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General Discussion General discussion about SageTV and related companies, products, and technologies. |
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#1
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WHS v2 and PP2 announced...
As posted on the WHS forums:
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I'm already looking forward to v2... |
#2
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Awesome news! Thanks for the heads up. I hope Sage is working on a 64-bit version, though.
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#3
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Why? What advantage would there be for having a 64-bit SageTV? It would only complicate matters with drivers and codecs.
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Server: i5 8400, ASUS Prime H370M-Plus/CSM, 16GB RAM, 15TB drive array + 500GB cache, 2 HDHR's, SageTV 9, unRAID 6.6.3 Client 1: HD300 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia 65" 1080p LCD and optical SPDIF to a Sony Receiver Client 2: HD200 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia NS-LCD42HD-09 1080p LCD |
#4
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Because when properly written 64bit can provide much better performance. 32bit is old technology and has many limitations.
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#5
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32bit was better than 16bit and 64bit will eventually replace 32bit too. Eventually all drivers will be written for 64bit (until we get to 128bit), progress is inevitable.
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#6
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I think the question is what sort of improvements are people expecting with a 64 bit SageTV? Sage doesn't use large amounts of memory, doesn't do lots of memory-intensive processing. It doesn't really do anything that would benefit from "64-bit" optomizations.
Of course my question is what's the big deal with PP2 or V2, the link's got nothing more than the OP. |
#7
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Quote:
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__________________
SageTV V7 (WHS), Diamond UI Server: WHS with Xeon X3350, 4GB ECC, ASUS P5BV-C/4L, recording into a 6.6TB Drive pool Tuners: 4 (2x HDHR) Clients: 2x HD300, 1x HD200 Extenders, 1x Placeshifter 2x Roku XD |
#8
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YMMV... |
#9
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Wow. Just... Wow.
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SageTV V7 (WHS), Diamond UI Server: WHS with Xeon X3350, 4GB ECC, ASUS P5BV-C/4L, recording into a 6.6TB Drive pool Tuners: 4 (2x HDHR) Clients: 2x HD300, 1x HD200 Extenders, 1x Placeshifter 2x Roku XD |
#10
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EDIT: Maybe this will help... http://gizmodo.com/5076473/giz-expla...e-about-64+bit Quote:
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Last edited by S_M_E; 01-23-2009 at 03:10 AM. |
#11
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__________________
SageTV V7 (WHS), Diamond UI Server: WHS with Xeon X3350, 4GB ECC, ASUS P5BV-C/4L, recording into a 6.6TB Drive pool Tuners: 4 (2x HDHR) Clients: 2x HD300, 1x HD200 Extenders, 1x Placeshifter 2x Roku XD |
#12
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The point is; transitioning from 32bit to 64bit is nowhere near the same thing as putting makeup on the gui and I'd prefer to have my apps running in a native 64bit architecture than virtualized. Yes, that is enough reason. While we don't know what a 64bit Sage will be like; that's only because it hasn't been built and tested...yet. Nice try... |
#13
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Wonder if my participation in the first WHS closed beta will get me a spot on the WHS2 betas?
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Server: AMD Phenom 2 920 2.8ghz Quad, 16gb Ram, 4tb Storage, 1xHVR-2250, 1 Ceton Cable Card adapter, Windows 7 SP1 |
#14
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Ultimately, if I'm running a 64-bit WHS server, I'd like all my apps to also be 64-bit. I've never attempted to run a 64-bit OS because I don't want to mess with the (and my admittedly assumed) hassle of emulating 32-bit under 64-bit. Maybe it works perfectly. I don't know. Will there be a slow-down? I don't know. Will there be compatibility issues? I don't know. I'm not sure I want to be the guinea pig, either. So, if I'm running WHS now and intend to continue doing so when the next version comes out, I'd also like to know that my applications will continue to work as well as they do today. If someone can tell me that all my 32-bit apps will work flawlessly on a 64-bit OS with more than 4GB of RAM, then I'll shut up about wanting 64-bit apps. |
#15
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I imagine that eventually they will make a 64-bit version. But as has already been said there is no compelling reason for them to develop one now or in the near future. The only gain would be access to more RAM (as if 2GB isn't enough for SageTV) and more registers. These are not compelling reasons compared to the switch from 16-bit to 32-bit. 64-bit for 64-bit's sake is lame when there is no discernible difference between running a 32-bit app on either 32-bit or 64-bit OS's.
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Server: i5 8400, ASUS Prime H370M-Plus/CSM, 16GB RAM, 15TB drive array + 500GB cache, 2 HDHR's, SageTV 9, unRAID 6.6.3 Client 1: HD300 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia 65" 1080p LCD and optical SPDIF to a Sony Receiver Client 2: HD200 (latest FW), HDMI to an Insignia NS-LCD42HD-09 1080p LCD |
#16
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They definitely need to assure 64-bit OS compatibility, as for actually converting/optomizing Sage to 64-bit code, I think that's a complete waste of time (unless necessary for compatibility reasons).
It's like asking for a 64bit optomized email app. |
#17
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Why doesn't MS just build an OS that will allow 32/64 bit drivers and apps to *both* work?
Apple did it, and continues the transition to a full 64 bit OS with 10.6 - yet "legacy" drivers and apps still function.
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MacBook Core2Duo 2 ghz nVidia 9400M GPU 46" Sammy HLP4663 720p DLP 2x HDHR, all OTA QNAP TS-809: 12.5 TB for Recordings/Imports/TimeMachine/Music HD200 via 802.11n in Living Room 802.11n client in bedroom |
#18
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I know the reason why 64-bit Vista doesn't allow unsigned drivers is because pressure on MS from the content providers has forced them to put more and more DRM into their operating systems, which could easily be bypassed by an unsigned driver. Based on that, it reasons that allowing mixed 32/64 drivers would undermine these protections. Sure, you could argue that they could just require signed 32-bit drivers as well, but that would be just as bad as 64-bit only since there are a ton of unsigned 32-bit drivers out there that would stop working. As for the comparison to Apple - that's hardly valid. Apple has the luxory of tightly controlling what hardware goes in their machines, so they don't have to have drivers support even a fraction of the hardware that Windows does. |
#19
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Sorry, it was too easy... |
#20
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Most but not all apps work fine in x64. There are cases of things not playing well with x64 but I don't have an actual list. I could probably find a partial list. Quote:
I can easily image that Sage could benefit from 64bit while transcoding and commercial skipping multiple streams. Until they build/test one we'll never know for sure. |
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