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General Discussion General discussion about SageTV and related companies, products, and technologies. |
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#41
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This device coupled with Plex web ui (html5 video player)
Or Phoenix App Android support for "Casting" could make SageTv live for that much longer. Any PVR backend for that matter. You know XBMC and MythTV will be all over this despite its narrow video/audio playback requirements. I would strongly consider droping my extenders if this thing works as well as I hope. Between roku(s) and this device, it could def change the way media is viewed in my house. |
#42
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#43
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Inside Chromecast
Inside Chromecast: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2422366,00.asp
Ifixit: http://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Chrom...ardown/16069/1
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Server: HP AMD64 dual core running Win7 64bit (MCE disabled) with 4G memory Tuners: 2 PVR-500(disabled), 3 HDHR and 1 HDPVR Clients: 2 HD200 and 1 HD100 TV: 70" and 52" and 42" Media Storage: ReadyNas 8TB Recording media: 300GB + 200GB+ 250 GB Network: Gigabit backbone' Thanks to all the developers who work on SageMC, code, utilities and plug-ins to make SageTV better!!! Last edited by QueOnda; 07-26-2013 at 04:26 PM. |
#44
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Although honestly, even SageTV can't do that. I reject the notion of playing Amazon, HP, or NF via plex to SageTV, that GUI is something only a mainframe programmer could use. |
#45
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Here's another write up http://phandroid.com/2013/07/26/chro...-review-video/
Interesting that only MP4 "local" files were playable and then only playable in 720p. (that might be a limitation of Chrome's implementation, not sure)
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Batch Metadata Tools (User Guides) - SageTV App (Android) - SageTV Plex Channel - My Other Android Apps - sagex-api wrappers - Google+ - Phoenix Renamer Downloads SageTV V9 | Android MiniClient |
#46
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For $35 I got one. Just ordered it today so we'll see how long it takes. Neat idea.
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SageTV Server: unRAID Docker v9, S2600CPJ, Norco 24 hot swap bay case, 2x Xeon 2670, 64 GB DDR3, 3x Colossus for DirecTV, HDHR for OTA Living room: nVidia Shield TV, Sage Mini Client, 65" Panasonic VT60 Bedroom: Xiomi Mi Box, Sage Mini Client, 42" Panasonic PZ800u Theater: nVidia Shield TV, mini client, Plex for movies, 120" screen. Mitsubishi HC4000. Denon X4300H. 7.4.4 speaker setup. |
#47
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I ordered one, too. At $11, after factoring in the Netflix promo, there was no reason not to. I sometimes, albeit rarely, buy videos off Google Play to watch on my Android tablets, but I don't currently have a way to play them back on my TV.
By the way, I just got my Netflix promo code, but it was sent to a weird email address. I ordered the device from the Play store using my Gmail account. However, the promo code was sent to my work email address. My work address is my "alternate" email address in my Google account, so I'm guessing they accidently sent out the codes to the wrong address field. |
#48
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OMG. Is someone really going to by this for $999 and without the netflix code?
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=400540897360 Well, I guess so. 4 available / 47 sold
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Server: HP AMD64 dual core running Win7 64bit (MCE disabled) with 4G memory Tuners: 2 PVR-500(disabled), 3 HDHR and 1 HDPVR Clients: 2 HD200 and 1 HD100 TV: 70" and 52" and 42" Media Storage: ReadyNas 8TB Recording media: 300GB + 200GB+ 250 GB Network: Gigabit backbone' Thanks to all the developers who work on SageMC, code, utilities and plug-ins to make SageTV better!!! |
#49
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anyway: I was lucky enough to get one and to score the 3 months netflix deal, The chromecast is def what Bialio described for me so far. It changes the way my home media is played. Yes it only does netflix, youtube, google play movies/tv/music and chrome browser casting, but i tell you waht, There is something that Strikes my fancy about NOT having to doing things on a hard to navigate 10ft gui.... as AWESOME as they are (i.e. Phoenix) There is something to be said for just having it in front of you in your hands, find what you want, play, done. I dig it. I have read many posts about people complaining that you can't use said device once you start streaming.. thats just not true at all. since the chromecast pulls from the cloud and NOT the device you can use the device as you would normally. One of the coolest things in my opinionis that ANY device for the most part can a remote. So i start a show from netfli on my phone.... switch to ipad or android tablet with netflix, and a blue banner shows at the top and says this is playing on chromecast (click to control) click it and BAM another device is te "remote"... go to a computer and login to netflix on chrome.. same thing. Its super cool. Once plex and a few other apps get on board itll be "solid gold jerry" |
#50
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I always suspected that those auctions that have crazy prices are a front for money laundering or some other nefarious activity.
