Windows XP Media Center Edition Review
Harpreet writes "It took 2 months but someone finally published an informative review of the new
Windows XP Media Center Edition operating system. AnandTech's
review has got everything you could want, including pictures galore. It looks
like the folks who make the Linux based Video
Disk Recorder have a new standard to live up to." Update: 01/08 21:06 GMT by T : Read on below for a different (Free software, CD-based) approach to computer-A/V integration.
Trunkboy writes "There are a lot of PVR projects out there (Freevo, TiVo, Dave&Dina, etc... but MoviX is a little different. MoviX is an entire distribution (linux of course) that is designed to play avi/mpg/mp3/etc files from a computer. Upgrading is easy, because it boots from a CD! Videos/music can be stored on a local hard drive, or on a network share. This project is incredible, but needs more developers. Stop in and give Roberto a hand -- MoviX shows some great potential!"
Let's see how much unwanted DRM they lumber THIS one with...
It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
Is Linux any different? It seems like I get an email from redhat at least once a week about a patch for something.
Oh, I see. You're saying that open source software is never top notch.
Nice troll.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
This seems like a push to remove Freevo and the other Tivo-like software out of the market. The only problems with the PVR software your run on your general purpose computer is that other software gets in the way. I would prefer a dedicated machine for PVR usage and another for generalized computing.
The project mentioned in the topic is only for DBS satelite users. For everyone else, check out MythTV. This project is so impressive I cannot even explain all its features here. Just go look at it yourself. It is amazing, does almost everything TiVo does (including interactive electronic program guide), plus is a MAME front end, CD player, image browser, and more. Make sure to check out the screenshots!
Expect Service Pack 1 sometime in 2006...
"As long as defiance continues, they can't claim victory." -Slashdot comment
It looks like the folks who make the Linux based Video Disk Recorder have a new standard to live up to.
Yes, the Linux VDR people will have to figure out how to hide spyware in their (open) source code.
Trolling is a art,
... these are still more Apples-to-Apples with XP than the Linux Video Disk Recorder:
MythTV
Freevo
Check it out!
Un-news
I have a TiVo.
I use a TiVo instead of piping my cable through my computer for a reason.
Its the same reason I have a football games on my GameCube.
Some things are just better without the PC.
Why would I use awkward PVR abilities of my PC (requiring me to sit in a specific spot, and use a mouse) when I can plop down on my couch and pick up the TiVo remote?
There's a reason speciliazed components sell better than PC software geared to do the same thing.
Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
------
The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
Computer Power User this month. Covered the HP with the emuzed card in particular
VDR released an update to their first version to fix problems. Which is better: releasing an update the day the product comes out, or releasing the update later? Either way, the first version of both programs had bugs, and they got fixed. I'm not aware of any programs that were perfect on their first release.
The article states that "the vast majority of TV tuner cards available will not work" -- and this includes all ATI All-In-Wonder cards. The only two cards supported are the Hauppauge WinTV PVR and the Emuzed Maui PCI PVR.
Personally, I think I'll stick with my ATI card and Video Disk Recorder.
The guide is very well written, and easy to understand.
Can Linux run something like this?
I have Linux installed on a pc, and I will use linux for a year straight, never touching windows until a few programs make me deal with the obtruse nature, and all the spyware, lock ups, and virtual memory sky rocketing my pc to a hault.
If it wasn't for Civ 3 PTW, I would never run windows, and I think that is how a lot of people are.
This is something I would gladly spend the extra money on, but do you have to use windows for all these functions.
(I have never actually payed attention to what comes out in the way of viewing television, recording it, and so on. If the options that are in the Windows verision are in a linux version, if any, that would definately be something to setup.)
http://use.perl.org
Direct link to article without ads
I took me that long to get it installed.
Microsoft should get Ellen Fiess and Steve the "Dude" guy of Dell fame to market this 'innovative' (heh) new technology. Could you imagine how amazing that marketing campaign would be?
First, you can't buy the software to build your own. Which means most of the options right now cost a lot. I'd like to build a cheap(er) box aimed JUST at the Media Center features and not also need it to be a great gaming PC or whatever from Gateway.
I don't want a PC. I want a nice AV unit in my component rack, like my TiVo. But the TiVo is getting dated. I need high def support. I need faster processing so I don't get annoyed at the menus. I think if you'd put the TiVo interface on the RePlay hardware we'd have a hit. Good interface with the best features.
I agree with your second point also, which is why PC games and consoles will always coexist.
Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
Your mom?
ha, ha..
just kidding
From the article:
Before you can proceed in the program guide setup you have to scroll through the 44 pages of the Terms of Service and select agree. Once again, this is done fairly quickly using the remote just by holding the down-arrow and then hitting ok.
That's good, sound advice there. Don't bother reading it.
You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
I don't have the time to read the article but I'm guessing it has several flaws
Ah yes, the typical consulting way of doing things, making a decision before knowing any facts.
I really doubt that Microsoft is making this software with any intention aside from
3. Profit.
I don't think they have any grudge for Tivo, they just would like to make money off anything they can.
Microsoft has a wonderful monopoly going. Everyone knows they want/need a computer, and it comes packaged with so many things that most people don't have any idea what they bought it for.
They just continue to package things in it that people will use. Tivo may never make it, but when Microsoft can just bundle things together, you will.
I don't like corn, but if i had to buy it at the store every time I bought carrots, I would own a lot of corn, and you would never know I hated it.
http://use.perl.org
This just stinks.
Why cant I buy this OS retail? It's the first new OS product from MSFT that I'm interested in.
I've been playing with hooking my PCs to TV's as the primary display for awhile now, since I first got the original All-in-wonder card, and as far as running windows on the desktop, the problem is always the same - the display is just too lo-res.
You can set it to 640x480, set the fonts to extra-large, but it still doesn't affect a truly system wide change, and setting non-standard widget sizes in the appearance tab makes for awkward glitchy windows.
Besides, it's more than font size - the desktop is basically just monitor-only.
I want a version of windows that has a 'lo-res' mode tailored for TV output. Big scrolling/rotating start menus, big icons with big fonts.
I don't want linux, because aside from watching movies, gaming is a must-have on the big screen (and more of the motivation).
Now they have something I want, but I cant 'roll my own', I have to overpay 3000$ for a proprietary machine like I was a mac user or something.
Does anyone know of a good desktop replacement for 2k/XP that might do what I want?
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
From the article:
Before you can proceed in the program guide setup you have to scroll through the 44 pages of the Terms of Service and select agree. Once again, this is done fairly quickly using the remote just by holding the down-arrow and then hitting ok. (Emphasis added)
Reading 44 pages is hardly a quick task, no matter if you have a remote control, scrolling mouse, or whatever. Unless it reads like 44 pages from a Dr. Seuss book. Then I wouldn't mind so much.
You may not reverse engineer on a train, you may not reverse engineer in the rain. You may not share files with a fox, you may not let files leave this box...
We need to develop some sort of global cache list so we can add the following from the article:
Isn't this a bit of an exageration? Obviously, they can't be "infinately" more powerful, but are they even considerably more powerful? I'm not too familiar with the spec's on PVR's, but I would bet they aren't that weak.
Forget the whales - save the babies.
I built my 7 year old a PC, it sits in her room and runs Windows XP home.
I checked it the other day when I brought her some new games, it has about 2 months uptime, and she plays with it all the time.
Now, if my 7 year old can run Windows without having to reboot, why can't you?
Because your a linux troll, maybe?
Frankly I'd want the MS OS for the ability to play games on the big screen. And tux racer is not a game, it's a joke.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
It's sad to see the Anandtech guy post stuff that's dead wrong. Firstly, Windows media player 9 final, does NOT play MCE based files other than on the MCE box. It won't play it on non-MCE machines. Secondly, windvd 4.0 most definitely works with this, as I've built a home-made MCE box using only windvd 4 and it had no problems.
I find it odd I never thought of that. :)
http://use.perl.org
We're trying to make a similar thing based on linux. (it's called DAVE/DINA and you can read all about that strange name -and more- over here).
I must admit, we were pretty surprised with this version of XP. It looks really cool (we haven't tried it though).
It made us realize we have to speed up our work on DAVE/DINA. So we're planning our first ISO-release this month.
It will include:
- Watching TV
- RECORDING TV (only europ i think)
- Playing/grabbing music
- Music Database
- Photo gallery
- playing/grabbing DVD
- playing DIVX
but a lot of work needs to be done. We hope to lure some contributors with this release.
But you can already start to help us now: Visit our website, and comment on our plans (so we know what we're doing right and what we're doing wrong), or make us a cool new logo
How do these and other open source projects handle things like cable boxes? The TiVo will change the box for me. I can't rely on a TV Tuner card to handle that since I need my digital cable box.
Does anyone make IR blasters that will talk to those boxes that can be made to work?
With support like this, I highly doubt that this product is going to get much support from the general public. Most windows users aren't going to go out and buy new hardware for their PC, just to run a new flavor of windows that has the same functionality as a PVR. When faced with the choice of a set top box or a dedicated system/hardware/OS upgrade, joe consumer is probably just going to run and buy a little set top box with only a couple of cables, that is proven easy to use and save the hastle/time/money.
I don't have time to read your post but I'm guessing it has the following flaws:
- bla bla bla
- bla bla bla
- I have an iPod
- bla bla bla
- Microsoft sucks!
- bla bla bla
Suckers!
there's no place like ~
First, don't bash anything untill you read about it and understand it.
Second, and yes, this is pricey, but if your looking for a media PC, this will do the trick, and you shouldn't have trouble hooking up your ipod or any other media device to it.
Alien Ware Media Center PC
Third, You didn't mention it but others did, this is extremely hardware limited, ATI can't even get on because their cards don't do all the encoding in hardware. You also must have a remote so the lazy people can operate this from their couch.
Finally, I know anytime MS is mentioned, it will get torn apart. And i know this has DRM in it, but it will only be months before that is broken. In all honesty, XP is alot better than their previous efforts, RIAA and MPAA ass kissing aside. So lets drop the nothing from MS will ever be good enough, because we all know that the majority of people that use Slashdot are browsing from IE.
Don't waste time... procrastinate now!
1. There still isn't enough good stuff to incite me to want to do this, yet.
2. I use Linux, so Microsoft won't work with my stuff anyway.
3. Excessive consumerism-no one really needs one of these, it is just more marketing hype by the Redmond Bug Factory. Instead, why not spend the money on helping Open-source projects. Take 10% of what you spend on Microsoft and other proprietary software/hardware, and the quality of open-source will improve dramatically.
Hospital computer makes fatal error Hmmm, Windows?
I am happy to see that instead of adding on and redoing windows 98 over and over (thus 98 SE, thus ME, thus 2000), they decided to rebuild the entire source code from scratch. A lot of errors were fixed and some extra considerations for security (however weak on default install) meaning they are stepping foward in the right direction.
;) )
I do think their XP product is very good in terms of stability, and despite the major difference between 2000 and XP the compataility with hardware beats any other operating system I know of. I tip my hat to the XP team on their progress.
Great review, so I hope it sheds a bit more light on the MS company and how they are working to improve the products. (guess this means they have grown up enough to stop 'stealing' code?
"Oh shit. That wasn't supposed to happen." - OpenBSD telnet exploration turned into accidental server crash
The fact that you seem unable to grasp the basic notion that M$ servers have a reputation for needing constant reboots is sad (for you).
My analogy was a comparison between large scale dynamically published websites / ecommerce applications and a PVR server. So how does your analogy about your 7 year old's PC even apply here?
And who mentioned games? Tux Racer is a joke? Who's trolling now?
Did you read the article?
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
I recently acquired a satellite system (DSS) with the PVR built-in (see my journal if you want to know more). Basically it just hooked up the same as the standard receiver. I've been using it for not quite a month and I just can't see going through the hassle of a media centre PC anymore. (I was looking at setting up something like that before - and being in Canada, I would have the added problem of finding a PVR that supports local satellite or cable options Guide-wise).
Basically, having a set-up like this 'just works'. You press pause and TV is paused. You select the program you want to record out of the program guide or program search and it records it (you can choose to protect it, to prevent other recordings overwriting on a full HDD, and you can choose to start recording 1 minute early). You can go back and watch something that you recorded while it records something else. Every time you change the channel it begins buffering again automatically (up to 1 hour I think). It can hold 30 hours of programming. It can IR-Blast the VCR if needed also.
I'm a PVR addict. Now I'm sure you can accomplish all of this and more using a PC with WMCE or whatever, but it's nice to not have a computer hanging around the room or having to show my wife how to get everything going. Sure I can't share with other PCs and I don't think it can really perform every trick that PC software or a TiVo can right now, but it does have an upgradeable BIOS. It is not hooked up to the internet or the phone line (if I ever bother with PPV then I'll have to use a phone line). I can tell the unit not to upgrade its BIOS without asking.
Basically, a home theatre setup often borders on messy anyways - throwing a PC into the mix just further confuses things.
And I definitely don't need a MS solution - don't need a BSOD messing up my TV viewing!
"A generic Linux install..."
What ever that is...
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Then I saw this:
Even with our reinstall, there have been cases where the Media Center application crashed, requiring a full system restart before functioning properly
I've got 2 Tivo's, both hacked, and neither has ever crashed or spontaneously rebooted on me (save one hang during first upgrade because I didn't disable write verify on the disks first.. my fault, I cut corners). There's no way in hell I'd trust a box that's not completely reliable to replace my trusty Tivos.
- My favorite error message: xscreensaver, running on an old Sparc 5 w/ 8bit color: bsod: Couldn't allocate color Blue
FTA:
"ATI's latest All-in-Wonder line comes extremely close; closer than any previous attempt, but ATI is still bound by the tragic flaw of a PC based PVR - the Windows interface."
This doesn't take a rocket scientist to add 2 and 2 in this case, does it?
I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
This kinda reminds me of the whole "new" tablet design. Yes the technology is great, but who the hell are going to buy them (en mass)?
TiVo (which I love, love, love) and ReplayTV aren't exactly setting the world on fire in terms of sales, so its not like there's a HUGE demand for these things. Also the price seems a hell of a lot higher than buying a functional computer and a TiVo seperately. How many people live in apartments so small they can't have both? College students are always bandied about for potential buyers, but my sense is that most would rather have a laptop. Plus, how many parents are going to plunk down that kind of money right after signing that check for school so their kids can record TV? I just don't think the cost would be justified (my dad would have laughed at me 'til he was blue in the face).
Nice tech, tiny market. MS better watch out. There only so many "these'll change the world" ideas that don't pan out that hardware companies are willing to subsidize.
>operating system. AnandTech's review has got everything you could
want, including pictures galore. It looks like the folks who make the
Linux based Video Disk Recorder have a new standard to live up to."
>
>
Only if you want a DRM-encumbered system, that is.....
