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Modded XBox The Ultimate Multimedia PC?

Anonymous writes "Can a modded Xbox running homebrew software really beat all existing designed-for-the-living-room multimedia devices hands down?! Tom's Hardware Guide seems to think so. They reviewed Xbox Media Center (XBMC) and say the free open source software turn an Xbox into The Ultimate Multimedia Center, the ideal home playback system for audio and video. (Apparently there is a PC software version available too: Media Portal)" The article also explains some of the more convoluted issues surrounding XBMC. But I definitely agree that this is a great system.

35 of 358 comments (clear)

  1. no question... by nomayogr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    XMBC is the first media center type application that I have found that runs on $150 worth of hardware. That says a whole lot about it's success.

    1. Re:no question... by ikewillis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's not to mention the fact that a $20 box buys you HDTV component video output as well

    2. Re:no question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's not to mention the fact that a $20 box buys you HDTV component video output as well

      Yeah, but in all honestly the video quality of the XBox is not that great. It'll do for a lot of people that don't really care too much, but to call it the ultimate machine for video playback is absolute bullshit.

      I've had it playing the same DVD, using the component video out, onto a 53" HD rear projector, next to a Toshiba DVD drive. The difference was, well, enough for me to get the hell back to Frys to return the XBox.

      Seriously, there's no need to start a flamewar over this, just if you plan to use this as your DVD player you may want to check out the quality before the 'no questions asked return policy' expires.

      It's just a suggestion, do with it as you please.

    3. Re:no question... by marcop · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, you can flash the onboard TSOP or do some other type of software based mod; both don't require a modchip. I don't know if you can do a software based mod (boot off a CD all the time?) and have an upgraded HD. The TSOP mod should work fine but then you can't disbale the mod to play on Live.

      I would add the following costs though:
      - larger HD. 120GB costs ~$60 after rebate
      - IR remote control: $30 (not needed but nice)
      - Samsung DVD-ROM ~$50 (not needed but nice)

      A note about the DVD-ROM. The XBox can have one of the following type of DVD-ROMs: Samsung, Philips, or Thomson. Only the Samsung will read CD-R's though. You can either try to trade someone $50 plus a Philips or Thomson drive, or there is a retial Samsung drive that can be flashed to work in the Xbox. Details of this are at xbox-scene.com.

    4. Re:no question... by timmyf2371 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      In the end, it really depends how you define an "Uber-Media-Machine", for lack of a better name.

      Is the X-Box designed for playing DVDs? No, it's primarily a game console with a secondary function which allows you to play DVDs - perfect for the kids or those who don't want to/can't afford a separate DVD player in addition to a games console.

      For $200 including the console + any mod chips required to make the media functions work - for the average person who wants a simple media machine for the cheap - it's bloody excellent for that price.

      --

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    5. Re:no question... by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not the DVD Drive that determines if a system supports progressive scan or not, it's just a data delivery device - it's the output from the video encoder chip.

      If you hook a component video cable to the Xbox, it does indeed drive a 480p display.

      XBMC is the newer version of XBMP - it's not quite as stable, but new builds are released VERY often, and it gets better and more stable with every release.

      Modding my Xbox was the best possible thing I could've done for it. Microsoft is incredibly foolish not getting on-board with an "official" application like XBMC for people who wish to have run it on Xboxes that aren't modded. It would be very popular.

      N.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    6. Re:no question... by Osty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you hook a component video cable to the Xbox, it does indeed drive a 480p display.

      A standard, un-modded XBox with the DVD player attachment will not do progressive output for DVDs, even with the HD pack. However, that's not a limitation of the hardware, but the software. There are hacks that can change that, and if you're already hacking your XBox to run XBMP, you may as well do the hack to play DVDs in progressive output.


      Modding my Xbox was the best possible thing I could've done for it. Microsoft is incredibly foolish not getting on-board with an "official" application like XBMC for people who wish to have run it on Xboxes that aren't modded. It would be very popular.

      It's also not the target demographic of XBox. It would compete with the Windows Media Center PCs, and gets away from the idea of XBox as a gaming platform. More importantly, if Microsoft were to release a supported XBMC-like application for XBox, you and everyone else here would be screaming foul, saying that Microsoft is trying to leverage their weight to take over your living room.

    7. Re:no question... by Babbster · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah. That would be, well, all of them. Every software DVD player outputs progressive (hint: your monitor is a "progressive scan" device). The key, of course, is the output from the PC to a [HD]TV. I don't know about Nvidia, but ATI's cards (at least the ones with an option for component output - of particular interest would be the All-In-Wonders) support the various HDTV signals (480p/720p/1080i).

