Archive for the ‘Home Theatre’ Category

Windows Home Server Power Pack 2

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

After procrastinating for ages, the availability of Windows Home Server for Technet Plus subscribers got me motivated and my Windows Home Server is now up and running.

  • Motherboard - Intel DQ45CB (mATX, 5 x SATA, 1 x eSATA, Intel Gigabit)
  • Processor - e5200 (2.5GHz, 45nm, 65w max)
  • Memory - 4GB (2 x 2GB Geil PC6400 DDR2)
  • Storage - 2 x WD Green Power 1TB, 1 x 500GB Samsung, 1 x 400GB Samsung
  • OS - Windows Home Server PP2.
  • Case - Antec Mini P180
  • PSU - Antec NeoHE 500W.

Total Storage is 2.64TB with just over 1TB used so far.
Most folders have the duplicate option enabled.
PC backups are working well, and Media Centre Connector works (if a little slowly).

The solution is virtually silent thanks to the Mini P180 design and the HD’s are typically running at between 32-38C.

Just looking at automation of moving recorded shows from my VMC box to the WHS.

Current State of HD Audio for PCs - Why we are still waiting…..

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Anandtech posted up a good (and short) summary article about the current state of HD audio over HDMI for PCs.

It can be found here.

It’s very hard not to get immensely frustrated about the effort required for consumers to actually access the full features of the product they have bought due to the “consumer last” position of the media companies and their willing accomplices in the PC and HT audio industry.

Calibration - Maximising my HT “Investment”

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

I recently had my Fujitsu Plasma screen and source devices ISF calibrated by Avical Australia. It took approximately 2 hours and cost a three figure sum.

So was it worth it?

YES! A resounding “Yes!” actually. All other family members noticed the improved picture quality and the richer colours, and brilliant contrast that was now consistent across all sources. I’m very happy with it.

I learnt a lot observing and discussing with the engineer doing the calibration. It was interesting to see that the final configuration was quite significantly different to my own settings!

One of the issues that came up was that despite the advances in thin panel technology fewer (not more panels) have advanced configuration options that can really assist in getting the best out of the panels. The engineers’ personal view was that in the current market Pioneer (Professional or Kuro) were best for plasma and the Sony X series for LCD and pretty much the rest should be left alone. Fortunately my now venerable (in flat panel terms) Fujitsu 50″ was the last of the models with advanced calibration options.

Much like the purchase of a sound meter and a good hour with a how-to that were a revelation on the audio side, I have found that the display calibration has really improved the quality of my HT experience, and I can highly recommend it for those who have made a substantial investment in HT environment.

One consideration is that you need to have all your source devices available and cabled up to your final specification as changing devices or even connectivity types will impact on the display calibration.

HDMI Cable Gone Bad - Revisited

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Well I finally got round to organising to replace the faulty HDMI cable in my wall between the AVR and my wall-mounted TV.

Assisted by my friendly Hi-Fi guy we took the Plasma TV off it’s hooks and inspected the faulty cable. Try and we might we couldn’t get the existing cable to budge (in hindsight this should have caused alarm bells to ring).

We then tried to pull the replacement Kordz Evolution S 10m HDMI cable through the conduit using the pull wires. Disaster struck when we were about 90% of the way through. The pull-wires stuck and an attempt to pull it further caused the pull-wires to detach from the HDMI cable. Bugger!

It appears that the final turn in the conduit is too sharp and it prevent cables proceeding. So I’m back to running the HDMI cable in front of the feature wall and my in wall conduit is of no use.

I’m now awaiting the assistance of a custom installer who specialises in this sort of activity.

Linksys DMA2100 Media Center Extender

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Linksys DMA2100

My Linksys DMA2100 was delivered a week ago and I’ve set it up in the master bedroom. It’s primary function will be to remove the need for my dearly beloved to move from the very comfortable bed and fight for a timeslot in the Home Theatre room to watch recored HDTV or DVDs.

Setup was straight-forward and relatively painless. I found that the component connection looked a little soft into the Samsung 32″ LCD in our bedroom. However, changing over to HDMI gave a better picture.
As per the addendum note in the box, I did have to amend the Flow Control setting on the NIC in my Media Centre to RX in order to get sufficient quality for HD TV. I’m using the wired Ethernet option (wired each room with CAT6 when I had the HT built).

Watching Live HDTV, Recorded TV and using the Guide is just like Vista Media Centre. My wife is happy with the functionality.

