S
subsammy
Guest
MythTV
I have been following the cutting cable and am here to put in my $.02. Starting down the road you are on, I can give some tips. Try MythTV. Mythbuntu or Mythdora work well and are easy to set up if you have good computer knowledge. Don't be afraid of Linux. I have learned it as I have installed my system. I got a aspire revo in December and attached it to the existing MythTV backend. All went smooth. I set it up to dual boot and had intentions of using Boxee with my Netflix and Hulu under Windows XP and have been happy with Netflix but Hulu leaves a bad taste in my mouth. The revo is not quite enough to run Hulu well. When booted in Linux MythTV and using VDPAU acceleration for the video processor load is very low. I run 720P and audio over the built in HDMI. Connecting this computer to a TV is the easiest one I have ever connected. I bought a MCE remote and USB receiver from Newegg and replaced the remote with this: http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Univers...mote/7978183.p?id=1153999180455&skuId=7978183 to get better ergonomics and other device functionality. There was a MCE code in the remote and it worked out of the box. I added a small antenna to get free HDTV (it looks better than my cable) and added a HDHomerun receiver to my network. The MythTV backend runs on a FlexATX Jetway Atom 330 board and is nearly silent. It has enough power to commercial detect in real time. It also acts a file server for the rest of the house. The WAF on this setup is very high. She prefers to watch the MythTV setup in the bedroom to the cable DVR in the den. A little tweaking to the MythTV setup and you can play music from a server in the house or other videos stored on a NAS or other computer.
What are people using to add IR capability to their systems? I've been playing with Boxee and XBMC iPhone/iTouch apps that work via WiFi. But the end game may require using a Harmony One.
BTW, anyone notice that the D-Link Boxee Box remote is RF? Another complication we don't need...
I have been following the cutting cable and am here to put in my $.02. Starting down the road you are on, I can give some tips. Try MythTV. Mythbuntu or Mythdora work well and are easy to set up if you have good computer knowledge. Don't be afraid of Linux. I have learned it as I have installed my system. I got a aspire revo in December and attached it to the existing MythTV backend. All went smooth. I set it up to dual boot and had intentions of using Boxee with my Netflix and Hulu under Windows XP and have been happy with Netflix but Hulu leaves a bad taste in my mouth. The revo is not quite enough to run Hulu well. When booted in Linux MythTV and using VDPAU acceleration for the video processor load is very low. I run 720P and audio over the built in HDMI. Connecting this computer to a TV is the easiest one I have ever connected. I bought a MCE remote and USB receiver from Newegg and replaced the remote with this: http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Univers...mote/7978183.p?id=1153999180455&skuId=7978183 to get better ergonomics and other device functionality. There was a MCE code in the remote and it worked out of the box. I added a small antenna to get free HDTV (it looks better than my cable) and added a HDHomerun receiver to my network. The MythTV backend runs on a FlexATX Jetway Atom 330 board and is nearly silent. It has enough power to commercial detect in real time. It also acts a file server for the rest of the house. The WAF on this setup is very high. She prefers to watch the MythTV setup in the bedroom to the cable DVR in the den. A little tweaking to the MythTV setup and you can play music from a server in the house or other videos stored on a NAS or other computer.