: latest in software media extenders?
shmish 2009-10-17, 03:51 PM Hi,
I currently use my Vista PC for recording and watching tv on my PC. The tv is digital and HD OTA signals through a Hauppage card. As well, I have a NAS with movie, photo and music data on it. I connect to the NAS on an HPTC (actually it's just a laptop) that is running XBMC. I really like the interface of XBMC. However, it cannot receive media (ie tv) from my vista computer.
What is the best os or software to load on the HPTC such that it can stream all sorts of media from the NAS as well as the hd tv from the Vista machine? I think SageTV is an option but I like free options when available. I'm not sure that using windows media center type software will work for all of the movie files I have, and the interface isn't as nice as xbmc. Besides, I'm not sure that I can even install Vista on the HPTC.
thanks
TorontoColin 2009-10-17, 05:41 PM You wouldn't have to run Vista on the laptop, you would need an Xbox 360 as a media center extender (about $200). They work well but they won't stream a lot of your files. If you're planning on upgrading your Vista computer to Windows 7 that will fix a lot of those problems.
SageTV would probably be better for streaming files but in that case you'll need a copy of the SageTV license ($80) and a SageTV HD Theater extender ($200). Also, if you find the Windows Media Center interface lacking you might be severely disappointed with Sage (or maybe you'd love it, it is kind of a personal thing).
MythTV is a free Linux based platform. There are software extenders that you can install on your laptop, the problem is that the server PC (the one with the TV tuner) needs to be running Linux. Same as Sage regarding the interface; it's not awful but it's not as pretty as VMC.
jean luc picard 2009-10-17, 05:44 PM first of all, media center is BY FARRRRRRRRRR the best looking gui. its not even a contest. second, media center will play any codec you want with a simple "plugin". third, media center will NOT stream live tv. you need the xbox360 for that, but the 360 has more issues with codecs.
i don't know much about sage, but i think it can stream live tv.
shmish 2009-10-18, 10:18 AM Maybe this is a dumb question, but how does a remote Media Center (for example, a vista media center laptop) connect to a main Vista Media Center (the PC with all the data/media files on it)? With the windows media extenders, I'm under the impression that you give the VMC an 8 digit code and then you can connect to the extender. With two computers running VMC though, do you have to use the normal windows file and media sharing?
I think the SageTV idea is good, but it's a $300 layout. I'll also have to look into the PS3 option, as $300 would also get you a blu-ray player. I don't think the ps3 solutions provide tv streaming.
tbusa 2009-10-18, 10:21 AM Actual if you go to the Sagetv store, Its $224.95 for a extender and Server +shipping ! with the CAN to USD looking good, its not going to be that bad in the wallet.
jean luc picard 2009-10-18, 11:01 AM Maybe this is a dumb question, but how does a remote Media Center (for example, a vista media center laptop) connect to a main Vista Media Center (the PC with all the data/media files on it)? With the windows media extenders, I'm under the impression that you give the VMC an 8 digit code and then you can connect to the extender. With two computers running VMC though, do you have to use the normal windows file and media sharing?
assuming all media center pcs are on the same network, you simply tell media center which folder to look for recorded tv content. this folder can obviously be on that computer or ANY computer on the network. which is cool because you can record tv on any computer and stream it to any other computer on your network. in other words, you're not restricted to a single server. but most ppl just record to a single pc.
only the 360 can stream live tv if you want to use media center.
shmish 2009-10-18, 01:46 PM Any idea if W7 will change things in terms of live tv streaming?
Wayne 2009-10-18, 01:49 PM Vista or Win7 Media Center are prettier than Sage but there are lots of add-ins that make Sage look nicer. I was running a Windows XP Media Center PC but I switched to Sage about 1.5 years ago.
But there are several other advantages of Sage. Microsoft doesn't seem to care too much about the Canadian market and they have not done things to help us. This includes issues like not supporting OTA HD in Canada, which you can get around with a hack, and also not dealing with the CGMS-A recording flag that plagued Canadians for several years. Microsoft also has more interest in having DRM in their media implementations and they seem to be losing interest in the whole concept of media center PCs.
