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I think relatively speaking putting the CD onto a hard drive and accessing it from there is way more appealing than a music server.
The products he describes (from Cambridge Audio and Olive) are hard drive based music servers. Basically, they combine the network storage and SB into a single unit, rather than have them exist separately.I haven't read much about the Cambridge Audio solution, but the Olive looks very nice. The only aspect that I don't like is that their products don't yet support access to other harddrives over the network. Thus, once the internal drives are full, you are out of luck. Of course, this would b ...
When I looked into music servers few months ago (I am always looking for the most convinient way even if I have to pay a little more as I never have enough time) they all looked overpriced with very small storage capacity. Increasing capacity won't be so trivial since fan noise comes into play as disks get bigger and faster. Wireless SB was my choice because I can house a large network storage 2 floors away -- no noise and no space on the rack.
brj - thanks for the link to silentpcreview. I will be buying a cpu to use for this. I also want to record tv shows (i.e., football games) onto it. My thought is to hardwire, and have it in the room. Is there anything I can do in the ordering/configuring stage to help make it more silent?
Brian has been an indispensible resource in my brief parade into the world of linux and file servers. Unfortunately it came to a tragic end when my linux box came to a crashing hault recently. I suspect a malicious virus is at fault when I was undoubtely naive when surfing for appropriate linux drivers.
So some things that I want my "music server" to do beyond just serving up music files to my SB are: 1) spin down HDs when not in use 2) serve files for my home network, so small/efficient drives can be used in other PCs. 3) have option of being a back end server for a HT front end at sometime in near future. This can/should include: --PVR functionality and storage --tuning and serving for HDTV, DVB and maybe SAT or (not likely) cable. --serve up some nice aps like weather & internet music 4) and be energy efficient. No high CPU requirements, efficient PSU, etc. ...
For $469, I can get 1TB of storage with a $100 RAID card from eBay and 4 250GB drives. And with two 350W power supplies in that beast, your electric meter is going to grin (assuming you fill up all the bays with little drives).