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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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Not a Sage user yet, wondering if a setup like I want is possible
Hey everybody, I've got a friend who swears by SageTV and I am thinking of setting up a system (mutliple machines) and running SageTV on it. My current setup is just using a couple modded Xboxes running XBMC to stream content from a fileserver.
What I would like to have: 2 or 3 cable boxes hooked to a PC dedicated to the capturing, this box hidden in my server closet. Recording digital cable content in DVD quality (6mbps 720x480, preferrably MPEG-4) and recording HDTV transport streams from ATSC and QAM. A separate box hooked to my TV that allows me to watch Live TV, either through another cable box hooked directly to it or, optimally, streamed across the network from the capture PC in the server closet, watch recorded programs streamed over the network with no transcoding involved, upsampling to 720p resolution, including DVD ISOs. Would also like this machine to be able to dump my DVD collection onto my fileserver or the recording box over the network and then stream those ISOs with menu support and such. Output from the machine hooked to my TV should be component with optical audio supporting Stereo, Dolby Digital, and DTS. Would like to have the ability to compose DVDs of recordings on the machine hooked to the TV and burn there, pulling the content across the network, either in DVD format or, most importantly, in the format it is stored in. Definitely need to be able to also stream the music, video, etc that I already have stored on my fileserver. Indexing and being able to browse offline media (DVDs, or collections of MPEG-4 files on DVD) with the system asking you to insert the needed disc if you attempt to play. How much of this does SageTV support? I've read a bit about the network encoding servers and such and it sounds like I might be able to do most of it, but haven't really found any place that describes the kinds of setups possible in detail. Thanks for any information! OtakuCODE |
#2
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First off, as far as I know Sage can do all of this, with the exception of recording from within the Sage software. That would require additional software. Here is what I know. Some may have to add more to things I don't currently do.
1. Of course sage can sit in a closet with 2-3 boxes hooked to it. That is how everyone does it with DTV and Dish Network. You will need a USB-UIRT if you are using digital cable boxes (unless they can be controlled via a serial connection). 2. Of course you can stream live tv. What would be the point if it couldn't? Just a simple recorder? That's no fun! No box needed next to the tv. 3. Upsampling will actually be a function of your Sage Client hooked to the tv. Your tv out cards (using either component or dvi/hdmi) will actually do the upsampling (not so much Sage). Obviously your tv encoder cards will only record at 640x480 but your video card will take care of the rest. I recommend a 6600 or better if going nvidia 4. While I don't currently have my DVD collection on my servers (I only have 400GB of space in my Sage Server), I know this is working. Many are doing it. In fact in the new Beta versions, they have DVD playing over the MediaMVP's even. 5. Streaming audio/pictures/videos is possible. In sage 1.0-5.04, the audio searching isn't necessarily the best, however, I understand that 6.0 Beta is much improved (I haven't tried it yet). 6. DVD recording - You could do it on the client I would imagine, but wouldn't be thru sage. Personally I wouldn't recommend doing it from the client hooked to the tv regardless if it was an option or not. Why? I would be worried about buffer underruns due to a network drop out/slow down. Just my thoughts anyway! 7. Inserting Disk - I haven't tried this either. Someone else will have to advise if this works or if it is ever been tried.
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Sage Server: AMD Athlon II 630, Asrock 785G motherboard, 3GB of RAM, 500GB OS HD in RAID 1 and 2 - 750GB Recording Drives, HDHomerun, Avermedia HD Duet & 2-HDPVRs, and 9.0TB storage in RAID 5 via Dell Perc 5i for DVD storage Source: Clear QAM and OTA for locals, 2-DishNetwork VIP211's Clients: 2 Sage HD300's, 2 Sage HD200's, 2 Sage HD100's, 1 MediaMVP, and 1 Placeshifter |
#3
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paulbeers being up a good point at buffer underruns due to a network drop out/slow down. Quote:
Last edited by SHS; 12-09-2006 at 08:26 AM. |
#4
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Thanks for the info, guys! I'm not very worried about network issues causing problems with DVD burning... I burn all my DVDs over my gigabit network as it and I have absolutely no problem. I usually burn at 8x if I am simultaneously doing something like watching a streamed DVD (since now I burn at my main PC). My main desire to do it from there is just because I am a bit of a digital packrat, I don't like to delete anything. You never know when you might want to pull out that old show that got cancelled after one season and give it another watch (altho since I buy the DVDs of most shows I like for the extra features and improved quality).
