Archive for the ‘Media Center’ Category

BBC HD pixelation on nVidia 8800GTS card

Friday, June 11th, 2010

…and it’s gone!

For the past 2 years since installing my satellite I’ve been watching BBC HD over Freesat on my lounge Media Center with pixelation for the first 5 seconds of every show, including when I skip forward and backward which makes it very frustrating when trying to jump around programmes. This has never been a problem with my other machines with ATi cards so have always put it down to the nVidia card.

But lo and behold, this evening it’s gone!?! I can’t see any updates in Windows that explain it so perhaps it’s a BBC stream adjustment?

I’ve never seen it on ITV HD and have read that it can be down to the format of the BBC stream itself.

Whatever the reason I feel like I have a proper Media Center now; I feel liberated Smile

Windows Media Center Extenders

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Decent extenders are the Holy Grail of a Windows based system in the home. Not everyone wants a full-blown PC in every room where they want to watch TV, nor do they want to go the cost of adding a Home Server, so an Extender is the ideal option. Unfortunately, only Xbox360s are the most viable option, but they also have their own drawbacks. So, with Windows7 taking the PC market by storm, what is the future for Media Center Extenders? Read this engadget article for some good options.

Blu-ray upgrade to kitchen HTPC

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

I Spent time upgrading the kitchen HTPC to include a Blu-ray drive over the weekend; I’ve found that since the kitchen PC has been in place I use it for ripping DVDs more than I do the DVD/BD drive installed in the chimney breast in the lounge; mainly because it’s always on and also because it’s an easier terminal to use just in terms of ergonomics. I currently rip any DVDs across the network to the external drives on the lounge PC but if that’s not on, they end up on the C:/ drive of the kitchen PC and I drag them across later, now of course I can include ripping Blu-rays from the kitchen as well.

The drive is an LG multi-drive that’s a discontinued model now, but I’ve had it for a while. So empty the shelf, swing the PC around, open its case and install it…

N.B. To help with the cooling I’ve also butchered some ducting to the rear vent and led that up behind the shelf and out the top of the cupboard; it used to get quite warm in there before.

Kitchen PC Blu-ray upgrade

Not sure I’ve ever stated what this PC is built on; an aBit NF-M2 nView mobo, AMD 5600X2 CPU, 4Gb RAM, ATi 4550 HD graphics card (with HDMI), Compro VideoMate S350 DVB-S card, LG Blu-ray ROM, 400Gb Samsung HDD and Windows7 of course. It’s quick to boot into Windows, but needs a few minutes to steady itself so I want an SSD for this instead; the SSD in the lounge has proved incredibly nippy and improves reaction times of the Media Center interface greatly.

You can also see the Intelliplug in the background that powers up the AegoM speakers when the PC is on.

Kitchen PC

Once all done it’s put back together and slid back into place. I’ve also butchered the front of the case to help improve airflow through it; the front trim had no vent holes whatsoever so that was taken off to get air over the hard disk. It may not be pretty, but it is very functional.

Kitchen PC

And you’d never know it was there (you can just see the USB IR sensor poking out the top of the right-hand cupboard).

Kitchen PC

Windows7 Home Premium release

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Well my retail copies of Windows7 arrived last week and so far I’ve only gotten around to installing one of them on the lounge system. Nothing to note really: it looks and feels the same as the RC I’ve been using for the last few months. However it is nice to finally get the release version installed, and if it’s as stable as the RC (which hasn’t crashed once in a combined total of 12months use across 3 PCs) then Microsoft have won back my favour after Vista. BTW, the retail package comes with both 32 and 64 bit discs so you can hold off deciding which one to install right up to the last minute!

Windows7 Home Premium

Sky Player for Media Center

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Apart from waiting for my copies of Windows7 to arrive in the post today (three for the bargain pre-order price of £150), I read about the the new Sky Player integration but I didn’t think I come home to see it automatically added in my Media Centers.

Sky Player

Sky Player

Sky Player

They certainly didn’t hang about, but it all looks quite intersting and certainly adds another layer of function to the Media Center interface. Once up and running I’ll post some more shots.

Wiring layout update

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Nothing too exciting today, just an update to the wiring layout of the house to incorporate the kitchen. Hopefully it helps make a bit more sense of the whole thing. Extension still to be added ;-)

Wiring diagram

Kitchen install completed

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

The kitchen Media Center install is now complete. I have updated the kitchen page so head there if you want to read about it.

