
For those of you connecting the Nvidia device to a 4K screen, it's well worth turning the feature on, at least to see how it handles the content you give it. In our experience, this works seamlessly, and really well too: it even got some of our old 1990s television shows looking sharper and more detailed through the Plex app. If you're watching content that's not in 4K, the Nvidia Shield TV Pro will scale it up for you, if you want. The voice control certainly comes in handy when you have to enter a lot of text (when searching for a particular movie, for example). There's support for Google Assistant here, as you would expect, but you can also use Amazon Alexa on the Nvidia Shield TV Pro too: you can use either digital assistant to turn the box on or off, control video playback, launch specific apps and plenty more, all using your voice. It is worth noting that the latest Wi-Fi 6 standard isn't supported, but 5GHz connections are. The box is capable of playing 4K video at 60 frames per second, and there's support for Dolby Vision HDR, HDR10 and Dolby Audio here too.


The Nvidia Shield TV Pro comes running the impressive Nvidia Tegra X1+ processor with a 256-core GPU and 3GB RAM, and there's 16GB of on-board storage here as well (which can be expanded via those USB ports).
