However, I just tried playing back some HDTV recorded content from my MythTV and Xbox chugged on both 1080 and 720 playback of my recorded shows from OTA. Anyone have any tips on getting it to play past the 15fps or so in mplayer it was getting from my Xbox Media Center? Since XBOX 360 has the Media Center for Windows free, I was thinking I could just mount my MythTV recordings on my Windows Media Center PC and stream the HDTV shows that way to 360.
The best use (and most expensive) of clustering under Windows I've done is with SQL Server 2000. Active/Passive configuration only requires one copy of SQL Server Enterprise, (MSRP is $20k but you can get for well under $10k now), two Windows servers, and a nice storage array, and you've got a pretty decent SQL Server cluster solution from Microsoft. I'll admit that the install and setup isn't entirely easy to do from memory, but there are decent instructions online from both Microsoft and other websites.
However, I just tried playing back some HDTV recorded content from my MythTV and Xbox chugged on both 1080 and 720 playback of my recorded shows from OTA. Anyone have any tips on getting it to play past the 15fps or so in mplayer it was getting from my Xbox Media Center? Since XBOX 360 has the Media Center for Windows free, I was thinking I could just mount my MythTV recordings on my Windows Media Center PC and stream the HDTV shows that way to 360.
The best use (and most expensive) of clustering under Windows I've done is with SQL Server 2000. Active/Passive configuration only requires one copy of SQL Server Enterprise, (MSRP is $20k but you can get for well under $10k now), two Windows servers, and a nice storage array, and you've got a pretty decent SQL Server cluster solution from Microsoft. I'll admit that the install and setup isn't entirely easy to do from memory, but there are decent instructions online from both Microsoft and other websites.