I bought some (fairly expensive) hardware for a wireless frontend and found it useless. Then, I have 11b nodes, which when turned on, would make the video way to slow, plus I was using D-Link, which I have found to be most unreliable.
Even when the network speed was good, jumping around in video proved slow and someone else mentioned. In the end I bought a 25m cable and will run that until I hardwire the ethernet in. Cheers, Whytey On 9/6/05, Robert Denier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I suspect that if it isn't too hard to do a gigabit switch and adapters > combined with cat 5e/6 will give you a more responsive system, > especially when you jump around in the video, but the numbers below make > it look like the wireless would work... > > On Mon, 2005-09-05 at 22:32 -0700, Fedor Pikus wrote: > > On 9/5/05, Brian McEntire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi - > > A question about network capacity: > > > > I'm planning to put a front end by the TV, and a back end in a > > different part of the house. The primary purpose for this > > MythTV setup is HDTV viewing. > > > > Some early HDTV recordings are about 2.4 GB for 30 minutes. > > > > This works out to 2.4 * 10^9 * 8 bits/B / 30 min / 60 sec/min= > > 10.7 Mbps > > > > About 1.37 MB/sec. You can get this from 802.11g, but it's right at > > the limit of the standard 54 MBps (and only if you don't use the > > network in mixed mode, if you add 802.11b clients the throughput will > > drop). However, this is well within the limits for the "fast" 11g, > > i.e. proprietary extensions which typically double the speed of the > > network (you've probably seen 108 Mbps devices advertised, that's > > them). The catch is, they are usually 108 Mbps to each other, and 54 > > Mbps to another brand, if you're lucky. > > > > I have a network of several Viewsonic WAP/Bridge devices (WAPBR-100, > > CompUsa sells them on-line if you can't find them) and I get 2.4 > > MB/sec transfer rate to and from my Myth box. These are ethernet to > > wireless bridges, not wireless adapters, which is the best since you > > don't have to mess with wireless drivers - you just take all your > > bridges to one place, connect them to a PC one by one, configure them > > all, one as a WAP and the rest as bridges, and then connect them to > > any ethernet-enabled device, and with no changes to the device you're > > now connected to wireless. > > > > Fedor > > > > > > For streaming from the backend to the frontend (aka accessing > > via NFS?) it appears it will exceed Ethernet speed and require > > fast ethernet. I don't have cable run, so my question is, for > > a strong signal, is it reasonable to expect a quality stream > > over 54 Mbps wireless-g or is running CAT5/6 a better bet? > > > > Thanks! > > > > _______________________________________________ > > mythtv-users mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Fedor G Pikus ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) > > http://www.pikus.net > > http://wild-light.com > > _______________________________________________ > > mythtv-users mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users > > > > _______________________________________________ > mythtv-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users > > > -- -- I have GMail invites, if you want one, email me direct. _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list [email protected] http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