  2. It makes sense by General+Sherman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not only does it already have standard PC hardware, letting Linux coders use their previous experience, but it's got some other special things that are also perfect.

    It has HD TV-Out (Or RCA cables), and a DVD-ROM drive. A spacious 250GB HD can be installed to save everything under the sun, and after all that, you can still play games on it and not have to worry about viruses and worms, and most importantly, cheaters, playing online. It's cheaper than any hardware of that class should be. Cheap cheap cheap! That's why this is so popular.

    Plus, you get the added bonus that you got to do something that Microsoft doesn't want, all while MS makes a loss on the XBox.

    --
    - Sherman
    1. Re:It makes sense by schmoli · · Score: 4, Informative

      wrong, flash your bios and you'll have plenty of room on your G: drive (whats left over after F: reaches max capacity. I've uhhh, seen plenty XBOXes with 160GB drives in them.

    2. Re:It makes sense by Digital11 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Whoever modded this up needs to be slapped. If thats true then why did I (until my Xbox was stolen) have 250GB of usable space in my Xbox? Bioses that allow greater than 120GB drives have been around for many months. Check your facts man.

      --
      I am a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar.
  3. Launcher/Media Player integration is a big win by ikewillis · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think one of the great advantages of XBox Media Center is that it also doubles as an excellent shell/launcher (especially with its built-in FTP support) and replaces both applications like EvolutionX which was a dedicated launcher and the now defunct XBox Media Player. No other dedicated media device offers such integration between shell/player... on Windows they're two seperate applications which don't seem to integrate particularly well.

  4. XBOX os by kunudo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Might be a little offtopic, but since the XBOX is an x86, and at least some people have the expensive flash burners/readers it takes, why hasn't anyone taken the XBOX os and put it on a PC? Maybe run it inside emulated XBOX hardware? I wanna play XBOX games on my PC... :)

    1. Re:XBOX os by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Funny

      I wanna play XBOX games on my PC... :)

      Come on... that's really "I wanna download X-Box games from P2P on the Internet and be able to run them on my PC."

      If you really wanted to wedge X-Box onto a Windows or even a Linux PC... there's a nice open front door to do it through. Just get a PCI-TV card from one of several vendors, and install it. Then, buy a real XBox and plug it into the S-Video and RCA audio inputs on that on that TV card. There you go...

    2. Re:XBOX os by kunudo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      most people don't use a matrox g200. I believe the XBOX has a modified version of the geforce 2 GTS, and any nvidia card after that should be able to run stuff for it, maybe with a lightweight emulation layer. Or people could buy old GF2 GTS cards. I'd buy one to be able to play XBOX games on my PC.

    3. Re:XBOX os by the_crowbar · · Score: 4, Informative

      You may want to keep tabs on CXBX, the Xbox Emulator. See this story for more details. My computer is not much faster than my XBox and only runs Linux so it is of no use to me.

      the_crowbar

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  5. Coincidence? by John+Girouard · · Score: 5, Funny

    Anyone else getting an ad for Windows XP Media Center Edition in the middle of the article?

  6. Alternate links by jdgreen7 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Tom's Hardware article

    XBox Media Center's page (googe cache)

    There's my karma whoring for the month.

  7. It's great by zeth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A modded xbox + xbmc is perfect! I use it daily, so I know.
    The only thing missing is a video-in card. Currently I have to use my desktop PC to record shows and then stream to the xbox. It works, but it would really be perfekt if one could use normal PCI-cards on the xbox.
    Anyone know about this problem and if the xbox2 has the same limitations?

  8. Re:um.. by grub · · Score: 4, Funny


    can something from microsoft really be The Ultimate?

    It isn't until you install some free software on it. Think of it as spraying perfume on a pig.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  9. I've been considering this by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There's a place selling modified Xbox's for about $450 that does all of this stuff that I've been considering.

    For the most part, a modified Xbox would be my "dream TV box". Sit it in the living room (it's about the same size as the DVD/VCR combo machine - thicker, but not as long), and I could have an archive of my legally purchased DVD's. As a guy with 2 kids who are always trying to ruin the DVD's with their grimy little fingers, this would be a great machine for my household.

    "Here, kids - want to watch 'Blue's Clues on a Deserted Island and Joe Dies Horribly' again? OK - let me just use the remote on the Xbox." Boom - there goes my XVID ripped DVD movie on. Originals are kept safe, kids are happy.

