For MythTV go with the HDhomerun http://www.9thtee.com/hdhomerun.htm  
You will thank yourself later for not having to fight the endless  
kernel modual battle!  This is far and way the best option for  
mythTV.   For the front-end and back-end I use a single Mac Mini.   
Nice small and most important silent!  I have a external firewire  
drive for media storage. My setup has worked great for years.  And the  
Mini remote in my opinion is the perfect minimalist remote.  The mini  
also has digital sound out for booooming 5.1.





On Dec 30, 2008, at 10:22 PM, Brian wrote:

>
> I've been wanting to make a home media system for years now and I
> think I can make a pretty good one with LinuxMCE according to the
> research I've done.  I was going to use Mythbuntu, then I looked into
> just MythTV only, KnopMyth, but I think LinuxMCE is a good mixture of
> 'all of the above'.
>
> I have some questions though that I thought some of you might be able
> to answer from experience...(and by the way.. I realize that this is
> going to take some money to set up realistically if you want it done
> right..so don't be afraid to throw me some suggestions that might cost
> a bit more than one would expect)
>
> Backend (core) questions
> 1.) Can you capture hi-def if you have any hi-def cable/satellite
> channels?
>     a.) I've been researching popular hardware setups on:
>          
> http://pvrhw.goldfish.org/tiki-pvrhwdb.php?offset=0&sort_mode=rating_desc
>     b.) It seems like most Linux folk like Hauppauge PVR-150, or 250,
> but can they do hi-def?
> 2.) Can you rip blue ray discs with Linux?  Not that important, but
> curious
>
> Frontend stations
> 1.) What would you suggest as a good 'front end' thin client or pc
> for:
>     a.) living room with flat screen and surround sound capability
>     b.) home theater room with flat screen and surround sound
> capability
>     c.) kitchen with small flat screen monitor with built-in speakers
>     d.) bedrooms with flat screen tvs with built-in speakers
> 2.) I've been researching thin clients and the like.  I just want
> something small and quiet
> 3.) How exactly does the audio and video get to the thin clients?
> Does all the information go over cat5 ethernet or wi-fi to the thin
> client and then out the a/v outputs into the tv/receiver?
> Ideally it would be nice if there was just a thin client that would
> allow me to boot from network and load the LinuxMCE frontend over the
> network.
> I've also seen where you can run linux on a ps3 now which may give you
> blue ray ripping ability and make a nice 'thin client'..I'm not sure.
>
> Thanks for any help on this subject. :-)
> Brian
> >


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