For watching movies XVid worked and you can get DivX working - go here.
Also I have found that DVD VOB’s do play.
It’s just that you don’t have access to the DVD menu options but if you are like me and used DVDShrink to merge the 1GB (or less) VOB files into a single file using English soundtrack only then you can simply play that. I’ve also added a shortcut in the folder to each movie and this can be used to launch the movie.

Only one downside/bad experience so far. Two day into ownership on the Sunday the DMA2100 hung for a couple of hours and nothing seemed to work to reset it. Even using the rear-reset button, then suddenly it came good. Very frustrating but it has not reoccurred.

Well January is done…onto to February….ps Welcome to 2008!

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

A Very Belated Happy New Year.

Meh, I’ve got the flu (before my employer had a chance to organise this year’s flu vacination!) and after 3 days off work I’ve still suffering but at the green flem stage. Ugg.

Well January is done. The good news is that I only worked 9 days of the month – the bad news is that I was only paid for 9 days.

Christmas was good but over too quickly. Fortunately I only had 3 days of work before we went on holiday for two weeks.

We had an excellent time in Thailand. Bangkok is pretty much everyone has ever said and the traffic is legendary for good reason. The temples were fantastic and my wife and daughter enjoyed the shopping. The second week was spent in Krabi at the fantastic Pakasai Resort where we lazed by the pool except for 2 day trips out. I was very reluctant to return….but we did as the start of the school year beckoned.

So what of the High Definition Wars?

Obviously whilst I was away on holiday there were some significant developments in the Hi-Def “War”. The biggest was Warner dropping their format neutral stance and going Blu-Ray only. The news prompted many inside and outside of the industry to declare BDA the winner and HD-DVD dead. But wait…………..HD-DVD isn’t dead…yet.

As a result on the Warner decision, and after a period of shocked insensibility by the HD-DVD Forum and Toshiba, prices were slashed starting in the US and then Europe. Finally here in Australia we got the price cuts too and whilst too early to tell whether it is merely a “dead-cat bounce” HD-DVD players have apparently outsold BD players (including the PS3) 2-to-1 last week here in Oz.

I now have an Toshiba HD-XE1 player and it is indeed a very fine piece of machinery. It has the special region free firmware to enable it to play all regions of SD-DVD’s thanks to the ingenuity of a fellow forum member here in Australia. It has the excellent Silicon Optix/HQV Reon Video Processor which does wonders with SD-DVD processing.

I’ve ordered 20 or so more HD-DVD titles to do my “bit” for the struggle.

Onto February when we all perspire in the final, humid sweatbox that is the tail-end of summer and such lunacy as the start of the Super 14 Rugby Season will be upon us. For some reason the fact that whilst Rugby Union is traditionally a winter sport it is now played in late Summer/Autumn in Australia has yet to penetrate the heads of the manufacturers of rugby attire. So if someone sees me at Suncorp stadium without a rugby top it’s only temporary until it cools down and I can were a rugby top without melting.

Oh….HD-DVD still isn’t dead yet. Perhaps someone could answer me this?

I don’t understand why a lot of the so called “geek” community have decided to endorse the standard that has mandatory region coding (admittedly not an issue for the majority of American’s who struggle with their own geography let alone the rest of the globe), and mandatory DRM with the prospect of even more onerous checks in the future using BD+.

Bad Cable, Treat your HDMI Cables Well…or…..else

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

I was dashing too and fro yesterday (something to do with ‘Xmas), and arrive back home to discover son waiting to lodge a service ticket for the HT.

The screen had gone all hazing and then green. Fortunately son had just shut down HT and waited for me to return.

Quick diagnostics established that video from the AVR to the Display was not working. It is fed by a 10m HDMI cable which runs through conduit in the wall.
Some quick HDMI cable swapping (always powering all devices off between changes) established that the DVD player to the Display worked fine using a short HDMI cable but when trying the same combo with the in wall HDMI cable a green screen resulted.

A quick visit to Living Sound and the loan of a 10 metre Kordz Evolution S HDMI cable and I’ve well and truly proven that the in-wall cable is at fault. Bugger…not the easiest thing to replace.
(BTW try borrowing a couple hundred dollars of cable from your local box shifter, not to mention a sub and a HD-DVD player whilst waiting for yours to arrive)

So sometime during the recent frenetic activity in and around my HT during the last few weeks, the in-wall HDMI cable had been pulled/plugged/twisted one too many times.

So a new addition to the list of Holiday activities is to dismount the Plasma and pull the replacement HDMI cable through the approximate 8 metres of conduit (2 spare pull wires available). Not exactly what I had in mind for the festive season.

Moral of the story is to treat your cables but especially the HDMI ones well.