Kitchen Media Center

Windows 7 on an 64Gb Samsung SSD

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Well I bit the bullet and upgraded the main OS drive on the lounge PC to an SSD. To keep things relatively cheap I went for a standard Samsung model (SSD64M), which although not giving the best SSD performance out there is still better than my aging platter drive.

Overall the response of the PC has been greatly enhanced, especially in Media Center; the guide instantly pops up when called rather than the 4-5sec delay I sometimes had with my old drive. Boot time has dropped from about 65secs to around 45sec, so no major improvement there but the Samsung isn’t the fastest SSD (an Intel would wipe the floor with it, but than again it would also cost a heap more as well). Overall everything just feels a bit more responsive.

Installing Windows 7 on it went without a problem and required no other input from me on setting it up. I also downloaded the SSD Tweak utility to change a few things in Windows that should hopefully extend the life of the drive.

Flashed Gigabyte P31 ES3G checksum error and a new Kitchen HTPC…

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I mistakenly flashed the bios of the bedroom Media Center recently for no other reason than why not, and what happened? Checksum errors every time I tried to change the settings within the bios – typical.

It would boot OK with the default settings, but that’s hardly ideal. It’s a Gigabyte P31 ES3G and I jumped from bios F6 to F13 which may have been a leap too far in one upgrade. To fix it I double checked everything, from checking and replacing the battery to reseting the bios a dozen times by shorting the jumpers, each time trying a different technique read from the internet, but no matter what it just wouldn’t boot with anything other than it’s default settings; any changes would bring up a checksum error.

The solution was rather simple and unexpected; unplug the PC from the mains for an extended period even with the battery still in.

It came about being unplugged for a couple of days while I tested the new kitchen Media Center PC in its place (yes, another HTPC, and ironically made up of the aBit AM2 motherboard that use to run in the bedroom but was too unstable booting to be relied upon but since rebuilt has now shown great stability) and when put back in place after moving the new kitchen PC downstairs, it cleared itself; result!

Now as for the kitchen HTPC, it’s a micro ATX board squeezed into a micro ATX case given to me by a friend as a dumped PC (recycling at its best), and along with a spare HDD from the lounge PC (cos’ the lounge is now SSD), some new 4Gb of RAM, a cheap DVB-S card (a Compro VideoMate S350), and swappping out the decent PSU from the ancient office PC (a P4 that now works with the PSU from the friends dumped PC), it’s a PC from the ashes, a phoenix.

Even though my other systems currently reside in the attic I wanted this one to live local in the kitchen so it would become a hub-of-the-house more easily, so it was a challenge of getting some co-ax for the DVB-S card, and a network cable down into the top of the kitchen cupboards. But armed with 43cm of 19mm flat wood bit, I took some very careful measurements, aimed at the kitchen ceiling and started drilling, checking every few inches for electrics or unexpected plumbing and luckily enough to come out exactly where I wanted it to, at the bottom of the bedroom wardrobe where I could then simply run the wiring up through a hole in the ceiling over to the rest of the systems. Phew.

I’ll sort some photos out of this new work in the upcoming days.

Cross platform TV Guide

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Another amendment to Windows 7 Media Center is the intelligence of recording a program across the guide on another tuner if all current-type tuners are in use, i.e. to record something automatically on satellite if the freeview tuners are in use.

I normally just use the two Freeview (DVB-T) tuners for day-to-day use of Media Center and leave the satellite channels (DVB-S) at the bottom of the guide only to venture down there once in a while for random satellite viewing. But take this example below where I’ve tried to record three programs on Freeview; both DVB-T tuners are in use recording several programs during the hour that Supernatural is on but Media Center tells me in small print at the bottom that the conflicting program, Supernatural on channel 6, will be recorded on 118 (satellite channel number) instead.

Recording conflicts

This feature didn’t immediately make itself known as the conflicting program doesn’t appear as a recorded item in the above list (and obviously only works on channels that appear on both DVB-T and DVB-S), however returning to the guide and jumping down to channel 118 shows it as scheduled to record. It was only after seeing programs that I thought I couldn’t record appear in the RecordedTV list that I realised what it was doing. Nice touch.