Do I really want my PC recording The Simposons while I play Unreal Tournament 2003?
I don't think so! I have a 3.06 P4 with an ATI 9700 and its pretty much maxed out while playing UT 2003. I bet them same will be true with the upcoming Doom title.
I'd much rather have my Replay 4500s doing their recording thing while I'm doing my computing/gaming thing.
You can get two or three Replays for the price of a Media Center PC, I think. You can hook them up to your network and share programing between them, your PCs and friends on the net. And they won't steel CPU cycles from your PC.
...you can purcase Windows XP Media Center Second Edition starting Febrary 1st, for the low low price of $149.95 plus tax.
READ the info on this. You can not buy the software. You can only get it along with a new PC. The lack of support for a wide range of hardware (the complications which that would create esp. with non-hardware compression like ATI) is one of the reasons they must have chosen the OEM-only route.
A wee bit defensive, are we?
"Whenever AMD or Intel release a new CPU, everyone asks the question what we need faster processors for? The most common response for that is "to enable future applications" and a couple of years ago, there was enough processing power in a cheap enough form to finally give the VCR a brain - the idea of a set-top Personal Video Recorder (PVR) was born."
"Although MCE is by far the best first attempt at a PVR we've seen from any company, it isn't without its very noticeable flaws; the most serious of which happens to be this issue of performance. On a 2.53GHz Pentium 4, CPU utilization hovers around 30 - 40% while simply watching TV; note that this is with a hardware MPEG-2 encoder card and a very fast Pentium 4 CPU. We tried performing our own clean MCE install on the setup, updated all of the drivers and walked away with nothing better. There are clearly some issues with MCE as it shouldn't require such a high speed CPU to perform simple MPEG-2 decoding and writing to the disk. The CPU utilization drops to below 20% if MCE is closed and it's just recording in the background, which isn't too bad but still higher than you'd expect for a hardware MPEG-2 encoding engine that isn't relying on the host CPU.
The Tivo uses a 75Mhz PowerPC, which was available many years ago and is a joke of a processor right now. It's also what enables Tivo to not cost $1000. The fact that this windows media center slows down noticable with a 2.xx Ghz P4 is embarassing. Tivo rarely exhibits any slowdown, and it's not only using a alledgely more inferior PowerPC processor, but one from several years ago running at 3% of the speed of this thing.
http://www.naildrivin5.com/davec
This article (not the Slashdot article, but the review referenced) is really going around itself to lap up the MS PR releases here. First off, it never once questions why you would want this thing in preference to a TiVo or Replay. It does bring up the "advantage" of PC-based PVRs. Apparently it's the ability to convert your stored shows to any format you like... of course, they then explain that MCE can't do that, but they expect that MS will add it soon!
They also skip right over any discussion of ease of use, setup, cabling, access to guide data, fees, etc. I'm assuming that the author simply read some releases, watched a couple of Simpsons episodes and then decided to write a review (mostly of the Simpsons, as it turns out).
Oh, and I'm assuming that the assertion that this will be WindowsXP/Pro + MCE is a joke. I can't imagine that MS won't lock all of the "server" features in this, just like they do with XP/Home.
that's not what it says for me. for me it says With Microsoft's clout and programming ability, this product will be nothing less than top notch.
where in that does it say open source software is never top notch?
and that is crap. The ATI & nvidia cards aren't supported. This is too bad.
Yeah thats the same thing. Like the last one week about Pine being updated? That is Redhat's fault alright.
Comparing these is like apples to oranges.
People seem to forget that most Linux distibutions come with HUNDREDS of "third party" applications that you may or may not have installed. Redhat provides these emails based on your current system profile they have of your system. When is the last time MS put out an alert for an Eudora, PC Pine, Pegasys, or Norton Antivirus update that all run on Windows?
Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
so what do we all do, when watching "the simpsons" (to quote the article) and our box gets 0wn3d? count the number of days before script kiddies have a script to pipe specific (obscene) images/sound onto your tvs..just what microsoft wants grandma and kids to see huh?
At least the war on the environment is going well
Dave/Dina is similar to MythTV
:-)
At the moment MythTV has beter TV-options, better layout and a better logo
DaveDina has more AUDIO options, at the moment.
....is that you don't know what "mission critical" really means if you are running them on any form of PC, to begin with, and Linux, to end with.
Second thing that pops into my head is that you are simply a fanboy troll.
No it doesn't :)
But the main problem with it is I can't play Divx4 movies on TiVo. I have a server upstairs with a whole bunch of movies as divx4 *.avi files. My Tivo is on the network but still can't play them.
However if I put a box behind the TV with MS media stuff, then I could play them. Hmmmm.... Maybe its time to make another purchase.
My personal experience with XP (it's on my wife's computer) is that the games I play are somewhat stable but if I play them too long or if there is a lot of reloading, IE between games in NHL 2003, it tends to crash.
oh sure, they've replaced the BSOD with a little "would you like to tell Big Brother all your problems" prompt...but that doesn't mean it's more stable. It just appears to be.
It take more faith to believe in evolution than it takes to believe in God
"I don't have the time to read the article but I'm guessing it has several flaws:"
.
.
.
"Wagner LLC Consulting Co. - Getting it right the first time"
If you want to get it right the first time as your sig states, I would suggest _taking_ the time to read the article before commenting....
Just a suggestion
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Hmm.
Mod +3 Vorpal
Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
to raise the fucking hit counts and show more ads.
Any particular reason this story couldn't of been 5 to 8 pages at the most?
Yes, my RedHat box has a flashing ! every few days too. Programmers are human last time I checked, and humans come in all varying abilities and disciplines. Not all OpenSource projects are written by l33t ub3r cod3rs, and every closed source shop (like Microsoft) is not a bunch of community college flunkies.
I'll gaurantee you any decent sized company has a whole bunch of programmers just like the average slashdotter (or ARE the average slashdotter), that live to code, love what they do, create elegant routines and would seriously not appreciate anyone saying everything they do is weak, trojan-infested, closed-source satan code, just because they work for a business model that keeps proprietary development private.
Lay off our programmer bretheren.
I'm Rick James with mod points biatch!
A new Outlook virus is running rampant and now, in addition to infecting your computer and propagating itself through your email, it deletes all references to itself from both your email and any news programs you might be watching -- even the live ones!
Essentially the humans would have to go back to voice communication to know what was going on.
yes, this is pricey, but if your looking for a media PC, this will do the trick, and you shouldn't have trouble hooking up your ipod or any other media device to it. Alien Ware Media Center PC
That Alienware box looks suspiciously like the Shuttle barebone PCs which you can buy at newegg.com for less than $400. Do-it-yourselfers could save more than a few bucks making these into an equivalent media PC.
greechneb, prove it.
I'll even accept a packet sniff that said that the machine in question was touching the outside world during any file search regardless of where the connection was being made to. Doesn't even have to be phoning home... could be phoning anywhere and I'll believe your paranoia is justified.
Until then, I'm calling bullshit on your FUD.
... and that TiVo also has dedicated MPEG hardward and a custom ASIC (dunno what the custom ASIC does, didn't both to check further than to see if it had MPEG hardware, which it pretty much would have to have).
http://penguinppc.org/embedded/tivo/hardware/
The PPC is just there for the user interface and possibly shoveling data around (probably for just setting up DMA engines). The PPC403 is *not* a heavyweight computing device.
>> The fact that you seem unable to grasp the basic notion that M$ servers have a reputation for needing constant reboots is sad (for you).
I grasp the 'notion of a reputation', but I also know that it doesn't relate to the real world.
Linux also has a reputation for poor hardware support and second rate performance when it comes to the video/gui arena.
Acclaim earned a reputation for making really shitty games back in the NES days. So what?
Comparing the latest linux build to NT 3.51 is getting really old.
My 7 year old analogy applies perfectly. She uses a TV as her primary display, and watches DVDs and a small library of cartoons in divx off my fileserver (which runs linux, btw, because that's what I find linux appropriate for) I find this much closer to the function of these machines than an ecommerce server.
And people pointing to Tux Racer as if it validates linux as an entertainment/gaming platform *is* a joke.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
Yeah, I dunno wtf the stuff is doing using that much host CPU. At least in the TiVo, the PPC is just there to run the user interface and stuff and probably set up DMA transfers or shovel data to/from the disc at the most. I would figure something similar would be the case with this thing... guess not.
The "Linux and MacOS won't be able to compete with this." part was an unnecessary jab at Linux and MacOS.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
This is a bit OT, but why did HP put a "Do Not Remove" cap over the on-board VGA connector? There are perfectly valid reasons to run multiple monitors (especially on a "Media PC"), and there doesn't seem to be any reason to cap the connector off...
Obviously the GeForce is a better card, but... why use a board with onboard video, just to cap it off? Seems like a hack to me; perhaps a driver conflict caused concern, so they disabled it in the BIOS and capped it off.. but it's very unprofessional IMO.
Just a nitpick I guess...
NGWave - Fast Sound Editor for Windows
Here's a thought, geniuses: instead of modding me a troll, how about posting a follow-up explaining WHY you think I'm trolling? Be sure to cite any resources that suggest that MS's intentions with Windows XP's product-activation and upcoming Palladium "features" are anything other than dishonorable and anti-consumer.
Tivo rarely exhibits any slowdown
You ever try to reorganize 34 season passes? It takes about 10 minutes.
I can tell you exactly why.
Tivo uses several DSPs to handle the audio and video.
MCE does everything through software which, in technical terms "sucks ass".
This is just another way ms shoots themselves in the foot by forcing everything through windows.
Who would want a PVR from a company that can't even manage their own network0 8/techweb .microsoft.outage1/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/biztech/01/
You're right - you have to go the OEM route if you want this PVR OS - but ianjk is right when it comes to the options facing the consumer:
1) Get one of these OEM boxes - special PC with specific graphics hardware and PVR OS (time, hassle, money)
2) Buy a set-top box for 1/4 the price (simplicity)
As the article states, unless the end user is going to use the PC for more than just a PVR, he'd be much better off getting a set-top box.
I didn't catch that. Now it makes more sense. Having to buy a 2.53 ghz box for $1,649.00 to get this OS is still not that apealing. Especially if it is unstable out of the box.
I haven't had any problems whatsoever with NHL 2003, actually only problem I had was with NOLF2 (which of course was their fault, not the OS's).
If linux became 'the desktop' platform tomorrow, all the publishers would be writing the same code, just for a different platform, and they'd crash just as often. I'd say at least 99% of all the bugs/crashes/problems I encounter are the fault of an application, or my own.
And the prompt box does mean it's more stable - it tells me that the OS detected and cleanly removed a rogue app, and recovered the resources it had in use.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
I find there are few things that I can consistantly do to product a debugging script on a regular basis. On the other hand I notice it tends to go in busts of popping up more one week then the next, even when just surfing the web.
On top of that my issues with the pop up box is why send the message to Microsoft if they never get back to me nor seem to fix the problem?
It take more faith to believe in evolution than it takes to believe in God
What an intelligent person full of bright ideas. You sir are a real assssssset to the slashdot community!
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Try checking out that big room outside the server room, you know, the one where the ceiling is sometimes blue, and sometimes black with little white lights, and the A/C sucks.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Well, you can shut off that box, and I have applications crash in linux all the time, it's not a Microsoft phenomena. My point is, since the overwhelming majority of apps and games are written for windows, it follows that that's where the majority of bugs are going to be.
Microsoft just logs the problems, that's all. I mean how is Microsoft going to fix a bug in NHL 2003?
The box doesn't replace BSOD. What replaces BSOD is an automatic reboot (the idea being that if your server crashes on you it'll reboot without user intervention).
It's infinately more frustrating to troubleshoot (but again can be turned off), and the only time I've seen it was a hardware failure (bad stick of RAM). I haven't seen a driver conflict, stack overflow, invalid pointer, etc, bring my system down yet.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
Mind you, I felt inclinded to post this even though it will undo my moderations. I guess my wife is right... I am a no-good geek. ;-)
Before you can proceed in the program guide setup you have to scroll through the 44 pages of the Terms of Service and select agree. Once again, this is done fairly quickly using the remote just by holding the down-arrow and then hitting ok.
Gee Anand, don't strain your eyes there! :)
MCSE doesnt impress me :) But I could very well be misinformed and have this be on my fault. Being a BSD user moreso than windows I could very well be mistaken from top to bottom.
Thanks for pointing that out though (corrections), when I did the network support for MS tech they told us to treat it like a 98 machine attempting to behave like an NT machine. That was applied to all versions before XP. Hm.. guess there was a sense of bias with the admin that was teaching us. Well, guess you learn something new each day. Bah, that is what I get for sticking my nose out of the BSD door.
"Oh shit. That wasn't supposed to happen." - OpenBSD telnet exploration turned into accidental server crash
I don't really count that, because TiVo knows it will take a while and tells you. What the article was talking about was the UI slowing down at times w/out warning. While both do suck, I'd rather know that I need to wait and do all the waiting at one time, rather than wait on a slow interface....
http://www.naildrivin5.com/davec
I have this same problem with using my tv tuner card. It runs fast and smooth under gentoo linux, but the whole computer slows down if I try to watch tv in windows 2000.
Is it just me or did anyone else see PVR OS in the parent post and read it as POS?
"Good things don't end with eum, they end with mania or teria." - H. Simpson
Maybe the article is referring to capabilities, not processing speed. A PC can, in theory, perform an infinite number of different tasks. A PVR (like any other specialized device) is restricted to a few.
What the heck? Who are MSFTards who modded this guys post? Hmmm...Microsoft XP Media Center Edition...watching TV on your PC...Digital Rights Management...this guy's not trolling, he's got a valid (and very ontopic) concern here. If there's any justice, the mods will get metamoderated into oblivion.
"We are far too easily pleased." --C.S. Lewis
MythTV!
Malike Bamiyi wanted my assistance.
Especially if it is unstable out of the box.
That's actually the reason they're only allowing 6 different companies to sell Media Center PC's. They don't want the brand name to get tarnished by cheap PC's.
I run XP and it has never crashed - apps have crashed but that's it. Since this is a streamlined version of XP that is to run on a certain set of hardware, I'd be pretty confident that it won't crash. Yea I know what most people here will say about that.
This anti-MS chick at work told me I was a fool with blind faith for buying an XBOX - said it would crash all the time. It's been fine.
I recognize that performance issues are unacceptable, the article seems to suggest they are due to poor coding of the guide scrolling system rather than design of the encode-stream.
So long, OS X and whatever media packages are available for Linux, it was nice knowing you.
ShowShifter.
It is the only PCTV software package available that does not 1) include spyware 2) include DRM or 3) require the use of a keyboard to gain *all* functionality. Although HDTV support isn't there yet, there are deinterlacing plug-ins available for progressive display of non-HDTV content.
