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SageTV Media Extender Discussion related to any SageTV Media Extender used directly by SageTV. Questions, issues, problems, suggestions, etc. relating to a SageTV supported media extender should be posted here. Use the SageTV HD Theater - Media Player forum for issues related to using an HD Theater while not connected to a SageTV server. |
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#161
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You should note that there currently is no access to menus and extras if that is important to you.
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-Craig |
#162
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If the core is DD it will output to analog just fine, but the extender can't decode DTS so if you've got DTS-HD MA with DTS core, then no you won't get analog output.
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#163
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I use the HDHR (2x for 4 tuners) for OTA (I can get all the big networks (ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, CW, about 5 PBS stations) via OTA and the quality is usually better (less compression).
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Server 2003 r2 32bit, SageTV9 (finally!) 2x Dual HDHR (OTA), 1x HD-PVR (Comcast), 1x HDHR-3CC via SageDCT (Comcast) 2x HD300, 1x SageClient (Win10 Test/Development) Check out TVExplorer |
#164
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Is there anyway to use any of the software discussed in this thread (tsmuxer etc) to force the subtitles onto a new movie file that I can then add to my library? |
#165
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Sorry meant "were working on it"...
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#166
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#167
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Is there any plan on supporting BR structure within an iso as well? -Dravor |
#168
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50Gbytes per Movie and 42 inch display
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We have a 42 In 60Hz Vizio 1080P. The Blue Ray movie and DVD movie play back in Wide Screen Format with black spacing above and below the picture. ASPECT 101 has a nice writeup on the reasons for this. In any case this reduces my 42 inch display to something less and as a result the BlueRay only looked slightly better. If I had a 50 inch screen or sat closer than 6 feet then we would see a much bigger difference. For Films soruced in HDTV aspect ratio then the difference would be more significant. For example Broadcast ATSC HD Shows and especially HD sporting events look way better than DVD. Most of these are 720P or 1080I. So my wife and I were very supprised by this. We were expecting Blue Ray to look similar or better than ATSC HD. So we are sticking with DVD for the following reasons. 1. Most Movies are filmed with a wider asptect ratio than our HDTV. 2. Blue Ray Movies are huge 49Gbytes per disk and roughly 32Gbytes for the main movie. 3. Writable Blue Ray Media is very expensive 4. Blue Ray Players, and RW Drives are expensive
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SERVER/Endcoder: ASUS M2NE,AMD 5600, 4G Ram, ATI 3850, 10 TB, Antec P180 Case OS/Software: Win XP SP3 (32bit), Smart Defrag, Care, Windows Defender, Sage 7.1.5 Encoders ATSC: HVR 1800 (PCIE), HVR2250(PCIE) Satelite: Dish VIP622 Bronze HD Pacakge, HD PVR Rev E1 1.5.6.1 TV1: Vizio 42" LCD 1080P 60HZ, Sage HD200, Yamaha 6.1 TV2: Samsung 26" LCD720P 60HZ, Sage HD200, TV Sound Network: Airlink 300N to DLINK DAP-1522 to Sage HD200 |
#169
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Server: i5 8400, ASUS Prime H370M-Plus/CSM, 16GB RAM, 15TB drive array + 500GB cache, 2 HDHR's, SageTV 9, unRAID 6.6.3 Client 1: HD300 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia 65" 1080p LCD and optical SPDIF to a Sony Receiver Client 2: HD200 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia NS-LCD42HD-09 1080p LCD |
#170
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There are two ways content is recorded/created. Film and Video. Sports, documentaries and such are shot on HD Video, with HD Cameras that capture content with digital sensor as "high" framerates (30/60fps). Movies, and most TV shows (dramas, etc), these are shot on film stock and a lower frame rate (24fps). All that technobable means that HD Video tends to have that razor-sharp, vivid, smooth picture most people think of when they think of "HDTV". This is what's quite often used when demoing HDTVs. Movies on the other hand are almost universally shot on film, and I guess I'd say the improvent is not as "smack you in the face" as with HD Video. Now all that said, a good Blu-ray will easily, and noticably, best the best ATSC/broadcast content if it's "like" content (ie film vs film). The other thing is NTSC TV is pretty bad to start with, where DVD is pretty good, so NTSC->ATSC is a much bigger jump than DVD->Blu-ray. |
#171
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-Suntan |
#172
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I clearly see an improvement. I have Iron Man both on DVD and BluRay. I was watching Iron Man on BluRay and stopped about half-way through. Later, my wife started watching Iron Man without me on regular DVD (not knowing she should select the bluray version). When I came in the room I could immediately tell she wasn't watching BluRay. It actually surprised me how poor the DVD image was compared to BluRay. Okay it wasn't as stark a difference as standard TV vs HiDef. But a very nice improvement none the less. I am watching on a 61" screen though.. Perhaps the difference on a 42" is not as noticeable.
