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SageTV Github Development Discussion related to SageTV Open Source Development. Use this forum for development topics about the Open Source versions of SageTV, hosted on Github. |
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#241
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And not to beat a dead horse about the extender thing, but I mentioned to my wife this morning about Narflex's post that actually gives some hope to the idea that the extenders could be revived, and she actually got excited (if you knew my wife and her normal reaction to anything tech-related, that would impress you ), and rattled off a list of names of her friends whom she said would definitely be interested is getting into Sage if the software is back alive and extenders are available. I guess she's had lots of people over for kids' playdates (while I'm at work during the day) and had the TV on and they've all said they wanted it, but she had to tell them "sorry, Google bought it, it's not available." These aren't tech-savvy people, either, they are soccer moms.
I still say there has been a massive increase in knowledge/acceptance of media devices, streaming gadgets, home networking, and even home media servers (to dumb it down, a "24/7 running computer somewhere in the house that holds your media") within the general public in the three years since Sage went dormant. Three years ago, I would show people my home Sage system and almost all of them had the opinion, "that looks cool but it's too complicated for my lack of computer knowledge". Truth is, it wasn't, but they were just scared to jump out of the safe cocoon of paying Time-Warner a big chunk of money every month and getting what they always had before. In the last three years, thanks to netflix, smart TVs, Rokus, FireTVs, AppleTVs, etc., those people are more comfortable with the idea of having gadgets and networked devices in their homes. They've seen that they can do it and it's not rocket science, and makes their lives better. So, I'm tellin' ya, Sage could be about to take off.
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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. |
#242
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1. A plug and play home server. I believe Jeff and the Sage team had this as a stated goal prior to the Google acquisition and it still applies. The knowledge required to install and build the server is the single biggest barrier to entry. Being able to buy a Sage Server off the shelf and just set it up via an abbreviated Web UI version of the install wizard would be key. 2. Free Updated software clients aimed at "Generation Y" 18 to 34 year olds. Android, iOS, Roku would be top 3 priorities with the Android and iOS clients having support for Mobile / Tablet / Set Top UI variants. Chromecast support is critical here. 3. A next gen "HD400" successor supporting 4K / 3D and HDR (if a spec gets finalized) would be critical to support the market created by the plug and play server and videophiles that want a quality home theatre experience. This is _completely_ compatible with having Android STB support mentioned above as you're essentially targeting a different market segment (aka married 34+ with money and WAF to deal with). WayneB's find of the Cloud Media VTEN means that likely all thats required is a couple of sample boxes to code against and a kickstarter campaign to fund the integration work (there is likely proprietary code work required for the Sigma APIs, but thats just a guess). 4. Long term and assuming broadband ISP support is there it would be interesting to see if the server could be virtualized entirely hosted in the cloud. Certainly Google and Amazon would be candidates to host but I could see a dedicated industry similar to the current Seedbox services pop up to support this if its viable. |
#243
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Java is one of many languages that run on the JVM so you have a lot of choices. There is a Python implementation called Jython, and if you google 'go jvm' it turns up a couple projects to implement Go on the JVM.
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Server: Intel Core i5 760 Quad, Gigabyte GA-H57M-USB3, 4GB RAM, Gigabyte GeForce 210, 120GB SSD (OS), 1TB SATA, HD HomeRun. Extender: STP-HD300, Harmony 550 Remote, Netgear MCA1001 Ethernet over Coax. SageTV: SageTV Server 7.1.8 on Ubuntu Linux 11.04, SageTV Placeshifter for Mac 6.6.2, SageTV Client 7.0.15 for Windows, Linux Placeshifter 7.1.8 on Server and Client, Java 1.6. Plugins: Jetty, Nielm's Web Server, Mobile Web Interface. |
#244
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I'm with valnar on that, I've been running XBMC (OpenELEC) on Intel GPU hardware for a while, and it's video output is can really only be considered "good" if the source is 1080p and no video processing has to be done. If you drop to anything else, 1080i, or especially difficult 480i, then it is most definitely "subpar". I would love to see some "renewed" (not for Sage but for devices in general) support for native/"Source Direct" output. |
#245
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#246
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I'm really impressed by the number of new features in the open source version of SageTV perhaps this is all being created by some new software development process that I haven't heard of.
I don't think think the world needs yet another Kodi backend, but for some reason that seems to be a pretty highly anticipated feature. Trouble is that could happen today without too much effort but no one really has wanted to own it, a failed Kickstarter project aside. I'd have done it myself but I find some of the "anti-anything but Sage fanboys" here hard to take. I figure that is only a few weekends of work too but that is probably If that relatively simple feature couldn't have been added over the last couple of years why does anyone expect that open source alone will cause the future of SageTV to be so bright? I'll post a separate post about extenders since I can give some incite into that but thus far in the thread I am not as optimistic as many of the users here. It's too bad the name MythTV has already been taken. I think there is a good analogy from history when Meedio a commercial app was purchased by Yahoo! to become potentially Yahoo! TV. That failed and the MeedioOS open source initiative appeared to be the solution. It actually still exists for the diehards probably some of them may still think it is the best. Martin |
#247
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They may not be capable of playing 4K, or other processor-intensive formats, but to say their performance is inferior to the HD-300 is misleading ... |
#248
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One thing to note. A lot of what you hear people suggesting for the open-source version are just that, suggestions. Nothing is planned, nothing is ready to be released. A lot of original community has moved on. Those that are still around, like myself, are still regular users of SageTV and hope that by open sourcing it, this will allow us to continue to have it available. We have used a discontinued product for almost 5 years because we have yet to find something better (or to stubborn to move on). Now that SageTV is going open source, it gives us hope and the ability to add things we'd like to see. That said, after SageTV is open source a core group of developers come together to add features (aka the suggestions throughout this thread) to the "official" SageTV release. Without that, you risk the possibility of stagnation. Ben |
#249
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I never actually used it I am going back on memory http://www.byopvr.com/meedio-update-...iotv-progress/ I think the comparison is still valid.
Martin |
#250
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More so when dealing with Blu-ray RIP's with embedded cinavia protection audio carp that some players that keep the PS3 and other from working. |
#251
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Meedios isn't a bad platform, but it's more like Kodi then SageTV. SageTV is better compared to MCE and MythTV. Again, what the community does after SageTV is open sourced will be the defining factor in SageTVs future. Ben |
#252
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#253
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I know the world wants to move to Kodi/XBMC as a front end for everything, but I think that is a bad idea. What separates Sage from that is NOT being reliant on XBMC. This is why, as we all can agree, why the WAF of Sage was head & shoulders above the alternatives. It would be a shame to reduce Sage to yet another XBMC back end. On a related subject, the main reason why a company like Sage/Frey could adopt a brand new extender based on a Sigma Designs chip was because they were a real company. They could place orders and charge us. I regret that may not be possible with an OS product. eg. The only reason PLEX (which I love..far more than Kodi) is gaining traction in the Roku's, Playstations and TV's of the world is because it also is a commercial venture. If the future of Sage is nothing more than a Kodi backend PVR, it will become a shadow of its former self (IMO). |
#254
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#255
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I may be missing something here, but where is the content that plays on an HD-300 that won't play on a Pi? |
#256
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#257
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I'm not asking to set the world on fire. I'm just talking about capturing and playing back TV programming. I do not have any of the problems and issues with the quality of the HD-300 that others here seem to. I guess that's why many people left, but I never have ... |
#258
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The Raspberry Pi can't play Blu-ray bitrate video.
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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 |
#260
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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 |
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