Personally, I would've (and have) gone the other way:

Low Horsepower + PVR-x50's -- great backend
High Horsepower + nvidia card -- great frontend

Just the output filters alone available for cleaning up the video on
the front-end make it worth putting some power into the front end.
HDTV content is also fairly high on the CPU loading.





On Wed, 2 Feb 2005 15:27:58 -0800, Kenneth Hong
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  
> I have been researching MythTV setups and have come up with the following 
> hardware configuration. 
>   
> Requirements:  
> Backend System used as a file server, multi-media jukebox and PVR for
> regular TV and EDTV (eventually over Comcast Cable when the HD-3000 drivers
> for QAM decoding are released) 
> Connects to cheap front-end devices connected to an AV Receiver and EDTV in
> one room, and a regular TV in another.  Devices are controllable with a
> programmable remote control. 
> Please let me know if you have any concerns or suggestions.
> 
> Backend 
> Pentium 4 3.0 GHz 800MHz FSB, 1MB L2 Cache, HTT
> 512MB RAM 
> 2 x 200 GM 7200 SATA HDD 
> 2 x Hauppauge WinTV PVR-350 
> pcHDTV HD-3000 
> basic video & audio out 
> (Since theoretically, I could be streaming video to two front-ends, does it
> help to have two -350's?) 
> 
> Frontend (EDTV Display, 5.1 Audio)
> Xbox 
> Xbox HD AV Pack 
> Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit with Remote 
> (CD Boot or HD Partitioned for MythTV, HD AV Pack supports component video
> and optical audio out) 
> 
> Frontend (Standard TV)
> Hauppauge MediaMVP  
> _______________________________________________
> mythtv-users mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
> 
> 
>
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