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General Discussion General discussion about SageTV and related companies, products, and technologies. |
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#401
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Quote:
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#402
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One thing to say...
Congratulations.
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Eckwell / Chicago, IL SERVER: AMD Phenom III 8750 Black / 4 GB / XP Pro / JV1.6.24 / V7 / 2 PVR-HD (DirectTV) & HDHR (2xATSC) STORAGE: WD Raptor36GB boot / 11TB in 2 eSATA enclosure DEFAULT STV Comskip triggered by DirMON2 --- HD100 / HD200 /HD300 BMI fanart |
#403
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This is fantastic news. I've been a big proponent of SageTV adopting Android for future iterations of its extender hardware and developing an official Android client. The later would run on Google TV devices with the upcoming Honeycomb update with Android Market (i.e. apps) and tablets. The argument being that Sage could leverage the open environment of Android (and its Java underpinnings) to focus on their strong suits while the Android ecosystem takes care of where they've been lacking (the web, search, Netflix, Hulu, licensed rentals, etc). The idea that Sage would get huge exposure on embedded devices (tv, blu-ray, stb, avr) while possibly gaining access to protected content (cable card, satellite, AllVid) was just icing. Make no mistake, Google TV will be a success. Android 1.0 (released Sept '08) didn't take over the world in 7 months either.
The acquisition, however, changes the calculus and makes the possibilities even greater. I'm hoping for everything outlined above with Google making the Sage back-end available for free while also maintaining compatibility with existing extenders. If you're an existing user, nothing changes. If you were a new customer coming to Sage, pick up a v. 2 Google TV device and save money on licensing the software. They may not take that approach but I think it'd be ideal for new/existing customers. My objective opinion is that Sage would have faded into irrelevance within the next few years without a buyout; it's just the way the technology is headed. Being a huge fan of both Sage and Android, this is the best possible scenario I could have hoped for. |
#404
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But it is NOT an ekstender......
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#405
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an analogy: while U2 sells out tours and Britney's ticket sales stall, Britney sells far more albums than does U2, at least currently.
U2 fans are the "geeks", the faithfull supporters who never waver, much like Sage users. We are in the minority, but can always be counted on. Britney's fans are "units" that are marketed to - sold to, targeted as it were. Much like what Google does with advertising. That being said, how long can U2 keep touring for?
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#406
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#407
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so now it is time to panic due to the time and money invested into Sage. I have been nervous since the seeming drop of Macintosh support, and now i cannot even get the needed hardware extenders.
=/ agree completely.
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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 |
#408
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GoogleTV is our new extender and our future.
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WMC Server: Windows 8.1, Dell PowerEdge T110, 12G ram, 2x2TB hd, 4xHDHR, HDHR Prime, 1000Mb/s Provider: Suddenlink Cable |
#409
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#410
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Quote:
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Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#411
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I say about 25/30% maybe more of the america people in rural area do not have any high speed internet Satellite Internet suck (Slow, Uesless for games, Bandwith Caps 200/500mb a day and max speed of maybe 2mbps) Wireless Internet all types really bad in rural area (Can be as slow as old 56k modem up to DSL1024k if really lucky on a good day) |
#412
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BTW, I install EMR systems for small medical offices - if you want to see horrible overuse of the internet, look into HIPAA 5010 - a true government mandated nightmare. Just my $0.02 |
#413
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Here in Canada we have lots of issues with bandwidth caps but I am guessing that those will go away over time or at least increase to a size that it becomes irrelevant - like 1TB per month.
In terms of the rural users - I think they are kind of SOL. They are going to be missing out more and more as high speed internet becomes a requirement to be part of modern society - just like electricity and running water.