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Will OS: Windows 7 Hardware: Intel Core i7-920 with 12GB RAM & an Adaptec 5805 with a Chenbro 36-port SAS Expander Case: Antec 1200 with 4 iStarUSA trayless hot-swap cages (20 drives max) Drives: 8 Toshiba/Hitachi 2TB drives in a RAID 6 & 7 Toshiba 3TB drives in a RAID 6 Capture Cards: HDHomeRun Connect Quatro 4, Hauppauge 60 HD-PVR Players: 5 HD300s, 2 HD200s |
#51
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I always figured it was the internet gadget equivalent of ticket scalpers. Whenever they can get in early on something desirable that they expect might sell out, they buy as many as they can with the specific intent of re-selling. They just need to put them at a price point where they will sell their stock before the product becomes widely available again. I suspect they have not done that here.
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Server: AMD Athlon II x4 635 2.9GHz, 8 Gb RAM, Win 10 x64, Java 8, Gigabit network Drives: Several TB of internal SATA and external USB drives, no NAS or RAID or such... Software: SageTV v9x64, stock STV with ADM. Tuners: 4 tuners via (2) HDHomeruns (100% OTA, DIY antennas in the attic). Clients: Several HD300s, HD200s, even an old HD100, all on wired LAN. Latest firmware for each. |
#52
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I'm glad I got my Chromecast early. It is certainly a neat device that is only going to get better once Google gets the API out of beta and allows developers to release their apps.
Given the amount of development already done (although not released) on the device, I do think this device will change how people use their TVs. It won't be long and people will be able to stream ANY content to the device - either from the web or stored locally on the network. It will likely also act as an Airplay type device and screen share what you see on your device if you want. I can't wait to see what else developers are able to do in the coming weeks/months and to see what other content providers jump on this bandwagon.
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i7-6700 server with about 10tb of space currently SageTV v9 (64bit) Ceton InfiniTV ETH 6 cable card tuner (Spectrum cable) OpenDCT HD-300 HD Extenders (hooked to my whole-house A/V system for synched playback on multiple TVs - great during a Superbowl party) Amazon Firestick 4k and Nvidia Shield using the MiniClient Using CQC to control it all |
#53
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Maybe I'm just getting old and unimaginative, but I don't see much happening with the Chromecast. I mean, how different is it from a Roku, in practice, other than using a phone/tablet to control it rather than a remote? I don't see a huge appeal. I was excited about the Phoenix android app and thought that I'd rather use that instead of 10ft GUI and remote, but in practice I still prefer the remote. The main advantage that I see would be for things that that fairly difficult to do with a remote. Youtube is a pain on a TV, since searching for things is painful. Netflix is a little less of a pain, mainly because one search gets you 20-120 minutes of material rather than 1-5 minutes.
