Howdy Fester.
Long time no post... Just thought I´d update you on my experiences with Linux MediaPCs so far...
Since I last posted here I have changed my Linux-box from Mandriva to Suse, or rather OpenSuse. MythTV installs and runs like a charm. It is easily added by connecting to an online upgrade-server within Suses update utility.
As an added perk installing Myth onto OpenSuse also puts multimedia-stuff into OpenSuse.
My setup is a 2.4Ghz P4 with an old nVidia GeForce 4200 card.
MythTV runs smooth and plays pretty much any media-file I can throw at it, but my gfx-card is a bit sluggish sometimes. Not so much during playback, but the menus can sometimes slow down to a crawl...
I also have a MediaPC in my livingroom running Windows MCE since this is the only software that integrates with my SetTopBox. I receive TV through my DSL as a streaming service kind of deal...
But to be fair, Windows MCE really doesn´t work as well as I hoped and I therefore have all my mediafiles hosted on the Linux-box. It just feels safer to have the files on a system that doesn´t crash a couple of times a week.
Besides, Linux systems are built for client/server tasks so I can boot pretty much any PC or MAC in the house to display mediafiles from my Linux-box using the MythTV interface.
Anyway, if any of you guys want to play around with Mediacenter PCs on Linux, based on my experience, I think you should have a minimum setup of:
P4 2Ghz CPU
nVidia Geforce 6600 or better
1Gig memory
I also think that MythTV is the best Mediacenter application for Linux. Especially because of it´s client/server model. If you install it using OpenSuse 10.2 you get a really neat system that is easy to maintain and installs MythTV real easy. It will also host a nice MythTV-backend server that you can connect thin clients to. Anything above Via Epia 600Mhz Eden systems should work fine as MythTV frontends.
The Knoppix-based KnpppMyth is even easier to install, but is a bit picky about hardware. It is really easy to use for booting any PC that it supports into a MythTV-frontend.
A nice and easy way to have a Mediacenter in the kitchen... ;-)
By the by,
Has anyone of you guys played around with the thought of an Amiga-based Mediacenter. At least for playing music and video - and maybe watching TV?!
An Amiga-PPC with a PCI-expansion should be up to the task... And the frontend for the system can be built in Hollywood or even Scala...
Any thoughts??
Did anyone try it??