Okay. I got it.
(The advantages of rising early.)
Booted up, went to Live; was offered and accepted the update.
Changes? A few obvious ones.
Yes, 1080p is enabled.
(Tried it via component and failed; no shock my display isn't supposed to do 1080p via component but it doesn't hurt to try. I'll have to get the VGA cable since it does accept 1080p via VGA.)
Video from a thumbdrive? WMV, Yes. I'll have to see what happens if I feed it WMV HD, DiVX, or Mpegs of different flavors. (Didn't have any handy.)
Video from Gigabeat S? Surprisingly (and dissapointingly) no. It won't play video from an MTP-connected PMC. In fact, it no longer identifies the Gigabeat by name. Still plays music and photos fine, though.
Video playback quality? A bit better than before. The occasional hiccups on large high-res videos is gone; playback is smooth as silk and, yes, the fast-forward defaults to a 30-second skip.
The Live interface is slightly changed but only slightly. Nothing that requires training; its mostly arthetics and changed categories.
Three *very* promising changes:
1- On the media blade, right below Video is an all-new unannounced entry: Video marketplace. It takes you to Live and the usual media options; new releases, all media and entertainment, Movie trailers and short films, TV, music, sports, shorts and more, etc...
2- On the media blade, video offers up the usual device choices, from console to portable device, but the next level on console is new: you get All videos, Movies and movie trailers,TV shows, Music Videos, Game videos, Viral videos, Other videos. None of the pre-existing videos sort out into the new categories; all show up as game videos, so its obvious the new video categories are a new development not previously planned for.
3- When a video is highlighted, the right hand pane shows the video title above an icon and the video size. Below that, and above the detailed video description blurb, is a new entry. For all the videos I have it reports: does not expire. Which is to say, videos are checked for DRM and expiration dates. By itself, this "just" means that the 360 will remotely play DRM'ed content from PC-based video download services. Good news for sure, but not as good as the promise of directly-downloadable movies and TV shows that comes when you add in the Video Marketplace entry. In other words: standby for more news on this front, probably in January.
All in all, a nice update; more work remains to be done to make the 360 the hub of home entertainment it can be but its about 90% of the way there now. Mostly what is missing is on the Live side; music/video downloads and streams, say via subscription.
One can only hope.
Happy Halloween!
