>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 09/27/05 8:40 AM >>> > My new house will be completed in a month, so I > am starting to plan for a home media network > that I'd like to put together. I already have 1 > coax and 2 CAT5e drops in each bedroom, the > family room and home office.
Good planning. This is pretty much what I have. There are a few places where I wanted 1 more cat5e, but I've figured out ways around it (more later...) > What I'd like to do is have a central media server > in the basement, and client media adapters > (players) in other rooms. What would be great > is if the clients could schedule recordings > independently but share each other's streams, > along with DVD backups hosted on the central > server. MythTV can certainly do this. You'll need at least a PC in every place you want to view content independently. You could also get a channel injector and have a central frontend to be viewed on a specific channel of your internal coax feed. I'm trying to do a combination...central feed for security cameras and frontend in each room for independent viewing. It gets a little complicated because I'm injecting the camera-only frontend into a channel that all the other frontends can see. > Is this something that is easily handled by > MythTV? Is it pretty easy to set up multiple > clients and a single server? Simple? Yes. Also it can get expensive. > As a noob in this area, I'm sure there is a lot > that has already been posted on this topic, > but I don't know the best search terms to > separate the fluff from the gems. Hopefully > some of you long timers can point the way. Start slow. Do you have a cable/satellite box? If so, how many? I have a friend who has 4 satellite tuners, all stacked connected to his backend. He's also got one cable box with an HD firewire feed. Then he has frontends all over his house and has a slave backend with an HD3000 for OTA HD broadcasts. He's always watching something and it seems like he's recorded everything remotely interesting on TV. I think he's got about 5tb of disks filled up. Amazing that his 10% free (recommended for XFS) is 500gb - more than most people have on their backends in total! > E.g. what are good video cards to use, a good > site for building reasonably priced clients, > gotchas in putting the network together, setting > up IR with cable boxes, what can TiVo do that > Myth can't, etc... Tivo can provide a box that is plug and play. Myth is still a tinkerer's dream. You'll get tons of opinions on cards, I find the Hauppauge pvr-150/250/500 to be the best and easiest to deal with. They offload CPU work to the pvr card, leaving your pc cpu free to do other jobs. I've seen custom client builds on the pvr database (pvrhw.goldfish.org) has some pretty good examples. Jarod's guide under Tips 'n' Tricks has some good pointers on various items, not specifically related to the overall use of his guide. Check out mythtv.info for Wiki entries. nVidia seems to have the best linux support, and specifically a fanless card is what you are looking for, regardless of vendor or maker. Good luck. Paul
_______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list [email protected] http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
