Posts tagged MythTV
Ubuntu Karmic – Mac Mini – MythTV
Dec 15th
I gave up on OSX. I could not get the media center working the way I wanted. Plex and XBMC have their bugs, as previously posted, twice, preventing predictable functionality. MythTV for OSX simply is not as refined as its native Linux counterpart. It feels like running Windows applications via wine. I just scrapped OSX for Ubuntu Karmic. Out of the box, off of the cd, things work great. Audio works perfect. What didn’t work? The Mac Mini remote control. I tried for a day to get it to work the hard way. I saw that /dev/usb/hiddev1 was working and displaying data; shown with cat. But lirc would not bind to the device. Ultimately I removed the program, and ran a system update. Problem resolved; clearly a bug report was filed and a resolution provided.
Fanart and coverart work fine. The Linux based fronted is seamless compatible with the Linux based MythTV server. I didn’t even need to input the servers ip information manually. I did have to set the repeat feature, for each key in ~/.lirc/mythtv.
Now all I want is to have MythTV sleep the system and wake the system. I get it to sleep the system by making the halt script sudo pm-suspend. Adjust your /etc/sudoers files to allow passwordless sudo for /usr/sbin/pm-suspend. The halt script is configured in setup-general settings. Waking the computer is another thing that I have yet to get working.
Manager Your Own Domain – Its Your House
Oct 29th
Head over to business.yahoo.com, or Godaddy and buy a domain. Godaddy is cheaper, Yahoo is more expensive, both will get the job done. Having your own domain is like owning a piece of property. You can build whatever your want. You can post whatever signs you want. You can yell or sit quietly in the corner. A blog allows you to write, and share your thoughts with others; but a domain is so much more.
With a domain you can try out many different software applications that are available. Check out OpenSourceCMS. The process of installing, configuring, and tweaking an installed piece of software of fun. Learn the software and figure out how to make it work. It will keep you busy, and give you something to blog about.
Overall heres my favs.
1) Wordpress; for blogging.
2) MythTV; for home theater server.
3)Plex; for a home theater frontend.
4) Ubuntu; for a desktop os.
5) Debian; for a server.
Email on the go is a necessity to really consider yourself as connected. My smartphones of choice, in no particular order, are:
1) iPhone
2) Blackberry
3) That Droid looks cool!
Plex and XBMC for OSX – Lack of Support for MythTV Servers
Oct 18th
Plex and XBMC for OSX do not work in two particular situations. One with MythTV .21 when a recording is in the process of changing channels video will completely lock. If you attempt to escape out you will be able to get back to the previous screen, but if you attempt to press any other button, including pause or fast forward/rewind the app with freeze entirely. This is extremely frustrating, and can be alleviate with transcoding the video. The problem with transcoding is that sometimes the audio of the video file is completely dropped for some reason or another. The extremely appealing graphical user interface of Plex and XBMC make is frustrating that it is not completely compatible with MythTV as a server. Also Plex has no support for commercial skip features heavily integrated in MythTV. Such a shame. XBMC says it supports this feature to some degree, but I have not tried the app much because it requires the videos to be transcoded to avoid the above problem, and I did not like that because some of the videos lost audio entirely. Plex and XBMC for OSX do not work with MythTV .22. Also the mythbox script for XBMC OSX does not work with the most recent version of MythTV .22. It works with a slightly older version, but not with the trunk that ships with Ubuntu Karmic. Because of this Karmic can not be used to host a MythTV server for Plex or XBMC. You must use a Trunk version of MythTV frontend. This is not that bad and is livable. I currently use a Trunk build of MythTV frontend on my Mac mini. I dont have to worry about the problems with videos freezing, and it handles all commercial skip applications appropriately. The only thing is the mac mini remote does not handle volume controls. I found this frustrating at first, but then I got used to using the TV remote to also control the audio receiver connected to the mac mini. This comes in handy because I can turn off my TV and control the volume also from one remote, and control the frontend with the mac mini remote. In either cause I would not have TV power control with the mac mini remote, therefore the TV’s remote is a necessity so I might as well control the volume with it.
XBMC/Plex Crash Using MythTV
Sep 23rd
For the most part MythTV is nicely integrated into XBMC and Plex. You can view all recordings and pull up live tv. There is only one bug. When you do a recorind with your MythTV backend, and the beginning of the video starts on one channel, and changes during the recoding to another channel a hard freeze occurs. Albeit it may be my recoding method, which is firewire, but I cannot verifiy this for sure. I have a MythTV frontend also on the Mac Mini im using as a frontend, and during the same situation it does not crash. The problem is after getting a taste of XBMC and Plex as a frontend I cannot see myself going back to a MythTV frontend. I am going to delete the few recordings that are causing me problems, and try and re-record. Maybe its just a random bug, and not necessarily the recorded transition between channels. Maybe its some sort of flag that MythTV puts on the video file, but not likely. In either case XBMC and Plex for Macs are the way to go for a frontend, especially for MythTV
XBMC – MythTV – What to Use for your Frontend – Backend
Sep 21st
I have been using MythTV for some time now, and it covers all the bases. .21 works great, and I have no doubt .22 will be even better when it reaches stable. I use the backend to capture firewire in HD. It organizes, categorizes, schedules everything in an intuitive way. I used the frontend for some time locally and remotely, but I have come across a superior alternative. XBMC is simply superior. Albeit it is unstable at times, but so it the MythTV frontend. I bought a lowend mac mini a while back and had linux on it to run a remote MythTV frontend. I though “I have mac hardware, why no try and use a native mac application?”. I tried XBMC for mac, but I could not get it to actually load the movies. It would see and create a screenshot of the movies, but they would not play. I then looked into a forked version that actually worked as XMBC should have. OSXBMC worked out of the box; they call their fork Plex. It works with the mac mini remote out of the box. Set your box to sleep instead of shutdown, and you have an instant on low power PVR. Just add a video source: myth://mythtv:dbpassword@192.168.0.100 Look up your mythtv database password in /etc/mythtv/mysql.txt. Its at the bottom of the file. It can be tricky at first to setup your MythTV backend to serve remote systems. You have to use mythtv-setup as well as bind mysql to the local ip of the computer rather than localhost. Configure mysql in /etc/mysql/my.cnf. Check out OSXBMC/Plex at:




