
Well suited to situational typing; easy setup; PlayStation 3 compatible
Pricey; touchpad occasionally inaccurate; no Xbox 360 or Apple support
If you're a home cinema PC owner looking for the perfect input device, look no further. Logitech has melded the keyboard of a BlackBerry with a flexible cursor control pad into an attractive, coffee-table-ready package that will let you master your PC without cluttering up your living room with clunky hardware
8.7 Excellent
Reviewed by Rich Brown
Logitech's diNovo Mini does for home cinema PC keyboards what Apple's
The price of the diNovo Mini is around £90, which admittedly is steep for what's essentially a
Design
Like the iPod, the Logitech diNovo Mini boasts a pleasing visual aesthetic that seems inseparable from its functionality. The clamshell design feels right in your hand, and it would look as at home on your coffee table as any remote control. It weighs only 7g and is roughly 19mm high and 152mm long. Open it up and you're treated to a small-scale, 61-key keyboard, backlit in either orange or green, depending on the mode of the control pad.
The control pad itself lets you change from analogue, touchpad-style control, to directional up-down-left-right controls by sliding a small switch. The idea is that you'd want it in touchpad mode for navigating a Web page or the Windows desktop, but that the directional controls are better for working your way through a set of linear menus, such as those in Windows Media Center.
The middle of the pad acts like your main mouse button, and you hold down one of the function buttons and a menu button on the keyboard for right-clicking. It's more intuitive than it sounds, and our only complaint is that the d-pad mode was sometimes not as responsive as we'd like. The analogue mode is fine though, and consistent with the quality of Logitech's
Features
Typing on the diNovo Mini is fully in the BlackBerry school. Especially since the width is about that of your average game controller, you're encouraged to use your thumbs for typing. The keys are large enough so that thumb- typing isn't a problem, and you might be surprised at how well basic touch typing familiarity translates from your 10 fingers to only your thumbs.
We wouldn't use the diNovo Mini to type a dissertation, but for password entry, instant messaging, keyword searches and typing in the occasional Web address, it's perfect. In other words, it's designed to serve the most common needs of a home cinema PC owner.
That brings us to the comparisons. We've seen several products over the
years purporting to be ideal for controlling your Media Center PC. Your
typical wireless keyboard often claims some kind of multimedia
functionality, but most of them, such as the diNovo Edge and
Microsoft's
We can't ever see putting one of them in your living room with a true home cinema PC such as the
Performance
Setting
up the diNovo Mini is a breeze. It uses a Bluetooth connection and a
rechargeable lithium-ion battery, and it went from the box to up and
running on a Vista-equipped PC in less than two minutes.
You
can install the Logitech SetPoint software if you want to customise the
hot key assignments and tweak the mouse cursor speed. It can also work
with a
The diNovo Mini also has dedicated play, volume and channel hot keys,
which work fine for driving Windows- based media, but we'd also like to
see some options for controlling your other home cinema hardware. We
realise that Logitech has its
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
Visit reviews.cnet.co.uk for in-depth reviews of many more products