    I'm kind of dissapointed we haven't seen a company come up with a solution like this. A Cappachino sized device with the same capabilities, running Linux so I could FTP/SSH into it for upgrades/other mods would sell like hotcakes. (And as an avid fan of hotcakes, I know what I'm talking about.)

  10. Biggest issue by vlad_petric · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Binaries - there's no "clean" way of getting them, AFAIC. You need VS.NET and ask M$ for the devel kit in order to compile them (at which time you're bound by their EULA, which disallows redistribution). Well, I definitely wouldn't mind a download link though :)

    --

    The Raven

  11. Its great by Monkelectric · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I've been using this more or less since the begining, and its the best thing to happen to television. My cable company resfuses to carry the Cartoon Network, but I can download most of the shows I'd like to watch and watch them whenever I want, or how ever many times I want on the xbox. Last week I missed all 3 broadcasts of "the shield" I was able to download and watch the show... I find myself watching ALOT less broadcast TV, it somehow seems inconveniant to have to watch tv on the networks schedule instead of mine, I imagine this is what the TIVO people were raving about. I usually end up buying the DVD's of the shows I do watch, but they seem to lag behind years of their broadcasts.

    My only regret is the xbox can't read DVD+R discs (only DvD+RW) so I end up using more expensive and less permanant media for no good reason whicn I want to archive a show.

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    1. Re:Its great by stratjakt · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mine can read DVD+R.

      There once were 3 main dvd-players in the Xbox, Thompson Phillips and Samsung (ordering from crappiest to best), but now there are several flavors out there.

      Newer xboxes (1.6 recently hacked last week) come with a newer Phillips that reads everything.

      I have a first run Xbox with a Thompson which is supposed to suck, but reads DVD-R(W), DVD+R(W), CD-RW but chokes on CD-Rs most of the time.

      Of course, it's childs play to replace the DVD-ROM with a PC DVDROM and install a switch. PC DVD-ROMs performance is soooo much better than an XBoxes (16x vs 8x, etc)

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  12. Better link by int2str · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is a better link to the article. The one in the original post bypassws the RR-mirror selection and goes directly to www6...

  13. I'm running Xebian on my xbox by asoap · · Score: 3, Informative
    Pesronally, I've been having a lot of fun with my xbox.

    I'm still really new to linux, and can't wait to move to linux. But there are still a few things holding me back.

    So to get my feet wet with Linux and also to have fun, I installed Ed's Xebian on my xbox. I can boot up the xbox and play all of my normal xbox games. Then if I want to watch a video, I just boot up linux (which is now in the main xbox menu), run mplayer, and off I go.

    Although I have had problems playing back certain videos. If the screen get's really complex, like if it's raining, and the video was compressed using dvix, or xvid, it can get pretty chunky.

    It's not really a problem, but it happens every once and a while.

    The only thing I've lost with running linux on the xbox is that I can no longer use xbox live.

    Other then that I love it.

    -asoap

    --
    Treat me like a marketing stat, and I'll treat your movie like a series of ones and zeros
  14. Re:Question on Using a PC as a PVR by Darth+Maul · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, you can build your own or use something called an "IR Blaster". I use a small circuit (found at lirc.org) with lircd to change channels on my sat receiver box for my MythTV setup. Works like a charm just from a serial connection.

    --
    --- witty signature
  15. Ummm, no by Sean80 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Meanwhile, the Microsoft folks in Redmond, WA appear to have overlooked the Xbox' potential as a multimedia center

    Ummmm, no. Don't you see? The XBox is just the first step of many. Microsoft has the money and the skills to be patient. The home entertainment market is going to be absolutely massive, and Microsoft is going to be in everybody's living room, whether it be the XBox 2 or XBox 3 or 4 or 5. Hell, they're already in many DVD players, aren't they? Even if you hate them, you have to admit they have a bunch of smart sons of proverbials up there.

  16. Re:Another Rip Off by cosmo7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    You should not reinvent the wheel on user interface.

    Imagine if the wheel had been square when it was first invented. Everything would be terrible. Cars would shake themselves apart. Bicycles would kill their riders. But people would say "don't re-invent the wheel" and so you'd be stuck with it.

  17. Re:Another Rip Off by toyato89 · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you kept up with the latest builds and news, you'd know that they had to remove the Windows MCE skin because of the usual MS licensing issues. It has beenreplaced with the Dell Media Center look (whose license doesn't have any restrictions on copying it) for quite a few CVS builds now.