If people would lobby them into Linux support, you could build your own Tivo for very little. And you get all of the benefits of open video format standards...
Life is the leading cause of death in America.
"
control the software AND the hardware. sounds like a mac to me
Not to mention that MPlayer can play ASFs, and hence has no trouble a) transcoding them or b) outputting them so you can transcode them using other tools (like mjpegtools). I've done this myself to convert ASFs to VCD-compatible MPEG-1 streams.
Okay, I'll give you that I live under a rock (kernel hacking for one class and dealing with the other classes has been my life for the past few months), but I have a few questions ...
Why the "new operating system" tag? This seems no more a new OS version than (say) Plus! was. Even Microsoft calls XPMCE a "new member of the Windows XP family". This isn't even a step from 95 to 98 as I understand it. :)
Second, what's so special about XPMCE? Other than it's designed to run on a Media Center PC. On that topic, does that mean that the only thing special about this version is that it will only run on machines that label themselves Media Center PCs? I ask because Microsoft's FAQ page says ...
Q.Can I just buy the Windows XP Media Center Edition system software and install it on my current machine?
A. No. Windows XP Media Center Edition is only available on a new kind of PC, called a Media Center PC. Media Center PCs provide the best of home computing and entertainment, and are built by Microsoft's partner PC manufacturers. The operating system software is not available as a stand-alone product, and a custom Media Center PC cannot be built at this time with off-the-shelf products.
So. What entails a Media Center PC, if you can't buy one off with OTS components? Cause I know you sure as hell can get "powerful processors, high-capacity hard disks, CD-ROM/DVD drives, and rich graphics and audio capabilities ... a remote control, [and a] TV tuner card" off the shelf.
Something smells fishy.
Erm... last I checked, mplayer is perfectly capable of playing ASFs out (using the Windows DLLs)... perhaps you are referring to something over and above this? Additional DRM features that I haven't run into yet, perhaps?
Any TiVo owner will immediately spot this little issue: namely, that 93GB of disk space equals 5 hours 8 minutes of record time at best quality. Even if the space available for PVR functions is 75% of 93GB (as implied in the screenshot), that's still about five hours for 70GB of disk space.
Maybe MCE's definition of "best" quality is dramatically higher than TiVo's, but TiVo can store about 9 hours at "best" quality on a 30GB HD. On a machine with 70GB of disk space, it would easily be able to record over 20 hours at best quality. Why can MCE only squeeze a quarter as much video onto the same amount of space?
Also, I find it ironic that MCE has such grievous hardware requirements. It requires a TV tuner card with hardware MPEG-2 encoding, yet still requires a really fast CPU, fast RAM and a fast, big hard drive. Admittedly, TiVo's aren't sharing their hardware with other apps (in most cases), but first-generation TiVos managed to squeak by with a 50MHz PowerPC and 4400RPM hard drives. Surely, MS can squeeze stutter-free performance out of moderately powerful CPUs and HDs, can't they?
I run XP and it has never crashed - apps have crashed but that's it. Since this is a streamlined version of XP that is to run on a certain set of hardware, I'd be pretty confident that it won't crash
the hp media center pc was unstable out of the box.
Looking through the Media PC screenshots, it looks somewhat more complex to use than Tivo, which I love dearly. Unfortunately Tivo does not pass the "Mom" test, and the Media PC is even worse. The plethora of buttons on the Media PC remote also looks like it would not pass the Mom test.
Basically, if I sat my Mom in front of a device, and if she can figure out how to use it, it passes the Mom test. I think she represents the non-tech-savvy user which is the majority of the population. She is able to use email and web browsing on her Mac, and she can program her VCR, but I don't think she would have the patience to deal with programming a Tivo or Media PC. If it has too many buttons and menu screens, it fails the test.
I would be impressed if someone came out with a low cost and very intuitive PVR/multimedia device that could sell to the common man. The raw technology is there to make all kinds of feature-rich devices, but there needs to be some serious attention paid to the user interface and useability if the devices are to be successful.
Brings up the whole thing in one window. It makes reading the article much less painful.
... which you can buy at newegg.com [newegg.com] for less than $400. Do-it-yourselfers could save more than a few bucks making these into an equivalent media PC.
No they couldn't; at least, not until MS makes WinMCE available as a separate purchase. Currently you can get teh OS if it's pre-installed on an approved Media Center PC.
$8.95/mo web hosting
The extra room on the drive is probably taken up by that 'nifty' little wrapper (.asf?) that MS is putting around the files...no telling what all is in that. And it seems to add a nice little bonus that you can't transcode it to another format (divx), nor play it with a a non-Windows Media format type player....
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
File it with the Smart Homes and Smart Cars. Interesting but irrelevant.
Why waste time learning, when ignorance is instantaneous? - Calvin
So, a 2.53 Ghz P4 can't handle opening the guide and scrolling through it? I have to make sure I'm not recording anything important while using the guide? Can M$ possibly get any more inefficient? Don't forget, this is with HARDWARE MPEG2! I wondered at first why cards without hardware MPEG2 codecs weren't supported.. now I understand.
DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
Okay, somehow I got really stupid and forgot that parent was a review of said XPMCE ... sorry for the slashbotting. I usually play much nicer :3
But ... having read the article, it says " ... if you strip away the Media Center part of the equation you will be left with a fully functional copy of Windows XP Professional. What Media Center adds to the OS is primarily support for the Media Center application, which appears as nothing more than a regular program in your Start Menu."
Great. So for a Media Center PC I'm paying for Microsoft to add another program to my Start Menu? With an "incredible interface" no less ... but really. So it knows how to talk to a TV card. Whee. Actually, the program UI looks nice, but if we could get one of these MPEG TV cards with open standards (good luck!) I think an equivalent could be made. Especially one better integrating the music bits.
So. "Media Center" PCs require TV cards that do onboard MPEG-2 encoding. Can't I get those now? Granted, there are, what, two of them? But still. Nothing's stopping ATI from liscensing a hardware MPEG-2 solution from someone. Hell, if they'd do that and let the driver toggle MPEG-2 encoding it'd be great. That should be more a message to ATI and NVidia to stop complaining about MS' move in this case and make more advanced products. Sheesh.
One thing about the article. MPEG-2 isn't "bloated". It's different. (I know, but bear with me a moment ... ) MPEG-1 was designed for high-bandwidth, high-quality applications. MPEG-2 was designed for lower-bandwidth. MPEG-4 is for even lower-bandwidth applications. I assume that the lower the bandwidth, the higher the time complexity of the encoder. (Decoders are supposed to be relatively simple.) Lo, this is what speaketh the MPEG Standards. So encoding TV to MPEG-2 seems reasonable. Good to know Anandtech knows MPEG. :P
The article calls the decision to require onboard MPEG-2 encoding in its TV-card "unique". ... I think it makes sense for a consumer product. I think it makes MORE sense than limiting who can make Media Center PCs. But hey, I'm not Microsoft. I also was somewhat disappointed that, while they found that the performance even under idle load was "unacceptable", their solution was essentially to say "Microsoft, wait for HyperThreading CPUs" instead of "Microsoft, optimize your code".
Hehehe ... for all the times I've seen someone tell other people "don't irc as root" on opn ... "Don't watch TV as the Administrator!"
The picture of the screwed-over VGA connector was good for a laugh ... "DO NOT REMOVE". :3
Uhhhh, no. MCE does [claim to] require a TV card that does its own MPEG-2 encoding.
