
richard.e.morton at gmail
Nov 8, 2009, 4:55 AM
Post #4 of 5
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Many people use an HDPVR in the US. This is so that they can use the cable box to decode, the HDPVR to capture via component HD and encode it into H264, then send it over ethernet to a storagedevice by nfs/smb share. In your case that sounds like too many boxes if you want it to be the size of a TiVo. So you're looking at PCI or USB tuners; I am not sure what tuners would be appropriate. I am sure someone else will say which are the best for you. So back to the box itself; it all depends on how noisy you are happy with... I hate background noise, so my front/backend is in a closet next to the lounge with a small hole in the brick wall for the cables to come through. My seperate frontend is completely silent with no hard discs or fans. hard drives and fans, for me are too noisy especially when these boxes tend to stay on even when not using them. Consider if you read quietly in the room and whether hard disc and fan noise will be distracting for you. So if you are serious about Myth; consider puting the box in an ajacent closet so you can buy a big box with room for expansion - more tuners and hard discs, plenty of CPU power for commercial flagging and transcoding. After that adding remote front-ends is a breeze and although they maybe a little more sluggish - due to network latency and reduced CPU power... they are fantastic. If you are serious about a small completely fanless system for myth; have a look at Tranquil in the UK, Hush Technologies in Germany. (I have bought one of each an original Hush and a Tranquil T2e and they are very well made - the Hush slightly better and more expensive than the Tranquil). If you are happy with a quiet fan, a silverstone tend to be very well made and many look like HiFi equipment so will fit into your lounge hifi stack well; they aren't fanless but take standard components and tend to give you a bit of room for expansion; PCI cards etc. With a little careful selection of fans you will get a system a little larger than a TiVo with more expandability and similar noise levels. Hope that helps. R Thanks And Regards, Richard Morton www.pidgin.im - MSN & Yahoo Messenger and many great features but without adverts www.kubuntu.com - 9.10 a free operating system thats pretty & damn good. www.mythtv.org - Home media system 2009/11/8 Patrick Doyle <wpdster[at]gmail.com>: > Hello All, > I am looking to replace my old (SD, analog, Series 2) TiVo with a > shiny new MythTV. I recently purchased a shiny new large-ish (37") > 1080i LCD TV. I looked at MythTV a couple of years ago, and thought I > remembered a "Here's my setup" page, but I can't seem to find that > anymore. > > If anybody has advice, I'd be glad to hear it. If anybody would like > to point me at the best (most recent) hardware recommendations guide, > I'd be glad to read through tath. > > I know some of the specifications of what I want... > > Since I want to replace my TiVo, I would like to build a combined > frontend/backend box. I would like it to be roughly the same physical > size of the TiVo. It would like it to have an integrated remote > receiver. I think something like the Thermaltake Mozart Media Center > looks like the type of case I want. > > I (currently) only receive and watch OTA ATSC video. So I don't need > a whole lot of horsepower to encode the video, but I do need to > playback 720p and/or 1080i video. I'm not sure how to interpret the > "HD_Playback_Reports" page on the wiki, but if I buy a retail CPU > (that fits in the retail uATX motherboard I stick in the case), is it > likely that I'll get something that can't handle that? How much > memory is "enough" for MythTV? > > Is there anything else I should be thinking about? Yes, I know I'll > need a disk, or two, or three, but I can figure out the size of that > later. Should I be (especially) concerned about the speed? I have an > ATSC tuner on the way, courtesy of WOOT. > > > Thanks for any tips or pointers. > > --wpd > _______________________________________________ > mythtv-users mailing list > mythtv-users[at]mythtv.org > http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users > _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list mythtv-users[at]mythtv.org http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
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