/

Jithesh
Jithesh
2 years ago

Sir,

Could you please share the firmware on Mele x1000 V1.0.2 for usb installation as my software crashed. thank you for your kind support

Khadas VIM4 SBC