Have to agree with Leland, I've been using Twonky on my NAS servers and
on a home server for the last four years, it's fast and reliable though
if you do have a lot of media (over about 2,000 albums), you will need
to increase the cache (one line edit in the config file).

It works well on my NAS's which are easier and cheaper to deploy and run
than separate Linux boxes...

I use Synology DS205 and ICYBOX's, both reliable, both run on Linux
though the Synology is more flexible in that you can add mail server
programs etc, it is a lot more expensive.


Adam.


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Leland F. Jackson
Sent: 27 February 2009 16:10
To: ProFox Email List
Subject: RE: [NF] Windows Home Server

I'm running Fedora as my primary OS, which is hosting VMware. I run
windows XP Pro as a guest OS in a Linux VMware Virtual Machine.  I gave
TVersity a try as a mediaserver, but wasn't really happy with it,
because it only runs under windows.  After some looking around, I
discovered TwonkyMedia, which is based on the open source Myth TV
project.

TwonkyMedia enables me to share all my Music, Pictures and Videos
throughout the house.  It is available for many different platforms and
inter-works with a large variety of client devices including XBox 360
and sony's PS3.  I Have PS3.  TwonkyMedia needs fewer resources and is
faster than other UPnP Media Servers, but still provides more features
to help users enjoy large media collections.  With TwonkyMedia there is
no need for a special NAS box.  All I need to do is add hard drives to
the Linux computer via EIDE, SATA, USB, or Firewire.  TwonkyMedia is not
free, but is a good value based on price.

TwonkyMedia runs as a service under Linux, is accessible to computers in
the local network via a web browser over a designated port, or with a
properly configured firewall, is accessible over the internet.

http://www.twonkymedia.com/

Regards,

LelandJ








On Fri, 2009-02-27 at 07:47 +0000, Adam Buckland wrote:
> Short and simple... it's a crock...
> 
> It's basically  cut down version of WS2K8 with media streaming and a
> backup program for your pc's.
> 
> You can only administer it via it's bespoke GUI.
> 
> Buy a decent NAS (Say like an ICYBOX or a Synology diskstation) stick
in
> 2 * 1TB drives and mirror them then take the $300 you've saved and go
> for a great meal....
> 
> If you've got a spare PC I'm sure there is a evaluation download
> available, it's in the action pack otherwise, I tried it and went down
> the NAS route with 750 GB of data at home.
> 
> 
> 
> Adam.
> 
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Steve Ellenoff
> Sent: 26 February 2009 18:27
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [NF] Windows Home Server
> 
> Anyone have any real world experience with this? I just stumbled 
> across it yesterday and it sounds great for managing large amounts of 
> data (but I'm skeptical because MS can make anything sound better than
> it is).
> 
> 
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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