Media Center - some basic Qs


  1. Posts : 23
    windows 7 64-bit
       #1

    Media Center - some basic Qs


    Hi all,
    I have a parent with arthritis and would like to set up a media center PC so everything is one one box - no need to swap out DVDs etc (walking across the living room to the DVD can be an issue). I've never worked with Media Center, so I have a bunch of basic Qs.

    FIOS for cable TV - what is the best card for input? Hopefully able to watch & record any channel?

    There a number of DVDs - is it possible to convert them and play them in Media Center?

    Remote control - any recommendations on a remote that is "parent proof."?

    Thanks,
    Rob
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 402
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #2

    To watch and record channels, you will need a card with I do believe dual tuners so one can record, one can watch.

    Hmm, as for the DVD situation, I would suggest ripping the DVDs as .iso files and using a virtual disk mounting software to swap out .iso files. But I don't know if that would help.

    As for the remote, some come with TV tuners, some don't. You might need to define what "parent proof" would be. :)
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 2,752
    Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
       #3

    sternfan2011 said:
    I have a parent with arthritis and would like to set up a media center PC so everything is one one box - no need to swap out DVDs etc (walking across the living room to the DVD can be an issue). I've never worked with Media Center, so I have a bunch of basic Qs.

    FIOS for cable TV - what is the best card for input? Hopefully able to watch & record any channel?
    You basically have two choices:

    (1) Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled card, either (a) internally installed in a PCIe x1 slot in your HTPC, or (b) external USB version

    (2) HDHomeRun Prime from Silicon Dust, which is a 3-tuner network device that communicates with your HTPC via your home LAN.

    The HDHomeRun solution almost certainly requires a gigabit home LAN setup, or at least gigabit from HTPC to the router and also gigabit from the HDHomeRun to the router. This is because a 1080i program takes about 25Mb/s bandwidth, so recording/viewing three separate 1080i programs at once would require 75Mb/s of bandwidth (from the tuners in the HDHR to the router and then to the HTPC for recording). Then at the same time feeding a separate HDTV with a 1080i recorded/live program takes another 25Mb/s from HTPC to router and out of the router to the HDTV. So you are now at 100Mb/s already involving the HTPC, and you've now maxed out a 100Mb home LAN. That's why I say at least several links to the router must be gigabit, and the router must be 10/100/1000 capable. But the individual playback legs from router to HDTV/extender can be 100Mb/s runs.

    If you can connect an HDTV directly to the video card in your HTPC then that's fine to watch HDTV directly from the HTPC (assuming an HD-capable video card). Otherwise, you can place an "extender" at a remote HDTV somewhere else in the house (connected via Ethernet to your router), with the HDTV connected to the HDMI output of the extender. You can use an xBox as an extender, or you can find a no-longer-made but still-available Linksys DMA2100. The xBOX uses more electricity, involves a drive, makes noise and generates heat, but is an xBox so you can use it for that purpose as well as being a Windows Media Center extender. In contrast the Linksys DMA2100 is silent, uses almost no electricity, has no drive, is 100% silent, and is nothing more than an extender to allow you to watch HDTV remote from your HTPC.

    There are a number of standard acceptable Windows Media Center remotes that work both on the HTPC as well as on extenders. Or, the Linksys DMA2100 comes with its own remote intended to be a perfect WMC remote. The xBox remote can be used as a WMC remote, but it's not laid out the same way. There are WMC remotes for the xBox, but I'm not familiar with them (I use DMA2100's, not xBox's, as my extenders).


    There a number of DVDs - is it possible to convert them and play them in Media Center?
    I don't actually play DVD's or BluRays via my WMC HTPC, although I do have CyberLink PowerDVD installed which can be used I believe to play the discs on the HTPC and deliver them to attached HDTV or extender/HDTV's via WMC. I think there is a WMC plugin from PowerDVD that enables this. No reason to convert anything... just play directly on the HTPC and watch on the remote HDTV via extender.

    Or, if you have your own method for copying/converting DVDs to some video form, you can define the folder containing those video files as part of your "Videos" library accessed by WMC. And these "videos" can again be played on a remote HDTV via the extender.


    I, myself, have the Ceton InfiniTV card installed internally in my HTPC (for more than a year) and distribute live/recorded content to three HDTV's around my house. I do have a wired gigabit home LAN, and have no performance issues whatsoever.

    You get an M-Card cablecard from FIOS (which inserts into the Ceton card) and you're pretty much ready to go, although you should be sure you've got FIOS coax cable going to your HTPC location and that you have a large internal hard drive (typically 1-2 TB) to hold your recordings.

    You will now be able to watch/record up to four "live" programs simultaneously, and also watch up to five additional previously recorded programs simultaneously... all at the same time, assuming you had that many display devices and extenders.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 23
    windows 7 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Thanks for the prompt replies. From what I read above - looks like the Ceton is the way to go. Looks like the setup looks like this:

    FIOS Box
    |
    Ceton Cablecard
    |
    Win7 Box Input
    |
    Win7 Box Output (1gb HDMI card)
    |
    TV

    I also found a wireless keyboard with a touchpad - looks promising as a remote.

    Q - for the connection from the FIOS box to the Ceton cablecard - what type of connection is that? HDMI? Coax? Component?

    Thanks,
    Rob
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 2,752
    Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
       #5

    sternfan2011 said:
    Q - for the connection from the FIOS box to the Ceton cablecard - what type of connection is that? HDMI? Coax? Component?
    Coax to the Ceton. With WMC driving it's just like a real DVR (though with 4 tuners), so it gets fed via coax.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 23
    windows 7 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    And just to be clear - with this setup, all channels will be available?
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 2,752
    Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
       #7

    sternfan2011 said:
    And just to be clear - with this setup, all channels will be available?
    Any channel you subscribe to, and could get with a real DVR... you can tune with the Ceton. You will need to get an M-Card cablecard from FIOS.

    You will not be able to get pay-per-view and on-demand.

    But all basic and premium channels are available.

    And just to remind, you will need an "extender" at each remote HDTV, in order to deliver copy-once programming to that HDTV. Copy-freely programming can be played on the Ceton HTPC, other Win7 machines, and extender/HDTVs. But copy-once programming can only be played on the Ceton HTPC that did the recording as well as extender/HDTVs.
      My Computer


 

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