It's great that it's dirt cheap, but I think as long as you come in under $100 you're pretty comfortably in mass-market territory for consumer devices (as long as its useful). At the $35 level you can pretty much sell it even if its not particularly useful. Chromecast is still going to suffer from the same content restrictions as Rokus. You're not going to be able to send a regular Hulu video to your TV without Hulu Plus. It will be interesting to see how HBO Go works. Will it be supported by any cable TV provider that works with the website? Or will it be more restricted like the Roku app is? These are the sorts of things that kill the streaming experience. |
#54
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I think it more of a shift in the way we view content.. there is no GUI, there is no 10' on the tv clunky slection to make. Everything is in your hand. because of this, one could theoretically do just about anything with it including live tv and DVR provided there is an HLS or HTML5 stream available. I def think its a game changer and see huge things coming down the pipe. Every other device to date still abides by the same "old school" my tv needs a ui to do anything... this breaks that mold in my opinion and allows for the sleek and fresh UI of the handheld/tablet devices we see and know today. I personally don't think it will suffer from the same issues that roku runs into for the simple fact that google has content provider contracts already in place for the likes of GoogleFiber.. I think they will leverage those to include live tv and dvr direct to the chromecast. but what do i know. |
#55
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More generally, the model seems a little backwards. Current trends with the younger folk seems to be towards enabling content on mobile devices that's traditionally viewed on TVs, rather than trying to get content on mobile devices to TVs. I realize that's not quite what Chromecast is doing, but it's along those lines. Part of my problem is that for this to really have a good user experience you really need your entire TV experience to be looped into the phone. If I'm using my phone, I definitely wouldn't want to have to use my remote too. So I'd want everything with my TV and AV receiver to just magically work. Quote:
Google has a fair amount of pay content in the Play ecosystem, although I'm not likely to jump into that. They might be able to bypass some of Roku's troubles by associating it with mobile devices rather than TVs. It wouldn't be entirely accurate, but I think there's a decent chance the cable companies won't view it as the same kind of threat to their business model as they appeared to view the Roku. We'll see fairly soon, I think. A good test will be what happens with HBO Go and Comcast customers. |
#56
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It seems to me like this sort of thing is a nice option, ie being able to control something with a phone. That said Roku has an android app, but I never use it. Maybe I'm weird, but well first, I never enable wifi on my phone, there's no point I've got unlimited data and I don't really use that much data to begin with. And two, I don't carry my phone around with me once I get home. I set it on the table and leave it there.
On top of all that I despise touchscreens for transport controls. I like being able to pause/play/ffw/etc by feel, not have to unlock a phone, look down, find the right area of the screen to hit.... I don't know, maybe if I get a tablet I'll change my mind. |
#57
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Channels DVR UBUNTU Server 2 Primes 3 Connects TVE SageTV Docker with input from Channels DVR XMLTV and M3U VIA Opendct. |
#58
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We just signed up for Netflix service about a on month ago, so it's still relatively new to me. My wife and I both didn't like searching through the playon app. My newest TV is a vizio which does have a built in Netflix app. This wasn't any easier to use than the playon app.
What we would do is search for movies on my phone or tablet and add them to the instant queue. That way they were easy to find. With the chromecast it's just one click on the tablet after we find something and it's playing. However, I still have to use my old harmony remote. The hdmi cec will turn on my three or four year old Philips tv and switch the input to the correct one but it won't control my sound bar at all. This makes it a rather clunky solution. I have to start, pause and stop playback on my phone but control the volume on my Harmony remote. I've only seen this mentioned a few times but at least on my phone, the lock screen control works great. One of the complaints I've read was that you have to open the Netflix app to be able to control playback. This isn't the case, I can hit the power button on the phone twice and it will exit whatever app I'm in and return to the lock screen and then I can pause or stop playback. Overall, I like the chromecast and I do think that it holds a lot of promise. A free cbs.Com app would be a great thing right now for TimeWarner subscribers. :-) |
#59
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This is an interesting device but really doesn't seem that different than an AppleTv with AirPlay or a Roku with their direct streaming of video, photos, or videos from your device and you have all of the channels available on the device itself.
And Roku already sells a stick version that's even powered from the port if you have the right kind of port (MHL?). Stick devices are pretty sweet; fewer wires and all that. There's nothing preventing Apple or Roku from making their boxes more like the Chromecast in being totally able to be controlled by a phone / tablet. I'm not sure that's what people want, however. It'll be interesting to find out. I suspect it will be hard to change mainstream behavior away from their cable company / sat dish boxes will be tough. AppleTV has just over 50% of the market and they've only sold "only" about 13M AppleTVs. |
#60
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