I will add that animated movies on BluRay look absolutely stunning. Madagascar 2 and Horton Hears a Who look amazing. BluRay makes watching those with your kid a lot more fun. |
#173
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Interesting this discussion about SD vs HD. I did some comparisons a few months back on a Norwegian forum I frequent. We had just gotten an HD edition of a local channel ('TVNorge') in addition to the regular SD channel. Because I have two DVB-C tuners I could record the excact same programs in on both SD and HD. The discussions on the forum went from people who could not see the difference. People who claimed that upscaled SD matched the HD, so no need for HD. The other way around, and so on.
I did two still comparison shots. First from Bad Company movie, second from the Rome series. They are shown below in this post. First a little data about the sources these are taken from, and how they were processed. Here are the technical details (on the DVB-C streams): - SD: 720x576 25fps - about 4.0Mbit MPEG2 video (720 x-axis scaled through 16:9 flag) - HD: 1920x1088 25fps - about 15.7Mbit MPEG4/H.264 video The short of it is that the HD signal has about 4x times the pixels as SD (about 0.5mp vs 2.0mp). Most HD channels I've seen on cable uses about 4x the bandwith for HD vs SD. In this case 4.0 vs 15.7. In addition the MPEG4/H.264 format is better than MPEG2, so you gain some details there to. The shots below are both taken in 1920x1080 on my computer, through PowerDVD 8.x as decoder. They both gain whatever intelligence/scaling the PowerDVD engine provides. The shots are cropped from the full picture, so what you are seeing are 1:1 pixel (except that SD material was scaled to HD before screenshot). Stored as JPG picture with low compression. HD material would be hurt most by this anyway. What I claimed in my original post, and still do, is that I cannot give an absolute answer for everyone on the difference between HD and SD. It's to personal and too many variables. What TV are one watching the material on? Distance to TV? What components/engines do the material pass through? How is the TV adjusted? What kind of program are one watching (nature,film,action,drama)? How good is the original material? How was it mastered to get HD edition? What is important for the person watching (the story or the picture quality)? It was the scaling claims from SD to HD that bugged me in the original forum. If you take some optimal material that has been produced to high quality 1080(HD), lets say 20.0Mbit MPEG4/H.264. Scale this material down to 576(SD) version, in 5.0Mbit MPEG2. Whatever people claim, the 5.0Mbit MPEG2 contains less information than 20.0Mbit MPEG4/H.264. You can have the best upscaling engine available to show the 576(SD) data on a 1080(HD) display. Details will be lost. The real 1080(HD) version will have more detail to work with. And if someone still claims that 576(SD) upscaled is good enough. Well, same logic can be used to scale 1080(HD) material to 2160(QuadHD). It will never be the same. Again, perceived quality is something else. Just taking the technical aspect here My personal observation is that if you start the evening of watching something in SD and then go to HD material at some point. You don't react as much. But if you start watching something in HD, then at some point turn to SD material, it's a depressing change in quality Comparison: "Bad Company" http://www.miwsoft.com/_temp/2008100...ge_Compare.jpg Comparison: "Rome" http://www.miwsoft.com/_temp/2008100...me_Compare.jpg
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SageTV 7.1.9 (headless/service) • JavaRE 1.6.0_37 • 2x FloppyDTV C/CI (DVB-C) (fw: 1.2.10 B43110) (CAM: Conax) • Win7 x64 • Intel E3-1245V2 3.4GHz • 16GB PC3-10600 ECC • ASUS P8C WS (Intel C216) • APC Back-UPS RS 800 • STP-HD300 Extender (fw: beta 20110506 0) - HDMI/SPDIF - Yamaha RX-V2700 - HDMI - Sony KDL-52X2000 Last edited by Opus4; 04-08-2009 at 02:27 PM. Reason: Images are too wide to be inline; changed them to links. |
#174
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Should we be able to switch through the different audio tracks? Tried playing back the Simpson's movie in BR, and could only get the commentary.
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#175
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Yes you should be able to... press options button while playing back a disc and then there should be a audio languages option that brings up a dialog with all the tracks in it...
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Server 2003 r2 32bit, SageTV9 (finally!) 2x Dual HDHR (OTA), 1x HD-PVR (Comcast), 1x HDHR-3CC via SageDCT (Comcast) 2x HD300, 1x SageClient (Win10 Test/Development) Check out TVExplorer |
#176
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I'll check some other movies as well. Thanks! |
#177
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See here: http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/showthread.php?t=41722
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Server 2003 r2 32bit, SageTV9 (finally!) 2x Dual HDHR (OTA), 1x HD-PVR (Comcast), 1x HDHR-3CC via SageDCT (Comcast) 2x HD300, 1x SageClient (Win10 Test/Development) Check out TVExplorer |
#178
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Does this same process work for the STX-HD100 extenders as well??
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Intel Q6600 Quad Core, 8GB RAM on Windows 7 Professional x64 |
#179
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Witht he latest beta firmware it does. But do a search and you will see that some high bitrate Blu-rays can tend to stutter. IIRC the issue is with the audio codec (DTS Master) and maybeVC-1 encoded discs.
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Server:W7 Ultimate, SageTV 7.1.9 Capture Devices: HVR-2250, 2x HD PVR 1212 Clients: 1x STX-HD100 3x STP-HD200 @cliftpompee |
#180
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I believe so, but the HD100's decoder might not have the guts for all BDs.
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