[plug] MythTV project

Shanon Loughton autobot at iinet.net.au
Fri Feb 11 16:27:46 WST 2011


maybe ill just get the PS playtv add on... :p


On Fri, Feb 11, 2011 at 4:15 PM, Lucas van Staden <lvs at dedmeet.com> wrote:

>  That plugin is still active and works pretty well. called MythBox -
> http://code.google.com/p/mythbox/
>
> I use it in conjunction with the 'built-in' mythtv// protocol, which you
> set as a source to video content, in XBMC.
> The built in mythtv// protocol is just to do playback, and makes it easier
> to get to the recordings from mythtv.
>
> -Lucas
>
>
>
>
> On 11/02/11 16:03, Alvin Teh wrote:
>
>  A long long long time ago, i saw a plugin for XBMC where you can control
> a MythTv backend to do schedule recording. It might still be available.
>
>
>
> XBMC is only a frontend player, so it does not have any recording
> capabilities itself, however I believe the guys at XBMC is working on it.
> (Don’t wait for it as it may be a while before it’s implemented)
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* plug-bounces at plug.org.au [mailto:plug-bounces at plug.org.au<plug-bounces at plug.org.au>]
> *On Behalf Of *Lucas van Staden
> *Sent:* Friday, 11 February 2011 3:57 PM
> *To:* plug at plug.org.au
> *Subject:* Re: [plug] MythTV project
>
>
>
> Hi,
>
> On 11/02/11 15:47, Shanon Loughton wrote:
>
> My ubuntu media server is not connected to my tv - i use mediatomb to serve
> and ps3 to play it all.  If I replace mediatomb with xmbc on the ubuntu
> server can you control the record settings through the ps3 client?
>
>
> Mediatomb and XBMC are two very different things.
>
> XBMC can serve its files to your network, but I am not sure if that is
> compatible with the PS3 (have never tried that)
> XBMC is only a playback frontend, cannot do any recording, for tat you need
> MythTV (as one example), which can also serve the files to your network (I
> forget the term right now).
> again not sure if the PS3 can be used for picking up that served content
> from MythTv.
>
> The PS3 client is just a playback service, so no, you cannot set any
> schedules with it to mythtv. (that I am aware of)
>
> I stopped using my PS3 as a frontend client a long time ago as the
> interface is very cumbersome/lacking.
>
> -Lucas
>
>
>
>  Shanon
>
>  On Fri, Feb 11, 2011 at 2:27 PM, Lucas van Staden <lvs at dedmeet.com>
> wrote:
>
> On 11/02/11 13:43, Tim Bowden wrote:
>
> Thanks for all the advice.  WAF is a big factor here, so I'd like to
> get it right before I roll it out.
>
> It looks like I'll go with a Micro ATX motherboard for the PCI slots.
> I'd like to run a separate back end system, but at the moment that's
> not practical.  I've got nowhere out of the way to run a 24/7 noisy
> backend system as I had to give up my study a while back for a kids
> bedroom, and won't get one back till we move.  I have an old AMD-64
> dual core system lying around with a dead motherboard that would make
> an excellent back end if I could find a new motherboard for it.  If I
> could find a Micro ATX motherboard that would still take it, I'd
> consider it as as a front end, but I suspect it would be a bit noisy
> with the cooling it would need.
>
> Interesting with the xbmc option Lucas.  What are the advantages of
> that over using the MythTV front end with MythVideo/Music plugins?
>
>
>
> Mostly mine is WAF related. (look and feel/ease of use)
>
> Last time I used mythtv frontend was a bout 4 years ago, and wife did not
> like the interface at all.
> Tried skin after skin after skin....
>
> xbmc  just LOOKS way better than any of the mythtv skins/screen layouts
> that I have seen and tried.
> I started using it a long time ago when I did not have mythtv running, as I
> had no need to record stuff (had a pvr box that did that job back in the UK)
> and just wanted a frontend to view d/loaded content. and stuck with it.
>
> I am very happy with it, and I myself think it is way better looking than
> mythtv's frontend, and simpler to use.
>
> Now that xbmc is gearing towards integrating their frontend with as many
> PVR backends as they can (mythtv seeming to be a main one), it keeps the
> frontend the same no matter what backend I am using, which again comes back
> to WAF.
>
> Other than that, not much else, off the top of my head.
>
> The xbmc plugins are great (and there are MANY), easy to install using just
> the menus, no technical requirements, so wife can install her own plugins as
> she sees fit.
>
> Can't comment on the music side, as I do not use that at all. (xbmc or
> mythtv - I find those interfaces really cumbersome, but not as bad as the
> PS3 interface to music - try and browse a couple of thousand songs there!
> using just a remote)
>
> Our music is run on the same mini-itx box (as it is next to the amp), but
> the interface we use is MiniRok, which I run over the network via xorg's
> network transparency stuff (and dxpc), and it allows the wife to play music
> using her own actual pc, which sits in the dining room area. (easy
> navigation/searching etc using actual kb and mouse - but the music blasts
> out over the amp)
>
> see
> http://www.dedmeet.com/software-projects-mainmenu-12/remote-music-player.html(little bit dated. Changed teh way i used dxpc to allow swapping teh display
> about and I had wired the whole house with cat6e since then. Also, we have
> moved on to MiniRok, which my wife likes the most of all music players
> tried.- it is simple, fast, and uses file navigation, not mp3 tags.)
>
> Minirok is run using dxpc, which is a compression layer and speeds things
> up, not much use on the homes gigabit network now, but it has one huge
> advantage:
> Minirok is always running on the mini-itx box, inside a dxpc session, so I
> can just connect to that session via a call from any pc in the home (all
> linux of course)
>
> So, I can 'seamlessly' swap the display from one pc to another, and the
> music is not interrupted.
> Great for parties!
>
> -Lucas
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Regards
> Lucas van Staden
>
> http://www.proxiblue.com.au/ (Consumer Electronics Retail Shop)
> http://www.vanstaden.com.au/ (Linux)
>
> --
> I'm happy spasmodically - If I eat a chocolate turtle I'm happy - When the
> box is empty I'm unhappy!
> --
>
> _______________________________________________
>
> PLUG discussion list: plug at plug.org.au
> http://lists.plug.org.au/mailman/listinfo/plug
> Committee e-mail: committee at plug.linux.org.au
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
>
> PLUG discussion list: plug at plug.org.au
>
> http://lists.plug.org.au/mailman/listinfo/plug
>
> Committee e-mail: committee at plug.linux.org.au
>
>
>
>
>  --
>
> Regards
>
> Lucas van Staden
>
>
>
> http://www.proxiblue.com.au/ (Consumer Electronics Retail Shop)
>
> http://www.vanstaden.com.au/ (Linux)
>
>
>
> --
>
> I'm happy spasmodically - If I eat a chocolate turtle I'm happy - When the box is empty I'm unhappy!
>
> --
>
>
>
> --
> Regards
> Lucas van Staden
> http://www.proxiblue.com.au/ (Consumer Electronics Retail Shop)http://www.vanstaden.com.au/ (Linux)
>
> --
> I'm happy spasmodically - If I eat a chocolate turtle I'm happy - When the box is empty I'm unhappy!
> --
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> PLUG discussion list: plug at plug.org.au
> http://lists.plug.org.au/mailman/listinfo/plug
> Committee e-mail: committee at plug.linux.org.au
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.plug.org.au/pipermail/plug/attachments/20110211/aa836e50/attachment.html>


More information about the plug mailing list