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I built an HTPC about a year and a half ago. It is not fanless, but I have low noise fans, and went passive on the CPU and video card, and it sits in my audio rack. I think one of the best features to me is the use of Lifextender. http://www.lifextender.com/ Lifextender automatically removes commercials from recorded TV using a number of criteria including close caption data, number of black frames, sound levels and others. Although there is a somewhat involved process to tweak it so that it works to the best of it's ability, I have just used it "out of the box" since day one, only setting "preferences", and it has worked near flawlessly. The only caveat I have found that it is quite CPU intensive, and drives CPU temperatures up like playing a video game! I have a Xeon E3110 (same as Core2Duo E8100) with 8MB RAM running under Vista 64, and have been able to record 2 HD TV programs + 2 SD TV programs simultaneously (more as a test, not that I have much cause to do that!), while Lifextender is de-commercializing and I am browsing on the Internet, all while iTunes is serving music without skipping a beat. Neat. Steve
Glad to have you back Robin!! So has anyone tried Windows 7 media center? This is the one area where I think Microsoft has the ball in their court!! The Media center is simply spectacular at what can be incorporated into it.
So has anyone tried Windows 7 media center? This is the one area where I think Microsoft has the ball in their court!! The Media center is simply spectacular at what can be incorporated into it.
And what about a CableCard?
Steve what brand of dual tuners do you suggestion for HD OTA?
I need to increase my memory as well, only running 4 Gbs at the moment.
Well, my two tuner cards are both hybrid, each with one ATSC and one NTSC tuner. And not a matched set. One is an AverMedia M780, the other is an Asus PE9400. I would have to look at what's currently available for a dual ATSC card, but Hauppauge is usually a good bet.
assume your running a 64bit OS? I'm not sure how important more memory is for dual HD TV recording, for me it's more of an issue of multitasking with other additional programs while I'm recording (and Lifextending). Another reason I upgraded to 8GB was to justify my choice of Vista64 which has bitten me in the a** several times because there were no 64bit drivers available for something. The current TV tuners have improved on board video processing, so motherboard CPU utilization is usually fairly low.
I also wanted to mention that my HTPC is on 24/7, a necessity so that it can record whenever it needs to, like a DVR. The Power Management in Vista is even more configurable than XP, so that my computer goes into a deep sleep where all fans turn off, including the fan inside the power supply (I suppose most likely requires a power management-aware PSU, mine is a Corsair 520HX). Only the CPU and RAM are idling. Then it has to be able to wake up the PCI/PCI-e bus when Media Center says it's time to record, or else it can't find the tuner cards. Think I had to tweak a setting for that.
I understand what you're saying about the 64 bit drivers. So far though I haven't had much of an issue with Win7 64 bit.
I added a video card and a blu ray player.
I have a perfectly good Canon scanner for which there are no 64 bit drivers. I also wanted to use a Keyspan Remote to remotely control iTunes from an Airport Express and no 64 bit drivers are available for that. I also can't get a Lexicon Omega USB recording interface to work either. But hey, I've got 8GB of RAM!
Since I have a 1080p TV, I thought about getting a Blu-Ray drive and seeing if would be worth acquiring BDs instead of DVDs. Does Windows 7 Media Center have native Blu-Ray support, or does it still require 3rd party software?
With Win7 64bit I just plugged up my components. It went online and retrieved my drivers for me.
Regrettably the Blu ray native support is only for you burning your own Blu rays; audio/video or just for data backup. Yes you would need a 3rd party software like Cyberlink DVD.
That's Microsoft's fault. Blu-Ray has been out for 2 years, and Windows 7 Media Center can't play them. That's just sad. Steve
Quote from: jqp on 18 Oct 2009, 06:54 pmAnd what about a CableCard? I don't know about Windows 7, but in Windows Vista, the only version that will work with cable cards is a special version sold only to HTPC integrators like Dell and Niveus. Again, have to wait and see if it's any different with Windows 7. Then, of course, there is your cable company. Here in Tucson, Cox Communications will only install (no, you can't self-install) a one-way cable card. It's not bi-directional, so you can't use interactive services like Pay Per View, or anything that requires pushing data out to them. Steve
Quote from: GHM on 18 Oct 2009, 10:26 pmRegrettably the Blu ray native support is only for you burning your own Blu rays; audio/video or just for data backup. Yes you would need a 3rd party software like Cyberlink DVD.That's Microsoft's fault. Blu-Ray has been out for 2 years, and Windows 7 Media Center can't play them. That's just sad. Steve
So are you saying there is a solution that is better than a one way cable card for an HTPC? What is that?
All cable companies are required by law to support CableCard access
Umm...I think you should say that Sony does not want Apple nor Microsoft to play Blue Rays without paying licensing that neither one has chosen to pay?