Here is what Sage can do that Media Center cannot:
Directly supports the Hauppauge HD-PVR for recording and streaming of HD from cable and satellite boxes.
Fully supports playback of ripped DVDs and Blu-Ray DVDs.
Hardware extenders (the only extender currently available for Windows is the Xbox-360).
Ability to use PCs as Media Center clients (known as softsled in the MCE world).
Direct support for Placeshifting.
Support for Windows, Linux and Mac.
Sage is also very proactive in releasing updates. With MS you are pretty much tied into the cycle of their OS upgrades so you may have to wait years for changes which is too long given the rapidly evolving world of home media.
IMHO the best model is to have a server with lots of hard drive and TV tuners and then stream this content via a wired network to extenders throughout your house. I have a server in my basement running WHS with SageTV. This records TV and has 6.6 TB of hard drive with tons of content. I can watch this in 5 places throughout my house, including live TV, on Sage HD200 extenders or PC clients. I can also connect to this from halfway around the world via Sage Placeshifter.
ScaryBob 2009-10-18, 02:22 PM I connect to the NAS on an HPTC (actually it's just a laptop) that is running XBMC. I really like the interface of XBMC. However, it cannot receive media (ie tv) from my vista computer.
The server and client must use the same protocol in order to communicate. XBMC uses a protocol called UPnP. In order to use XBMC, a UPnP server is required. These include Nero MediaHome, SnapStream BTV/BeyondTV (under Windows) and MythTV (under Linux). For more info see Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) (http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/UPnP) and Universal Plug and Play (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UPnP)
Windows Media Center uses Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP). For More info see Real Time Streaming Protocol (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_Time_Streaming_Protocol). It is incompatible with UPnP but is supported by a number of other clients. These include Windows Media Center and Windows Media Player.
You basically have two choices, either install a UPnP compatible server to use XBMC or switch to an RTSC compatible client. There are also a number of solutions that use neither but use their own protocols. That would require installation of both a server and client. MediaPortal is one free solution. SageTV is another solution.
TorontoColin 2009-10-18, 08:47 PM This includes issues like not supporting OTA HD in Canada, which you can get around with a hack, and also not dealing with the CGMS-A recording flag that plagued Canadians for several years. Microsoft also has more interest in having DRM in their media implementations and they seem to be losing interest in the whole concept of media center PCs.
To be fair they fixed the CGMS-A flag a long time ago, and I've never seen any DRM on any of my feeds. I know it is a problem in the US on CableCards but that's because of the CableLabs restrictions on firmware, not MS.
The big issue on that list that's missing from Windows 7 and has no work around is software extenders.
Wayne 2009-10-18, 09:51 PM To be fair they fixed the CGMS-A flag a long time ago, and I've never seen any DRM on any of my feeds.Colin - I don't know if you follwed this issue on TGB but it took at least a year from the time they acknowledged this until they released the fix - and I am not 100% sure that the released a fix for XP MCE. Taking that long to fix a significant bug is a SERIOUS drawback.
The big issue on that list that's missing from Windows 7 and has no work around is software extenders.I think the biggest issue is the lack of direct support for the HD-PVR. I know you can get around this but are there any tradeoffs in running DVBLink? The other issue is the demise of hardware extenders, other than the Xbox360.
And you still have to wonder whether they care about Canadians. Don't forget that they have never supported OTA in Canada and with the TV Pack 2008 they broke Peter Near's hack that allowed you to get around this.
Sure you can blame the lack of CableCards on the CRTC and the cable cos but MS has never really shown support to the Canadian market for MCE (and now they no longer sell the Zune in Canada) and they seem to really be pulling back from being that keen on MC as a concept. They seem to be pushing "TV on your PC" when what I want is "PC on your TV".
TorontoColin 2009-10-18, 10:41 PM As far as I know there are no drawbacks to DVBLink (and a few advantages including individual management of the HD-PVR's part of the channel guide, integration with firestb for channel changing, and a dedicated team that provides regular support).