  18. Re:Another Rip Off by stanmann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Name one closed source interface that isn't blatently stolen from xerox or a relic that looks like 1985?

    --
    Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  19. Cheaper solution by kfhickel · · Score: 3, Informative
    Well, I've been building a home PVR/distribution network, and I find that for simply distributing the content to televisions, the MediaMVP from Hauppage www.hauppage.com is a better solution. Available from buy.com for $89, it's cheap, supports 10/100 ethernet, and just works. This is a linux/busybox implementation, and there are sourceforge projects (two at least) that have been able to add things like telnetd and nfs client to it. The supplied software is a little "fresh" yet, but they're working on it. The current betta supports .wmv and .divx in addition to MPEG2.

    If you couple this with the WinTV-250btv/BeynondTV bundle for $139 (often on sale for $129) from SnapStream SnapStream Store, you've got quite a nice little setup for under $250 that supports one television, and numerous computers doing playback.....

  20. Re:mod - 10000 Unintelligent by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Informative

    The CPU and GPU on the xbox share memory, and not in a cheap pc onboard video "8 megs of RAM used as VRAM" way, they can both access the same memory. It can thus do some really cool shit for a PC as "weak" as it is.

    All those cool pixel shader effects and bumpmapping in Halo, for instance. The most expensive PCs from falcon northwest choke a little on that stuff, even at 640x480. Because the XBOX cpu can compute textures in RAM, and use them instantly without having to push them over an AGP bus.

    The long and short of it is, you'd need an AGP/PCIX bus at least as fast as the Xboxes RAM bus to simulate this.

    You could probably get close on current hardware, less taxing games may be emulated more easily.

    It's not as simple as porting the "xbox OS", though I do forsee an Xbox emu before a PS2 or GCN emu.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  21. No. The Xbox is the wrong answer. by Inoshiro · · Score: 3, Informative

    The best thing you can get is a model 50001 PS2 with network adaptor, a memory card, and GameShark MP3 player (a licenced form of the BroadQ QCast software easily available at video game stores).

    This nets you the ability to play progressive scan DVDs, a remote that can power on and eject the drive on your media device, the ability to play back MP3, OGG Vorbis, OGM, DivX (3.11, 4.x, 5.x), AC3 audio, JPEG, PNG, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and more via updates. The PS2 itself will play burnt backup DVDs. The server-side software's in Java and runs on Mac OS X, Linux, and even Windows!

    The total cost for this is way less than your Xbox, with no modding required, and gives you a much quiter machine that can be controlled via a simple remote (I use my Sony RM-VL700 which "learned" the PS2 remote's signals).

    Spend an extra couple of dollars on a PS1 memory card, and suddenly you can play PS1 in addition PS2 games as well. The only thing you're missing out on is Xbox Live!, but you can't use that with a modded Xbox anyways :)

    The config is way cheaper, quiter, and lower maintenance than my old Windows PC setup. The only thing I really miss is the ability to play VCDs directly, but I can rip those onto a media share in seconds with xreadvcd. It's just so quiter and easier to use, I don't know why you'd go to the hassle of an Xbox that doesn't let you completely control every by IR remote, and also requires you mod it.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  22. Re:No. The Xbox is the wrong answer. by ilsie · · Score: 4, Informative

    This nets you the ability to play progressive scan DVDs,

    The Xbox can do this easily. There is a one bit flag in the dvd player executable that turns it to progressive.

    a remote that can power on and eject the drive on your media device

    You can power off (or reset) the xbox via remote thru XBMC also. And eject implies that you'll have to get up and switch/insert discs anyways, so why do you need it on your remote?

    the ability to play back MP3, OGG Vorbis, OGM, DivX (3.11, 4.x, 5.x), AC3 audio, JPEG, PNG, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4

    so XBMC can play all that, and more. XVID, QT5, AAC, etc. etc. ad nauseum. Did you even RTFA?

    The total cost for this is way less than your Xbox

    Wrong. I bought a new xbox ($150), modded it with a homemade cheapmod ($7.50) and simply use the stock hard drive since I stream all my media from my fileserver anyways, thru Samba. I bought a cheap 3rd party remote, ($15) which brings my total to $172.50. Oh, and a simple switch to turn off the mod chip, and I play xbox live games till the cows come home.

    I don't know why you'd go to the hassle of an Xbox that doesn't let you completely control every by IR remote, and also requires you mod it.

    I dont know why you think this- I can do everything I need thru the xbox remote.

    Get your facts straight next time.