<span style="flavor: conspiracy-theory;">Although, it wouldn't surprise me too much if they don't actually use it for the first release, then turn it on, come back, and say "Oh look! This release of MCE is so much faster than the first one. Won't you upgrade ... ?"</span>
Seriously though. The article says it uses MPEG-2 onboard the TV-in card. The article, in fact, makes a big deal about it and says that ATI and NVidia are complaining about it. So next time you should probably read the article :) Although yes, doing stuff in software generally sucks if there's a hardware solution.
I could get tv-out on my Radeon 8500dv to work under Linux, I wouldn't even be reading this! Anyone got it to work? I've tried gatos to no avail....
Well, whatever people around here might think, the article says that the HP PC crashed a couple times before they reinstalled from the ground up.
So, well, I guess you're not right.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
Wow. Where do I start? Oh, yeah:
Not exactly striking from a position of strength, are you?
XP's WPA is rotten just on principle. But I don't see why MCE would be exempt. Home and Pro can do everything MCE does, with the right kit. All MCE does is put a shiny face on it all.
What? Take a current, standard issue Fiorina-Capellas Presario, add a tuner card, IR remote, and memory card reader, and wrap it in a lacquer finish case, and suddenly it's "legacy hardware"? You make it sound like it's a 286 with a VLB graphics card. And it already has hit the stores. I started seeing them at my local Best Buy in November.
How could a 286 support all that? :-) SerialATA is just starting to penetrate the high end of the market, so I'm not surprised by it's omission on the HP. Besides, putting hard to find hard drives in a consumer grade PC isn't very user friendly. Bluetooth, cool as it is, doesn't have an obvious application in a Media Center PC except wireless keyboards and mice. You can get those now without Bluetooth, so what's the point? A best-case 11 Mbps won't give users a good impression of 802.11b. I don't think WiFi will be truly useful on a media center PC until 802.11g hits the mainstream. And HP's models include both USB 2.0 and IEEE 1394, so your iPod will work just fine.
Buzzword Bingo! You have no idea what sound card it is, let alone how it works. You're trying to BS the wrong crowd, buddy. Oh, for the record, it's a Creative Sound Blaster Audigy in the HP. They even have a bundle that includes a set of Klipsch ProMedia 5.1 speakers.
Ah, now for the coup de grace. It's too expensive to begin with, but the feature list is missing a whole bunch of esoteric bullet points! Price is relative to an individual's financial situation, so I'll just post the prices, and leave you to determine their worth. An entry level HP is $1349. The loaded model, with higher-spec core components and (expensive) Klipsch speakers, is $1999. Sony's nearest match is the the Vaio RZ, which uses their home-brewed GigaPocket software instead of XP MCE, and includes a DVD burner on all models. It starts at $1599. (Note: all prices are from hp.com and sonystyle.com, which were both advertising sale and/or rebate pricing. Display not inlcuded.)
Let's see how many sarcastic uses of the phrase "ringing endorsement" this generates. Hey, is Bernie Schiffman hiring?
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The rest of the world. Yes that means everyone but you North American's (and some lucky Europeans) who currently have all the options in the world for PVR / DVR's might not get the best spin off from this release. But people like me in poor old Australia who currently has no option what so ever for a PVR. :( Even all the opensource options are made in the Northern Hemisphere, so poor people like me would have to somewhere find (steal) their programming info.. :(
:)
:(
For this reason thank god MS has come to the party, finally a big player that will push a "Good Thing(TM)" world-wide. Once they have set the stage all us Open Source freaks can pilfer their work into our free alternatives.
Of course only if Microsoft is planning on introducing this in Australia, hello?? Ohh, come on.. I really need to get out of this 3rd world country.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Comment removed based on user account deletion
What's the deal with recording shows? Don't people just...remember anymore?
This is Tivo's new service agreement in PDF, and here is Google's copy of Tivo's service agreement converted to HTML.
Unfortunately I'm unable to dig up the agreement I originally signed on for to comparision, but the following are changes from the previous agreement:
This is fairly subtle, but the previous agreement basically just said that service consisted of program guide information. Nothing else. The other features were implicitly part of the unit you purchased. Sure, the features weren't terribly useful without guide information, but if you could find another way to provide guide data those feature would work. Now they're claiming that if you fail to pay you have no rights at all these features which are entirely managed within the unit.
Given the helpful definitions of features in the previous section, TiVo is clearly reserving the right to remove Season Passes, WishList, Smart Recording, TiVo Suggestions, Parental Controls and other functionality. Sure, it seems unlikely that they'll take such features away, but why are they asking for the right to? Those are specifically the features they advertised the Tivo as having, and the reason I bought mine.
But I can terminate the service if I don't like it? Given the new changes, my Tivo effectively becomes a giant paperweight. And (checking Section 13), my lifetime subscription that I paid for before this change will not be refunded in any way, so I'm especially S.O.L..
The rest of the section is pretty reasonable, but this little clause is unreasonable. I purchased my Tivo specifically because they were very open and had a "You void your warrantee, and we won't support you, but feel free to hack on your Tivo" policy. I wanted to support that behavior. This effectively reverses the decision. No more hard drive expansion hacks. To heck with that.
In practice it looks like they only use this to record the silly promos I see on my main menu. That I don't mind. What I do mind is that this implies that they can preempt my normal recording to record their ads. That I object to. I doubt they ever will preempt my programming, but why not state as much in the policy?
When I purchased a lifetime subscription, I understood that the lifetime in question was for the unit, not me. I figured it just meant that if the system failed I'd need to pay to get it repaired. This working left me fearing that they may claim that once a Tivo experiences any failure that they can claim that its lifetime is over and cancel the service. Since my Tivo actually experienced a modem failure nine months into its life, this seems like a real risk to me. (On a related note, it looks like Tivo modems are fragile, thus products like this one. Get your Tivo on a phone line surge supressor!)
I brought up all of these complaints to Tivo support when I became aware of them. I got a form letter back that failed to address the issues I brought up. Feh.
Search 2010 Gen Con events
This seems like typical MS bundling. They have a nice PVR app and maybe a codec. Instead of releasing it as the "MS PVR" app or an add-on to Windows Media Player, like anyone else would, they *bundle it into the OS*. WTF? This is exactly what they got reamed for doing with IE, media player, WMA, DRM codecs, etc. etc. And they're still doing the same thing! (Yeah, that DoJ slap on the wrist really hurt...)
Don't fall for this marketing crap. Make them release it as a simple app. I don't care if it will only install if you have the XYZ tuner card or whatever, but it is NOT a new version of the OS! It is NOT "Windows MCE" whatever they tell you! It's just Windows XP with a simple (and quite nice, from what I can tell) full-screen PVR app.
Once they succeed in convincing everyone that the PVR app is "part of the OS" the market for 3rd party PVR apps will dry up, because of course who would pay money for something that comes for free? And then they can cripple it any way they want in future versions (no recording pay-per-view, no skipping commercials, no transcoding, etc.)
Don't buy this line. Anand is starting to behave like a PR flack; it's too bad. Think for yourselves, people! There are a few PVR Windows apps out there, and some of them are getting quite decent. Vote with your wallets.
-- Tristero
http://www.msnbc.com
I think this is the jist in Sound And Vision magazine, I think current edition, that the video recording delay is somewhat flawed. One of the functions is to use the PVR to delay playback. However on the Media Center, the delayed playback takes 5 minutes to rewind, and the delayed record holds only up to 30 minutes. So if you delay 30 minutes, jump in and watch, you'll miss the first five minutes!!!
I can't remember if it was in the same article or different discussions about how long it will keep recordings.
