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How Do You Handle Home Media?

carpoolio writes "Yahoo's Tech Tuesday has an interesting series on bridging the PC/home entertainment gap. The solutions are fairly complicated, and very Windows-centric. As I store more media on my PowerBook, I'm finding more ways I can't listen to or view it on my stereo and TV. One example: TiVo Desktop won't stream AAC files - only MP3s - from iTunes to TiVo. That's an easy fix, but still: how do you get stuff off of your computer and onto your TV, stereo, etc.?"

10 of 381 comments (clear)

  1. Xbox + XBMC all you need by systimax · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.xboxmediacenter.de

  2. Myth(TV) by Perrin7 · · Score: 5, Informative

    www.mythtv.org

  3. My setup by grub · · Score: 5, Informative


    Video: ATI Radeon 9800 Pro w/TV out (composite & svideo). A coax line runs composite -> the TV in line of my receiver.
    Audio: Audigy 2 card with coax running from the SPDIF connector to the receiver's digital TV in.
    To control it all: an ATI Remote Wonder remote control. It works by RF with ~10M of range so the source computer makes its noise in another room.

    The Remote Wonder works well under Linux and MacOSX although you may have to google for drivers.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  4. Dear carpoolio by slashnutt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a response to your question about 'How Do You Handle Home Media?'.

    In reading the question, you have actually answered the solution yourself. As you point at problems simply eliminate that area. You pointed to Tivo not streaming then eliminate that component from the problem.

    There is nothing preventing you from hooking the computer to a stereo tuner solving the issue or hooking a composite video card to a TV (better would be a DVI input directly to a flat panel). If the component doesn't suite your needs then that component is not part of the solution. That goes for the Windows Centric issue you addressed; if it doesn't solve the need than there are non-proprietary solutions, I think the name start with L or something someone.

    Really, Tivo and other you named are fighting a battle that may be hard won. The proprietary market seems to have slowed in response, yet the onslaught of FOSS solutions hasn't eroded over the years. The FOSS solutions seem to now fit needs faster than their proprietary relatives. Now if the true lower level hardware could be non-proprietary so you could order a manufacture to assemble components you designed in a collective community. Don't like Intel great IBM has some neat PowerPC chips don't like the video card drivers great we'll build it to your specs - this is a dream not achievable just yet.

  5. The most obvious solution works just fine. by arbi · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a networked computer in my living room with these things plugged into it:

    1) TV
    2) Stereo
    3) Wireless Keyboard / Mouse

    It works. I'm really not sure what the issue is here. :P

  6. a few ways by anjrober · · Score: 5, Interesting

    this has been an issue I (we all) have been fighting for a while. I recently saw an interesting system called sonos (www.sonos.com). It's an amp with built in mp3 decoder and wifi/wired connections. It comes with an ipod-with-screen based remote. You can connect them together and use one as a standard RCA input (for things like a tuner, dvd, etc) and all other amps share that central source. All amps play mp3s and stream web radio. This does not come out until later this year.

    For now, I'm using Tivo home media and not really loving it.

  7. Airport Extreme by Gannoc · · Score: 5, Informative


    For $130, you can plug it in anywhere in your house, and play anything that iTunes can play from any computer. As a bonus, its also a 802.11g extender and printer server.

  8. MythTV you insensitive clod! by drewzhrodague · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I use MythTV, of course! Actually, I use KnoppMyth, but -- same thing.

    FABULOUS TiVo replacement, but sometimes a bit hard to get working, especially if you only have seemingly random hardware, or just whatever is laying arround. The machine I dedicate for this is piped into my TV, stereo, local network, and it is convenient to drag-and-drop whatever media files I want (including MAME ROMs!) onto the MythTV box, and play away! Check it out, it really is worth it. Use an MPEG tuner card if you can.

    --
    Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
  9. Windows now - moving to mythtv by Sabalon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have a notebook setup just for this. The bad thing is that it has an ATI card in there for TV out which is a pain to get working with Linux, so for now I'm just using Windows. I can play vids for the kids and stream my favorite radio stations.

    The next step is to get MythTV running on the box, which has a much easier interface and can do more, such as image galleries, etc...

    The biggest problem I have is input. Right now the notebook is on top of the entertainment center because of the aforementioned kids. And it's running windows so things like forcing video out is a pain, plus my wife doesn't know how to work it. And what idiot decided that play/pause in media player should be Control-P instead of space.

    My main mythtv box has a remote controller for the video capture card, but I have nothing to hook to the notebook. I guess I need to bite the bullet and either buy some cheap IR receiver for use with lirc or threaten to burn the house down by building my own.

    I'm surprised no company has come out with a USB based IR receiver that can be taught so you can control all your apps with it. Seems like a simple little item, not much needed to make and could be sold cheap enough to return a decent product and get lots of people to buy.

  10. Squeezebox by jallison · · Score: 5, Informative
    For audio I use a Squeezebox [http://slimdevices.com/]. This is an 802.11 gizmo that allows you to stream music from computer to stereo. Works well.

    I've not conquered the video thing yet. I like the idea of having easy access to the digital media, but I don't like the idea of having a computer in the family room. Computers go in the office, where there's a desk and a proper work environment.