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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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#1
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HD200 - A nice small box, but
I am new to SageTV and love it and the HD200. But, I find that the size of the HD200 means that you have to use it in a manner which seems to run counter to my view (and hopefully others' too) of what the physical arrangement of distributed video should be. And that is, I think, to have all of the visible hardware in one location and only the displays and tiny IR receivers local to the viewer.
I find the HD200's form-factor and design clutters up the viewing experience when used with flat panel displays. With other distributed video technology, such as using a central matrix switch with only IR receivers and wallplate baluns (or small dongle type baluns) local to the viewer, you can place the display right against the wall or out on a stand and all you see is a tiny IR receiver 'eye' which you can locate in a wall or cabinet door or stick to the side of the display. With the HD200 you have this box that is difficult to hide unless you have a cabinet, but then you still have to see the whole box, when it is really only necessary to see the IR receiver eye. Now I realize that the main reason it is the size it is, which is much smaller than the HD100 that predeceded it, is because of the functionality inside the box. But, that would not have precluded it from having been designed in a manner that would have provided much more flexibility regarding the placement of the unit. They could have simply provided an IR jack and separate IR receiver and cable like the Hauppage HD PVR and this would have added very little additional cost. Or, they could have provided an IR jack in addition to the IR receiver located on the unit and could have sold an IR receiver cable for an additional cost. Then one could have taped or velcro'd the HD200 to the back of the TV or to the wall and taped or velcro'd the IR receiver to the TV. This would have also provide the added benefit of not having to see those annoying extremely bright red and blinking green lights on the unit (which, I know, you can just put electrical tape over). Anyway, then you'd have a nice clean install without clutter and just a small IR receiver placed in a cabinet or attached to the TV. I don't know whether the box can be modified now to allow this (likely it can if you know what you are doing). Certainly a separate IR receiver and flasher unit could be used with the HD200 so that one could hide it. But then this adds at least $100 to the cost and it could have been easily been avoided by having provided an IR jack and cable. No offence, as I think the engineers did a great job designing the internals of this unit, but it seems that the exterior of this box was designed by the same engineers without regard to design aesthetics and usability. Witness the overly bright blinking green light that really doesn't not serve much purpose as the screen will indicate whether you are connected and, as such, could have been located on the back of the unit, and the also overly bright red power indicator light. Thank God they chose black as the colour though!
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
#2
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I see your point, but the HD200, like the HD100 and MVP, is a Set Top Box, not a video distribution system. It's purpose is to be local to the display and "pull" video from the SageTV server to that display. It works just like a cable STB, DVD Player, or any of the other various networked media players out there.
Odds are if you really do plan on having all your equpment hidden, you've got something other than the HD200 in the area (AVR, DVD Player, STB, etc) that also have the same problem. |
#3
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You can do what you are doing by hiding it and ir extenders (extra)
I don't know anything that does this by default PLus the hd200 can be controled via ip. |
#4
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It would be nice to have an IR port for an IR extender. But I have no problem with its form really.
Ideally I'd like to see the next version of the HD200 have the following:
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#5
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For most of us there is no other equipment to hide. No STB as the HD200 replaces this. DVD's are typically ripped or can be placed in a DVD player, so that's not there. No need for an AVR except in the home theatre (it is unusual for people to set up surround sound home theatres in every room in their home). Also, an IR receiver and flasher allows the electronic clutter to be hidden in the home theatre. So they are all taken care of and it leaves only the HD200 as the problem.
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
#6
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DRB
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DRB I WANT MY HDTV |
#7
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I did not know this. Can you elaborate? (I know the HD200 controls the server via IP, but I think you are talking about something different)
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
#8
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__________________
Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
#9
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-Craig |
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#11
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I think WiFi is an attractive feature to the casual Media Player crowd. Its always better to use wired ethernet with HD anything, but I think it would help in the reviews and help in the appeal to those wanting a stand-alone Media Player. |
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#13
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+1000
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#14
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I'm always dreaming...
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#15
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So, no, there is no simliar issue as my former STB units as they were all centrally located just where they are now with SageTV, but connected to a matrix switch instead of a computer, as was the DVD player, etc. As for cost, it's debatable if much, if any, cost would be added as all you are adding is a jack and making the IR receiver external on a cable. I disagree that hardly anyone would use it. Coming from a space where you always have some box beside your TV maybe you think that, but for the majority of people not coming from that space (media players, beyond TV and the like), or the many used to other centralized distribution systems or those who never had cable boxes beside their tv for other reasons, they would rather not have a box beside their display. And, why pay for another IR receiver when it's already in the box and merely has to be slightly reconfigured. I think with the trend to slimmer and less visable devices and slimmer displays and more contemporary homes, not having a box like this visible will become more important.
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
#16
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But, then I'd have to buy one for each HD200 which increases the cost by 50% per unit only to duplicate something that is already in the box but sits behind some metal instead of being on 3' of cheap wire, thereby preserving existing functionality and providing additional functionality, likely at none or very little extra cost.
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. |
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#18
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#19
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But, what reason is there to see the box? It provides no feedback really as you get that from the screen. The STB is a different animal. Even the small ones are more than double the size of the HD200 and STB PVR's are much larger. And, most important, the HD200 does not provide any of the feedback (beyond the power light) one gets with an STB, such as indicators like the time, whether you are recording or not, the channel number you are on, the signal resolution etc. And, the insignificance of HD200's lights, beyond maybe when you initially plug them in, is witnessed by the fact that many like to tape over them. So I don't understand why it wouldn't be preferable to just plug your cables in, make sure the lights flicker, and then just hide it out of sight. So, what am I missing? Why does the HD200 have to sit their like an STB instead of being out of sight? Quote:
But yes, maybe the stronger point is that it's just a black box, literally as well as figuratively, that provides no feedback so there is no reason to see it.
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Getting Sager all the time... Displays: Panasonic 65" P65S2 & 50" PX77E plasmas, 19", 26" & 32" LCDs, 4 HD200s Source: 2 HD-PVRs, Rogers Toronto SA 8300HD PVR, 4250HD firewire tuned, WHS, SageTV, Sonos 1xZP100 & 3xZP120 wireless audio, Gigabyte GA45-E45-UD3R mobo, 2.5 GHz Core 2 Duo E5200 (2MB L2), Nvidia GeForce 96400GT, 120GB OS drive, 1 & 1.5 TB WD Caviar Green, Mushkin 2GB DDR2 800 SDRAM, El Cheapo case, Corsair 520HX modular Power Supply. Last edited by TorontoSage; 03-25-2009 at 03:44 PM. |
#20
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I don't know why you hook everyting else to a switch and use ir blasters to hide them but you don't do that with this?
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