I will give an update on my quest to this from my last post a week ago. If you recall, I was testing a Revo 3610. I have now picked up the cheapest current gen Mac Mini to compare. To net out my findings, the Mac Mini was able to handle any of the media I've watched without any major problems. MLB.TV looks awesome and the Revo never could really get that done without struggling, which still baffles me since its CPU utilization was only 35% and it uses the same graphics chip as the Mac Mini. The Mini also was much more snappy and responsive. I'll go into a bit more detail about the pros and cons, because with this stuff... nothing is a clear winner. I'll also qualify my requirements to say that I'm not considering building a big beefy desktop for this... I want a quiet appliance type box... so the Revo or Mini are both in that bucket. Most of the other alternative WinTel boxes are pretty equivalent to the Revo.
Revo
- Windows 7 Media Center as the entry point. Hulu Desktop and Boxee on the WMC menu and launch and return fine. WMC handles live TV and DVR functions.
- Generic WMC remote FOB tied to Harmony One for control
- HDMI built in
-
HDHomerun for OTA tuners
- Backend NAS for media and gigabit wired network connected to a 20mbps cable internet service.
Mac Mini
- Entry point is still being worked out. Plex (XBMC OSX version) is what I'm using at present, but it lacks integrated live TV and DVR.
- Remote function built in, but I'm using
Remote Buddy application to enhance it.
- HDMI to DVI cable... still working to solve my audio problem because my receiver lacks and available Toslink port. For now using a mini to mini cable, but will deal with that later.
- HDHomerun for OTA tuners
- Backend NAS for media and gigabit wired network connected to a 20mbps cable internet service.
WMC has come a long way. Its live TV and DVR functions are very well done and though not quite to a Tivo, its the next best thing I've played with. WMC's also integrated their own internet TV into it, but its kind of useless because most of what you end up with are just clips, not full episodes. I also found that viewing internet TV via WMC it struggled a bit compared to watching it in Hulu. Launching Hulu from WMC works well though, and WMC will continue to record your DVR list while that is going on. Netflix directly from WMC worked fine.
The Mac Mini lacks that WMC seamless entry point. I haven't looked much at Front Row yet, but that's Apple's alternative. Ironically, even though it is really their Apple TV code base, it lacks any live TV and DVR function. The best alternative for that is EyeTV which I already had. I am still tweaking it to find the best way to get back and forth between
EyeTV and
Plex. If it were just me using it, I can control them both quite easily with my Harmony One and Remote Buddy, however I need this to be "wife friendly". I am still working on that. I believe its possible to get there, but still working through it. Because the Mini handles all the media so well, I want to give this a good attempt.
I've just been digging into Plex and it has some nice capabilties... here are a few that I've exploited.
- Integrated Hulu that works - a couple of people in this thread have mentioned using Boxee to get to Hulu. Hulu does not work with Boxee intentionally... people find ways to get around it and Hulu breaks it again... not a good long term strategy. Hulu has a direct plugin with Plex that works great. Better still, there is also an app that will take your Netflix queue and your Hulu subscriptions, and insert them in your library of TV and Movies.... seamlessly with your local/NAS stored content. So I can do a coverflow type look through movies and can't tell the difference between them all... very nice.
- Integrated with iTunes/iPhoto/Aperture - I've only done the iTunes part, but Plex automatically pulls in your whole iTunes library and presents it nicely.
I still haven't ruled out Boxee as an entry point... it is pretty snappy on the Mac has a lot more support than any other alternative, along with a commercial product providing some funding to the effort. In my case, it also has an MLB.TV plug-in and one for Clicker.com. If you haven't looked at Clicker, check it out. It aggregates all most internet/TV content so you can search on a TV series in one place. Their Boxee app is still in the early stages, but is pretty good. I haven't been able to really use the MLB.TV app in Boxee yet because its not turned on for pre-season. This is something that would be really nice to use.
So the trade-offs between the 3 entry points
WMC
- Integrated in the OS and well supported
- Seamless live TV and DVR
- Seamless internet TV, but weak content making it kind of useless
- Easy to launch Boxee or Hulu and easily get back
- Integrated Netflix
Plex
- Integrated Hulu and Netflix - best of all by integrating with local content
- Integrated with iTunes/iPhoto/Aperture
- Very flexible on content it can handle
Boxee
- Social networking (I don't care about this at all)
- Hulu tries to block Boxee accessing their content
- Integrated MLB.TV and Clicker.com
- Very flexible on content it can handle
From a control point of view, I'm assuming I'll use a Harmony One remote to control any of these which is what the family is using now with Tivo... so I am trying to model behavior to make this easier to use for them.
One guy I talked to on AVSForum actually merged this and is running WMC on a Mac Mini and says he's quite happy with that approach. I don't really want to go there. I'm finding the Revo has some benefits, but its overall sluggishness compared to the Mini lets you see that it is being stretched a bit to handle all of this.