Heh.. what can I say? I'm spoiled. I'm so used to the Tivo always working that I hate "live" tv now. I've even caught myself (on the rare occasion that I watch something live... usually news, TLC or History) trying to fast forward into the future. Damn the laws of physics and time!
- My favorite error message: xscreensaver, running on an old Sparc 5 w/ 8bit color: bsod: Couldn't allocate color Blue
he did not say "isn't that like redhat" he said that's like Linux. and he was right. he was not saying that it is redhat's dity to fix the problems. What he is saying is that linux is just as buggy as windows, 3rd party or no, linux is not immune to bugs.
Mythtv looks really good. Also check out Flamethrower. It's still very much in development. What I'd like to see in Mythtv is dvd/vcd/avi file playback using mplayer or something. This can be added, and scripts have been written, but from what i understand, not included in the project yet.
Seeing as the review stated that merely watching the tv took 30% of resources on a 2.4G P4, I was surprised (to say the least) that I got a result of 2% on my Linux 1.3GHz Athlon.
So, it looks all nice and flash but that seems to be most of what the review is about. The fact that is used all those resources and crashed seemed very minor.
Also, I see they use yet ANOTHER proprietry file format for saving video.
This should scare the shit out of any XP user.
Here is a (probably incomplete) list of ways Windows XP tries to connect each user's computer to Microsoft's computers, or expects to be allowed through the user's software firewall:
1. Application Layer Gateway Service (Requires server rights.)
2. Fax Service
3. File Signature Verification
4. Generic Host Process for Win32 Services (Requires server rights.)
5. Microsoft Direct Play Voice Test
6. Microsoft Help and Support Center
7. Microsoft Help Center Hosting Server (Wants server rights.)
8. Microsoft Management Console
9. Microsoft Media Player (Tells Microsoft the music and videos you like. See the February 20, 2002 Security Focus article Why is Microsoft watching us watch DVD movies? [securityfocus.com].)
10. Microsoft Network Availability Test
11. Microsoft Volume Shadow Copy Service
12. Microsoft Windows Media Configuration Utility (Setup_wm.exe, sometimes runs when you use Windows Media Player.)
13. MS DTC Console program
14. Run DLL as an app (There is no indication about which DLL or which function in the DLL.)
15. Services and Controller app
16. Time Service, sets the time on your computer from Microsoft's computer. (This can be changed to get the time from another time server.)
That and more goodies on http://www.hevanet.com/
Read below, if you use the built in search tool and search the internet (not files), it does send a lot of info back to MS.
Personally, I would not want them logging jack, but since I don't use XP....
"When you search the Internet using the Search Companion, the following information is collected regarding your use of the service: your IP address, the text of your Internet search query, grammatical information about the query, the list of tasks which the Search Companion Web service recommends, and any tasks you select from the recommendation list."
That is *a lot* of tracking they do.
http://www.theregus.com/content/4/24611.html
That's just amazing. It's just a list of program titles, for goodness' sake. I don't think most programmers would waste that many CPU cycles even if they were trying really hard.
Gotta hand it to them.
I can't beleive I don't see one single comment about movix so far! That's terrible! I for one have been looking at it, and think that the project looks like it has a great future. I only wish that there was more that I could do. I know my programming skills are too rusty (I'm used to programming for my old 486).
Thanks for everything!
You're all bastards!
There are only 2 problems with this argument. 1. Not all M$ products will ship with the MCE stuff built in. 2. To even GET MCE, you need to buy microsoft's endorsed hardware, since they won't just sell you the raw OS.
You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
I don't know if I mentioned this, but I also got an old series 1 TiVo (my brother bought one when they first came out). The HDD is pretty much toast, and I wanna hack it up. Put two really large drives in it, etc. I need to get hat ethernet deal those dudes sell. I'll probably be bugging you at some point... :-)
-B
Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.
How am I supposed to trust microsoft with all my media? Can I even use all my junk on another computer?
5i9|\|3d, 5|\|ip3ri|\|di59ui53
HOW THE FREEKING HECK WAS THAT FLAMEBAIT??? you freeking faggot moderators. just because you disagree with my opinions doesn't mean my comments are evil. that was NOT flame bait. How do i know that it wasn't flame bait? because i wasn't trying to attract a flame. I was STATING MY FREEKING OPINION. I'm sick of you guys modding me down because i don't like these morons who say microsoft is bad because it's better than linux.
wait, let me guess how that was flamebait... can't think of a way to reply to my comment? i guess i win
Ok, I'll apologize ahead of time if this has already been asked (and I'm sure it has):
What interests me most in the Tivo and the Media Center PC is the program guide interface... it is unbelievably polished and quite detailed (ex. snippets about each show). What I would like to know is: Is there a Windows and/or OSX (I'll be buying an ibook shortly) equivalent program guide out there that can give me the same "look and feel" that the Tivo and Media Center provide? I don't care about recording features, nor do I care if the software would cost me money. I just want a program guide that looks as slick as that.
I would really appreciate any responses to this.
Thanks in advance.
It was flamebait because you engaged in mindless name calling. For example if I called you a dickless scum sucking maggot this post would probably be modded down as flamebait. But I won't do that.
I always try to avoid stating the obvious.
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
what name calling? i called him a moron, but it's true - he is. You can't apply certain rules to yourself and other rules for other people. Linux users don't get the benefit of fabricating bullcrap about microsoft whenever they want if microsoft users get modded down for the same thing.
Did you know to get a soundcard WIndowXP certified, it needs to include drm support?
Don't believe me? Why does XP use %25 of the cpu usage for doing any sound from Media player yet it does not do so when playing a game? Its because the ms media player's drm uses an encryption layer to please the RIAA so you can not tap and record any tune that you are listening to. Its mainly there for the advertisments on the defualt pop up screen. I guess hollywood is diluted enough to think that someone might record the demo and upload it to kazaa and throw the whole into communism as a result. I read it here on slashdot.
I believe ms wants to knock apple out of the multimedia market by making sure only WIndows pc's can be drm proctected while apple leaves copyrighted works as unprotected! If you go to apple's quicktime website you will see a whole bunch of movie previews. Microsoft is using the drm pitch to make all the big hollywood studio's sign into exclusive wmv and wma contracts for there demo's as well as space for the default opening page for the media player so quicktime and anything non Windows is no longer relavant in the digital age. Scary as hell.
http://saveie6.com/
Who do you trust:
1) Google
2) Microsoft
The exact statement was:
Is Linux any different? It seems like I get an email from redhat at least once a week about a patch for something.
No OS is immune from bugs, but to compare RH's errata which encompasses the core OS plus hundreds of other applications is two different things. Linux is the kernel. Not Pine, not Apache, not SSH, not Sendmail, not Fetchmail, not Bind etc. RH, Debian, Suse is the Linux kernel with all the other stuff added. I run Linux from scratch from a floppy for my router and I have only been directly effected by 2 published bugs for well over 2 years, neither of which could be exploited because there are no user accounts on it (well root could exploit it but he could also rm -rf the whole thing too). The Linux kernel can be used in many places for many things. To say it is as buggy as Windows XP is flat out WRONG.
Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
>MCE does everything through software which,
>in technical terms "sucks ass".
RTFA. Microsoft specifically requires MCE PCs to come with a dedicated MPEG encoder hardware. It is not "doing everything through software". In fact, according to the article ATI and nVidia are having fits precisely because of the outrageous hardware requirements Microsoft has slapped on these systems.
