You do not have to wait for the Boxee box. You can download the Beta now onto any Windows (or other) system and try it out for yourself.Is the boxee box out yet? Where can we buy it from?
You do not have to wait for the Boxee box. You can download the Beta now onto any Windows (or other) system and try it out for yourself.
I'm having a similar experience that I will describe further in the series.I've tried the boxee beta software and I'm unhappy with the way some of the content is presented (e.g. hulu content always displays incorrectly and truncates picture). I tried updating my codecs and software per boxee's recommendations, but it was very frustrating and didn't yield anything positive.
I'm hoping that the boxee box will fix all the "software" issues and will be able to show everything it promises.
I'm having a similar experience that I will describe further in the series.
One of the issues is that you need a machine that's fast enough. Just what that is, is under debate. Some say a single core machine like the Aspire Revo 1600 is fine. Others say you need dual-core.
The other issue is the ongoing battle between Boxee and Hulu. Hulu doesn't want Boxee accessing their content, so they keep changing things to break Boxee. Right now, I notice that NBC shows (Chuck, 30 Rock) are coming from NBC.com and not Hulu. Playback on the Revo 1600 is terrible, most likely because of the boxee browser workaround they need to use.
But accessing the same content via Hulu desktop plays nicely.
The Boxee box will have appropriate hardware (it better!). But the content that will be available and the hoops Boxee needs to go through to access it will be an evolving story.
In other words, don't assume the Boxee box will solve all the problems you currently see with the Boxee Beta!
I'm open to looking at anything. But how does a DVR free me of cable / satellite TV?I haven't seen MythTV mentioned yet.
It depends on the motivation for having cable/satellite in the first place. A lot of people (this depends on your country of origin) are attached to the idea that it is the TV providers who provide timeshifting capability. Of course, this isn't the case.I'm open to looking at anything. But how does a DVR free me of cable / satellite TV?
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