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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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Hauppauge Colossus v. 1 vs. v. 2 and SageTV
Using either Windows 7 or W10, what’s the difference between a Hauppauge Colossus version 1 and version 2 with regards to SageTV. I have a version 1, and am thinking of adding a second Colossus. Any driver problems if the tuners aren’t the same version? Any other insights?
I can’t really figure out the benefit of a v. 2 based on Hauppauge’s site.
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#2
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The other thing to consider is the BM-1000/3000 types of HDMI capture devices as they ignore HDCP.
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New Server - Sage9 on unRAID 2xHD-PVR, HDHR for OTA Old Server - Sage7 on Win7Pro-i660CPU with 4.6TB, HD-PVR, HDHR OTA, HVR-1850 OTA Clients - 2xHD-300, 8xHD-200 Extenders, Client+2xPlaceshifter and a WHS which acts as a backup Sage server |
#3
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I’m thinking I’d like to keep everything inside the box, so to speak. Plus, I take component out from my set top boxes, so the HDCP doesn’t effect me yet...
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#4
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Fair enough - I actually prefer everything to be outside the box as that facilitates switching to another server if required.
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New Server - Sage9 on unRAID 2xHD-PVR, HDHR for OTA Old Server - Sage7 on Win7Pro-i660CPU with 4.6TB, HD-PVR, HDHR OTA, HVR-1850 OTA Clients - 2xHD-300, 8xHD-200 Extenders, Client+2xPlaceshifter and a WHS which acts as a backup Sage server |
#5
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...and simplifies things if you ever decide to move everything into a VM.
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SageTV v9 Server: ASRock Z97 Extreme4, Intel i7-4790K @ 4.4Ghz, 32GB RAM, 6x 3TB 7200rpm HD, 2x 5TB 7200rpm HD, 2x 6TB 7200rpm HD, 4x 256GB SSD, 4x 500GB SSD, unRAID Pro 6.7.2 (Dual Parity + SSD Cache). Capture: 1x Ceton InfiniTV 4 (ClearQAM), 2x Ceton InfiniTV 6, 1x BM1000-HDMI, 1x BM3500-HDMI. Clients: 1x HD300 (Living Room), 1x HD200 (Master Bedroom). Software: OpenDCT :: WMC Live TV Tuner :: Schedules Direct EPG |
#6
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lol. don’t even know what that means....
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#7
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VM = Virtual Machine.
In simple terms, a VM is a piece of software that emulates the hardware of a complete computer. You can then install any operating system you want onto this virtual computer. And you can have more than one VM installed. So imagine that you have a “normal” computer with Windows 10 operating system. You could install VM software on top of this (it just installs like any other program you might use). When you run this program it lets you create one or more virtual computers. You get to specify things like how much RAM they should have and how big their hard drives should be. Then you can start and stop these virtual computers at will and you can install whatever operating systems you want on them - maybe Linux or an old version of Windows XP or another copy of Windows 10 - and they can all be different. Then you can install whatever other software you need onto those virtual computers. This way you can experiment with other operating systems or you can run software that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to run. Also, the VM is somewhat isolated from your main operating system and from other VMs, so you can try out new software on the VM without much risk that it will screw up something in your main operating system. Also, most VM software can store snapshots of the current state of the VM. It’s kind of like saving your progress in a game. Then if you screw something up, you can easily roll back to a good saved state.
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Server: Ryzen 2400G with integrated graphics, ASRock X470 Taichi Motherboard, HDMI output to Vizio 1080p LCD, Win10-64Bit (Professional), 16GB RAM Capture Devices (7 tuners): Colossus (x1), HDHR Prime (x2),USBUIRT (multi-zone) Source: Comcast/Xfinity X1 Cable Primary Client: Server Other Clients: (1) HD200, (1) HD300 Retired Equipment: MediaMVP, PVR150 (x2), PVR150MCE, HDHR, HVR-2250, HD-PVR |
#8
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Quote:
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
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