One thing I saw mentioned in the FAQ, but didn't find a good explanation of is Sage's "Archived" content feature... what is that? It sounded like Sage could still have information about content you moved offline. Also, does Sage treat content recorded directly in Sage much differently than content just hosted on a Samba share? Can it still keep track of whether things have been watched, save bookmarks, etc? I run Democracy Player on a server and have it dump its downloads onto my fileserver and watch a great deal of content that way. XBMC doesn't do things like keep track of what you have watched or anything, but it will at least keep bookmarks. Even if Sage just let me move the stuff I have watched into some other directory, that would be fantastic and make burning it much easier. Hardware-wise, what types of MPEG-4 encoding cards are supported? And you mention the resizing would be done by the video card... I have an ATi Radeon 9800 Pro card that I was planning on using (got it for free and they can be modified to run with passive cooling) on the playing box, is the upscaling configurable? Like can I tell it to do precise bicubic resizing or am I just stuck with whatever algorithm it uses? My HDTV is 3+ years old, so it lacks in several areas, and its scaling is one of them, so I was hoping to be able to compensate with Sage or the video card. Do the Sage extenders like the MediaMVP support full HD transport streams? The main reason I want to upgrade from my current setup with XBMC is because it simply doesn't have the processing power to handle the high data load of TS streams. Thanks again for the info, I definitely think I will be getting into Sage soon. MythTV has some features I want, but I really don't want all the hassle it appears to be. OtakuCODE |
#5
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You can set up SageMC (the custom STV that mimicks Media Center from Microsoft) to do the "offline" DVD thing. Overall, I can't see anything from your list that Sage can't do. It will take a little work to set it all up as you have a healthy list of requirements, but that is all part of the fun!
-PGPfan
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Sage Server: Gigabyte 690AMD m-ATX, Athlon II X4 620 Propus, 3.0 GB ram, (1) VistaView dual analog PCI-e tuner, (2) Avermedia Purity 3D MCE 250's, (1) HD-Homerun, 1.5 TB of hard drives in a Windows Home Server drive pool, Western Digital 300GB 'scratch' disk outside the pool, Gigabit LAN Sage Clients: MSI DIVA m-ATX, 5.1 channel 100w/channel amplifier card, 2 GB ram, , (1) Hauppauge MVP, (1) SageTV HD-100 Media Storage: unRAID 3.6TB server |
#6
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Heh, I agree, I love playing with this stuff, just wanted to make sure I could eventually get to where I want to be. I will start off slowly and keep expanding. My main concerns are HDTV recording and some other things I have a feeling I'll just have to do without. Can you even watch On Demand content through Sage? I'm fairly certain you can't record it, but is there passthrough?
Also, any recommendations on cards that capture in an MPEG-4 format? (Divx, Xvid, MP4, any flavor is fine really) Thanks, OtakuCODE |
#7
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Otak, you can capture anything from a cable box thru s-video.
Most boxes should have a firewire connection. I (and many other users) use this for HDTV playback/recording, and other digital channels However, the cable co's are only required to have this port activated for local OTA channels (ie ABC, NBC, CBS). Comcast, in my location, only encrypts a few channels (HBO for instance), but I've heard that some people have everything in the clear, while others have almost nothing. I dont know of any consumer level MPEG-4 hardware cards. I think I saw a used box that did something liek that on EBAY, but it was well over $1000. |
#8
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Sage's "Archived" content feature see screenshot
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Last edited by SHS; 12-09-2006 at 10:21 AM. |
#9
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Only this one Plextor ConvertX TV-402U or ConvertX M-402U
Does that work with Sage? Add in 480p component input and thats a really sweet device. |
#10
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#11
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Ah thats a shame Stanger. I've actualy found I get better quality encodes with h.263 2-pass than h.264 single pass. And h.264 2-pass takes too damn long.
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#12
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Well, H.264 was just an example, basic idea is the quality of encoders in the Plextor, combined with the amount of memory and realtime constraints, ends up with them not being able to come close to matching the bitrate-to-quality ratio most people expect of MPEG-4.
IIRC, I think the general comment was they'd create MPEG-4 recordings at 50% or greater vs MPEG-2, that means 2-4Mbps. You can get good results with H.264 (eg Nero Recode) at under 1Mbps. My basic point was that most people expect MPEG-4 to mean the kind of quality/bitrate you get for offline converted DVD rips, ie close to DVD quality at bitrates under 1Mbps. The Plextor's just can't do that. |
#13
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There are some Realtime H.264 hardware acceleration encoder and transcoders but they cost a lot of $$$$$.
The run of mill chip don't even make use of all advanced features find in MPEG-4, DivX, XviD and etc like High Profile , High Definition. stanger89 I know it not the hottest thing in world but it is only low cost one there is. |
#14
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Ahh, thanks for the information about that Plextor card, I was looking into it. I'm not really interested in transcoding the MPEG-2, one level of lossy encoding is quite enough for me. Good thing big hard drives are pretty cheap
Hopefully someone will develop an affordable chipset for realtime H.264 encoding before too long and we'll see some cards with it that aren't too much. |
#15
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SageTV server & client: Win 10 Pro x64, Intel DH67CF, Core i5 2405s, 8 GB ram, Intel HD 3000, 40GB SSD system, 4TB storage, 2x HD PVR component + optical audio, USB-UIRT 2 zones + remote hack, Logitech Harmony One, HDMI output to Sony receiver with native Intel bitstreaming |
#16
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a) It's not such a big advantage as is normally associated with "MPEG-4" b) Recording to MPEG-2 with a newer/better card (eg the ViXS ones) and transcoding may be a better option. |
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