Sounds to me like yet another case of crappy, bloated code from Microsoft. What a surprise. Would never have seen that one coming.
...is Lindows LP Ledia Lenter Ledition.
Read reviews of shopping cart software
Here's my issue with OpenSource: Bad communication.
Microsoft has put out a product that's decent. Yeah, the hardware control issue is clearly a purely political and non-consumer based decision, but I'm guessing after the initial phase, MS will introduce a package with the OS and remote. Or something similiar. Either way, it's released. I can go buy it, hook it up, and it all works.
On the OSS side, looking through this thread I have 15 links for 15 products that are all 50% of the way there. Some have no recording. Some don't have remote support. Some have issues with schedules. Blah blah blah. It seems that there is a lot of bright people with great ideas....that have NO IDEA that other projects are out there. What's the deal? Isn't the whole mantra of OSS to have a community collaborate and build a better product for that community? Why is there always a massive disconnect between efforts?
Either way, it's frustrating, and not worth the time or effort to sort through.
Now I need to reboot my VCR when it crashes after I set the VCR+? Will it be Y3k ready? Crap!
If only Bill Gates had a penny for every time Windows crashed... oh wait.. he does!
The article points out that WinDVD 3.0 is able to play the ASF files encoded by Media Center Edition. The reason this is true is that WinDVD looks for the codecs installed on your system when it runs into a format it does not have native support for. This is evident when playing DivX files in WinDVD. I find it hard to believe that Anandtech wouldn't realize this simple fact in its reporting.
You should never take life too seriously - You'll never get out of it alive.
XP's WPA is rotten just on principle. But I don't see why MCE would be exempt. Home and Pro can do everything MCE does, with the right kit. All MCE does is put a shiny face on it all.
I would not say rotten. Annoying, but honestly, given the number of pirated copies of their OS's out there, I understand why they did it. I'll omit any arguements for or against, but any business, even one with their income, would notice when over half of their users are not paying for their product.
MCE is just XP Pro with the Media Center Application. I do tech support for such a machine, was in the training classes and have had a lot of time to work with it. And no, you can't get what it does through a standard application, since essentially, it moves that remote to the forefront. I've had a TV card with a remote, and it's mostly just a glorified on/off button. The integration of recording and the scheduling setup makes this closer to a TiVo immitator (though nearly featureless). It also ties in the whole "My (Everything" folders into a browser you can use that remote for. The problems with it are in the recording format and that the Remote is used only in the Media Center Application.
Don't omit Gateway's Media Center PC from the list, and all of them are not in a price point for the Best Buy market. Having done my stint in computer sales there, I know. People ask you everytime a $400 eMachine or HP is in the ad "Is this a good computer?" It's hard to lie to them, and you want to say, no, it's a piece of crap. But you can't, you can tell them something like "There's a reason most computers cost $1000 or more."
Microsoft is not going after the Major home users on this, that's why MCE isn't an upgrade option. It's for Tech-savy, and for people that like toys. MCE is a slick toy to play with (though I'd say if you have TiVo, stick with TiVo), but it's also something that can be bundled with other options. Gateway has one with a Plasma TV, for example.
The other factor to consider is that there is a limited amount of Hardware supported in the configuration (the Video Card, TV Card, and Sound Card options are all limited). On the other side, having used the PC, for a Windows System, it's stable, and should something break in the Media Center component, it's very easy to fix.
Anyone take a look at eyeTv? http://www.elgato.com
Plug int your USB port and GO, GO GO!!!!
It looks like the folks who make the Linux based Video Disk Recorder have a new standard to live up to.
... yeah VDR users should really be worried about something that requires a p4 > 2.5Ghz and is not able to do this (I do have VDR installed on a machine with a PIII 800 and a k6III@300 Mhz, the only thing the K6 can't handle is divx replay):
..and ....
;-)
.. the only drawback is that vdr ir sat-centric and it is designed from the ground for broadcasts that follow the DVB standard (i.e. pretty useless in the U.S.) ... lucky me I live in Italy .....
- multiple channels recording (with multiple languages/dolby digital)
- MP3/DVD/VCD/Divx replay (no drm, no region codes no nothing)
- Network streaming (Oh yes, even to a windows client) of a live channel
- Timeshifting
- LCD support
- network remote control
- timers/searches/recording handled through web interface
- support for external RGB sources (requires a MPEG2 encoder card)
- No internet connection required whatsoever
- no keyboard required
- no license required
- no windows
- mpeg2 or divx recordings
- a minimal installation requires less than 20 MB (for the whole linux system plus VDR itself)
You sad, sad little man.
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
Which is probably exactly what you'll hear when you complain to Microsoft. Which is also why law firms and insurances are dropping Windows XP like a hot potato - their customer data is on the computer and NOBODY has a right to view it, not even Microsoft.
Go figure.
Home Page
Firstly, did Anandtech REALLY have to use 27 pages (some of which were only a couple of lines) for their review.
Secondly, this Media Centre is far too restrictive. It requires a PVR tuner card that can do hardware MPEG-2. You can't buy it as software, but only as a Media Centre PC. Why on Earth should we have to buy a Media Centre Operating System? All it is is XP with a MCE application, why not sell the app to those who already have XP?
OK, so the Linux PVRs are still a little geeky. (Which may be a good thing, as projects like mythTV are simple to use once installed and configured, we could make cash installing it for others at a fraction of the Media Centre cost).
But Linux PVRs don't have anywhere near the restrictions of Media Centre. They don't use proprietary codecs, and any niggles you may have with them can be ironed out by yourself.
I don't think I'll be bothering with a Media Centre PC. They seem too inflexible for my tastes.
The months are just too short. I can count the number of days on one hand.
Neither, in fact nobody.
Google's use of Linux doesn't make me trust more to them. They are just a commercial company. Not heroic "angels". Wake up already!
Limewire is opensource now with GPL but their commercial installer installs the evil TopMoxie with the client which I believe was coded by Limewire founders themselves.
They having "GPL" label doesn't make them fully trustable. It works for Google too.
/shrug i have 70-80 season passes, and it takes about 2 minutes to recompute 2 weeks worth of recordings after i change the priority of one, not sure why your's is taking that long unless each show has 14 episodes per day on....
I agree. This file size is completely unacceptable. I find a few more faults that seem to spell failure unless they are looked at closely 1. File Size as noted above. I have used TiVo and have dabbed witht the other one, (Replay TV is the name i believe) and they use much less space with equal visual quality. and it is quite easy to upgrade HD when necessary. 2. Video Format. Unless you can burn the show onto a VCD and play it on your buddies 60 inch, MCE doesnt do a damn thing for me. 3. Complete failure of communication with ATI and nVidia. These two companies control almost all of the video card market. and as fasr as the all in wonder series goes, it is a damn good card for what al you get. Software based encoding is a much better solution and would only make MCE a stronger alternative 4. I already have a nice enough computer. If i want to make a TV Box, i will buy a shuttle and assemble it myself, use quality parts and then install hte OS myself. but that sems to be a problem since there is not going to be a consumer version of MCE. I mean, i love alienware and think their navigator pro media center is very nice, but i do not have that type of money flow and do not want to plunk down money for something i can easily do myself. If this is the same as windows XP with the adition of the media center, how hard woujld it be to sell it as an ujpgrade and let people work it out for themselves?
The ads, and the small width of the columns is why it used 27 pages. Most sites do this, but what I do to read the whole story on sites that decide to display this way is to find the 'Print article' link. Works every time. Usually only one ad banner (at the top) and sometimes one at the bottom.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.