Home Entertainment PC Mod
Hughesey writes "With PC's beginning to enter the Home Entertainment scene, OC-Melbourne have come up with the perfect way to integrate a PC into your Home Theater setup. The OC-Melbourne HEPC. Quote From the Article: 'So now we have a PC that is capable of replacing many separate devices (such as a DVD player, and consoles), but lets admit it, that big beige case probably looks far worse than the hardware its replacing. Some people have gotten around this by using specialised cases such as those from Shuttle, or fancy aluminium cases such as those from LianLi. These cases, however, still don't integrate seamlessly into modern home theater systems, as they still maintain their "PC" look. Enter the OC-Melbourne HEPC...'"
Check it out
A couple years back when Intel had the guys in the anti-static suits doing their advertising I remember catching some pictures of some really awesome cases at some Intel show in Japan. There were a couple round ones in colors like bright orange and pink. Overall they were really great, but of course they were never mass produced. I'd love to get my hands on one, it at least pictures.
Am I the only one that remembers these?
sig.
I wouldn't mind having one of these next to my TV.
Y2K Compliant since the late 1890s
I finally broke down and built a TV machine last summer.. I mainly used it to play Divx movies--both ones I ripped from my DVDs myself and ones I downloaded from Morpheus.
Remote Control:
- I bought an IRman and got it working with Winamp's VidAmp..
- At first, I kept no mouse or keyboard on the box. I opted instead to use the remote,
Case:TweakUI-configured auto-login, and VNC (from my laptop already wired-up in the living room.
This eliminated any inherent case rattle.
to try to keep the AthlonXP 1700+ and three Maxtor drives (one 30GB and two 80GB) cool.
What have I learned?
hard-earned movies in the event of failure.
What will I do differently next time?
nasty, tricked-out, noisy system to handle all of the grunt-work in another room.
On-Screen Display menus and things.. One of the bottom lines of my experience is that Windows/FAT32
*kills* drives.
have one DVB card in the
STB to add pause-live-TV functionality. For the setup and recording of other scheduled TV programs and movies, the "big box" in the other room that will have somewhere in the
neighborhood of 4 or 5 DVB cards. This is fine for Digital Cable.. If I had a dish, it would
likely be very different.
I really didn't do all *that* bad.. I had ripped somewhere around 60 of the DVDs myself.
I've really got to say this--AVI-archived DVDs beats the friggin bug juice out of any multi-DVD player.
Here are some more related links..
LinuxDVB
VDR