I have no issue with the Xbox 360s as extenders. The new ones are pretty quiet, the noise is never an issue for me, and they're powerful and flexible devices, and relatively cheap and easy to find now too. Even when there were other options I always chose the 360s anyways (since XP MCE 2005) and I've never regretted that.
shmish 2009-10-19, 04:26 PM The SageTV sounds like an okay option. For just a bit more I could get a PS3 though. My NAS is UpNP and DLNA compliant, so it should be able to stream any backup dvds I have, along with all my digital music and photos. It should also be able to play back tv that is recorded by my PC. What it can't do is play back live tv or control recording. Of course the big positive about the PS3 is that it is a blu-ray player (I have no desire to backup blu-ray discs).
So for any given price point, I would have to decide between a blu-ray player or better integration (sagetv, xbox360).
ScaryBob 2009-10-19, 04:36 PM Another possibility is the TVersity Media Server (http://tversity.com/support/faq/). It uses the UPnP protocol so it should work with XBMC. There is a free and a paid version of TVersity.
What devices are supported by the TVersity Media Server?
TVersity is the most versatile media server and the only one that is truly universal in the range of devices it supports. TVersity can serve media to:
1. Devices supporting the UPnP AV / DLNA standard (which is the de-facto standard for connecitivity between devices in the digital home). This includes devices like game consoles (Xbox 360 and Sony PS3), networked TVs, DVDs, Stereo Receivers, Digital Media Adapaters/Receivers, Mobile Phones, Satellite and Cable set-top-boxes and more.
2. Devices with a web browser (XHTML-MP or WAP 2.0) and media streaming or downloading capabilities like iPhone, Blackberry, the Sony PSP, Nokia N series, and other smart phones.
3. Devices with Adobe Flash, this includes the Nintendo Wii.
4. Devices with an RSS reader and media streaming or downloading capabilities like the Sony PSP, iTunes/iPod and more.
shmish 2009-10-19, 04:59 PM Another possibility is the TVersity Media Server (http://tversity.com/support/faq/). It uses the UPnP protocol so it should work with XBMC. There is a free and a paid version of TVersity.
True, but I don't think TVersity does anything that my NAS doesn't already do. The NAS streams all my media except live tv.
ScaryBob 2009-10-19, 05:08 PM You would install TVersity on the Vista system for XBMC on the HTPC. I'm not sure how XBMC or media extenders would handle two media servers on one network.
shmish 2009-10-19, 08:41 PM ScaryBob, I'm not sure I quite understand. My impression was that TVersity doesn't stream live tv. In other words, if my Vista machine has a tuner card and a bunch of OTA channels, tversity cannot stream these to an extender (xbmc, ps3, whatever). If that is the case, then using tversity doesn't offer anything that I don't already get from my NAS using xbmc (xbmc streams all of my videos, photos, music, etc). However, if I'm wrong then that is great news because all I need to do is set up tversity on my Vista machine and I should be able to get whatever I want on my extender.
thanks!
jean luc picard 2009-10-19, 08:56 PM As far as I know there are no drawbacks to DVBLink
i don't think you can stream live tv to the xbox from the hdpvr. thats a MASSIVE drawback. until theres a workaround for that, it's sage all the way, imho. of course the only thing i watch live is sports, so maybe not an issue for some.
ScaryBob 2009-10-19, 09:35 PM My impression was that TVersity doesn't stream live tv.
You could be right. If so, I missed that. :confused:
TorontoColin 2009-10-19, 09:35 PM i don't think you can stream live tv to the xbox from the hdpvr. thats a MASSIVE drawback. until theres a workaround for that, it's sage all the way, imho. of course the only thing i watch live is sports, so maybe not an issue for some.
That's incorrect, DVBLink works like any other tuner, live TV or recording TV.
The only thing that might be considered a drawback is that it encodes in H.264 (because of the device, not the software) and the Xbox 360 is the only extender that can decode H.264. However, real-time transcoding into MPEG2 is on their list of features to someday add to DVBLink. Personally I wouldn't use it because it would probably be really resource intensive, but for those with Dlink or Linksys extenders this could be extremely valuable.
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