Upgraditis

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

Upgraditis is a common affliction, especially in the technological age, and for some time I have been battling the symptoms on the home theatre front.

It’s been there for a while nagging away at my conscious. Initially I was looking to improve low frequency performance especially for music and thence began a search for a musical sub woofer. Then it was all compounded by my jumping off the fence regarding HiDef movies.

Anyway, with a bit of help from an excellent deal from my local dealer (certainly sounds like an addiction!) I may have been cured…well in remission at least.
Hi-Fi Additions

  • Yamaha RX-V3800Bi AVR - replaces RX-V2600B
  • REL R205 Sub Bass System -replaces Energy XL8 sub
  • Toshiba HD-XE1 - replaces Denon 2930 for SD-DVD and HD-EP10 for HD-DVD
  • Oppo 980HD for DVD/CD/SACD Playback (can carry SACD over HDMI as DSD) - replaces Denon 2930 for SACD/CD duties

Currently only the RX-V3800 is installed (and currently uncalibrated). The rest is on order with the Oppo coming from the US as the Australian supplier is out of stock and waiting for the new 983HD before ordering more.
Home Theatre PC

  • Replaced original X1300 video card with a X2600PRO with Heat Pipe = near silence from HTPC!
  • Added Pioneer BDC-S02
  • Installed Slysoft AnyDVD HD and Upgraded the bundled Pioneer PowerDVD to the full PowerDVD Ultra.

As a result I now have region free (and AACS & HDCP free) Blu-Ray playback.
The only downside at the moment is that I have to use optical to feed the audio to my AVR and this results in the Hi-Def audio track being down-converted to Dolby Digital. The solution is to use the multi-channel analog outs into my AVR’s multi-channel analog in. Unfortunately these are currently occupied by the analog outs from my Denon 2930 for SACD support but once the Oppo 980HD arrives they will be freed up and I will be able to get PCM out to my AVR.

Oh my Goodness……

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Picked up my HD-EP10 this afternoon. biggrin.gif

Bonus #1 The free-in-the-box movie was “Chronicles of Riddick” biggrin.gif biggrin.gif Which actually the one I wanted (there is normally 1 of about 4 movies in the box).
Bonus #2 Was a special firmware CD from a DTV Forum user was in the Postbox biggrin.gif biggrin.gif . More on this in a minute.

It took a while to get kids sorted, help my son clear a path through the Lego to the Hi-Fi rack and do the usual shuffling, sorting and cable management.
There is only a single HDMI cable running to my Yamaha RX-V2600B AVR with both video and audio over the one cable.

Even at 1080i (limit of my Fujitsu 50″ Plasma) the image quality on Chronicles of Riddick is fantastic. I know it is reputed to be a good transfer but even so I am extremely happy. Can’t wait for the other movies to land.

Chronicles of Riddick HD-DVD

The wife was vaguely impressed, kids more so, and the wife then enquired as to the price and actually seemed quite impressed by the price cut and bonus DVD’s.

A bit later I got a chance to run the firmware update from the CD sent to me, and now my new HD-EP10 is no longer region locked for SD-DVD’s (with the exception of RCE encoded disks which will likely take another update to resolve).

It’s one of the weird things about the HD-DVD players available round the globe that whilst the HD-DVD format is deliberately not region locked, HD-DVD players still enforce SD-DVD region locking. Fortunately here in Australia, our competition watchdog has ruled against region locking and with the efforts of some wonderful forum members we have region free SD-DVD playback (excluding RCE encoded disks - mostly Fox) for the Australian versions of the HD-XE1 and HD-EP10.

I’ve since processed my $100 cashback redemption and 4 bonus HD-DVD’s online too.

Welcome to the Hi-Def Battlefront

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

 

blu-ray_vs_hd_dvd.jpg

In light of my recent decision to purchase an HD-DVD player I have been reading and posting in the relevant sub-forums on a couple of my regular haunts.

Some of the stuff that goes on would scare many sane people away, possibly for good. Some of the fanboism exceeds acceptable bounds. Not only do you get verbatim spouting of press releases, and name calling and worse, it even causes some otherwise rational members (based on their other posts) to take temporary leave of their senses and even losing their cool.

What makes people do this? Last time I looked it was simply two competing formats for Hi-Def movies. At this time neither party can land a knockout blow and it looks like both will be around for a while. I imagine sometime after Xmas I’ll get a Blu-Ray player of some sort and then start having to educate the family about which machine to put the disks into.

Oh and my HD-DVD is due in at dealer tomorrow (Friday) and my order of HD-DVD’s from the US have most recently “Departed FexEx Location, Memphis, TN”.