I've been a PC user for at least 15 years. I'm a professional (video game) programmer and I consider myself to be a power user. I've written an Explorer shell extension. I know pretty much every shortcut, I know how to tweak things, I'm very comfortable in the registry. But I'm fed up with Windows.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Saturday, March 31, 2012
DIY PVR 4: Putting it All Together
Here are some various notes on putting the hardware together and setting it all up.
The motherboard's power switch connector is at the back of the case; I have no idea why (maybe that's the standard for micro atx?), but it causes difficulty because the case's cables don't reach. I had to drill a hole in the front of the case so that the power switch would reach (it has to be plugged in otherwise it can't be turned on).
The motherboard's BIOS screen doesn't work over DVI (it does work over VGA and, I believe, HDMI). It caused me some difficulty since I was connecting the tv with DVI, but it didn't cause too much trouble.
The included Antec Fusion remote worked, but its button layout is pretty bad. It's workable, and the mouse emulation is cool (and occasionally useful), but it's not a remote that you can hand to your wife or houseguest and expect them to be able to do anything.
The motherboard's power switch connector is at the back of the case; I have no idea why (maybe that's the standard for micro atx?), but it causes difficulty because the case's cables don't reach. I had to drill a hole in the front of the case so that the power switch would reach (it has to be plugged in otherwise it can't be turned on).
The motherboard's BIOS screen doesn't work over DVI (it does work over VGA and, I believe, HDMI). It caused me some difficulty since I was connecting the tv with DVI, but it didn't cause too much trouble.
The included Antec Fusion remote worked, but its button layout is pretty bad. It's workable, and the mouse emulation is cool (and occasionally useful), but it's not a remote that you can hand to your wife or houseguest and expect them to be able to do anything.
Friday, June 17, 2011
DIY PVR 3: Hardware
Since reading this Coding Horror article on Jeff Atwood's new dvr setup, I've been contemplating switching from TiVo to Windows Media Center. One of the good things about Media Center is that you can pick your own hardware, but that means that you have to pick your own hardware. Someone needs to sell a prebuilt, preconfigured HTPC to compete with TiVo.
My requirements were simple- it has to incorporate a cablecard (with switched video)-compatible tuner. It has to look nice- like it belongs with TV equipment (tower cases are out). I'm looking for as inexpensive as possible, without being cheap.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
DIY PVR 2: The Promise

After being a loyal TiVo user for 10 years- not to mention converting my wife, parents, and sisters- I'm not going to switch to anything unless it's significantly better. For reference, here is an in-depth comparison of the TiVo Premiere UI and Windows Media Center 7. It looks like MC7 beats TiVo in all but a couple areas that I care about (most significantly, the ability to undelete shows). Here are some of the features I'm expecting to get out of this effort.
DIY PVR 1: TiVo Grievances

Over the years we've upgraded to a Series 2 and a TiVo HD. The HD was another leap forward- both by recording HD and adding a separate tuner: now we can record two shows at once while watching a third and downloading a fourth! They even added YouTube, Amazon Instant video, and Netflix (others, too, but these are the ones we use).

I still love TiVo, but it's showing its age. Sure, you can download videos off it (using TiVo ToGo) to put onto your iPad, but putting video onto it is a real bear- StreamBaby and pyTivo make it possible, but it's not a pleasant experience. It has Netflix, but the interface only allows you to watch your instant queue- no searching, no related movies, etc. The YouTube interface works well enough but is painfully slow to search; even just navigating the menus (favorites, for instance) is slow.
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