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New Server - Sage9 on unRAID 2xHD-PVR, HDHR for OTA Old Server - Sage7 on Win7Pro-i660CPU with 4.6TB, HD-PVR, HDHR OTA, HVR-1850 OTA Clients - 2xHD-300, 8xHD-200 Extenders, Client+2xPlaceshifter and a WHS which acts as a backup Sage server |
#414
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His answer was nothing. They had no toys back then. A stick and a ball if he was lucky. |
#415
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Thoughts:
1) If/when Sage goes away, what are the limitations to continuing to run what you have installed right now? Obviously, no further plugins or updates, no troubleshooting service. No EPGs, but I believe someone smarter than I could write a plugin (or a wiki about how to create your own XML mod) such that it could use some free service on the web somewhere. Don't the non-USA users have to do this now anyway? Otherwise, current SageTV software could keep working as-is, right? 2) The HD200/300 extenders still work in standalone mode. It's not like you have to throw them away - consider them like the WD or Roku devices, right? 3) Go do a web search (heh, "Google") the phrase "google buys sagetv". LOTS of articles out there, pretty much all of them view this purchase as a move by Google to get into the DVR market, because apparently the lack of DVR capability is viewed as the biggest reason that GoogleTV hasn't taken off. BTW, notice how many of the articles use a stock photo of the SageTV UI that isn't the default background - the "modern living room" photo that was part of a plugin? 4) My personal wish would be for SageTV to be left as-is, "grandfathered in" as it were, still able to receive EPG info from Google via Zap2It. But since that's unlikely, maybe that a future release of GoogleTV would work on the HDx00s via a firmware upgrade - such that the HDx00s would pull in GoogleTV UI and operation from the cloud, rather than our servers (similar to the "future of cable TV" youtube clip posted here last week from Comcast). If the future GoogleTV box is similar to an HD300, couldn't they do this? 5) For whoever above said OTA TV is dying, I'd like to introduce you to my growing number of friends who are cutting the cord (like I did). Mid-30s to mid-40s parents of small children who are realizing that pay TV has way too much trash, way too many infomercials, way too many re-runs, and the cost keeps going up and up. There's a small but growing counter-movement to pay TV, and having the ability to see certain shows for free online (or minimal netflix payment) just makes it easier. 6) TV as we know it won't go away soon, at least not totally. I agree with valnar above (and I have posted these opinions in other threads) that those on this forum are part of a small minority and have a skewed view of TV viewing. The VERY LARGE MAJORITY of people in the world still plop on their couch and watch TV. And a lot of them still don't even have a DVR. And many of those are (gasp!) under age 40. Which means it's gonna be a LONG time until TV moves to "all on-demand" as some here imagine. 7) If you think TV as we know it will go away, call ESPN and CBS. Ask them about the multi-BILLION dollar contracts they signed with the SEC (college sports conference, not Securities and Exchange Commission) to televise college football for the next umpteen years. Ask Fox is they are planning on moving the "American Idol" cash-printing juggernaut to an on-demand pay channel. Heck, there's a new ESPN launched every couple of years - Bill Simmons' old running gag about "ESPN8, the Ocho" isn't that far from being reality. Oh, and did I mention that pretty much all of the top TV shows yearly, all of which make billions for their respective networks, are not only on "regular" TV, but available free OTA? Why would they have incentive to switch that cash cow to "on-demand" or "online only"? Sports and Reality TV are driving the bus, and neither of those work well in an "on-demand" format. 8) I got into Sage because it did not have monthly fees. One-time purchase of software and hardware, I'm all OTA, I have ZERO TV bills. If this all switches to monthly fee-based, I'm gonna be mad. And if my HDHRs become useless.... 9) And, finally, as everyone else says, congrats to the Sage guys. They reached the goal of today's world... create a great product and then get bought out by a behemoth for a large check. I hope Narflex thinks of us when he's sipping champagne on his yacht.
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Server: AMD Athlon II x4 635 2.9GHz, 8 Gb RAM, Win 10 x64, Java 8, Gigabit network Drives: Several TB of internal SATA and external USB drives, no NAS or RAID or such... Software: SageTV v9x64, stock STV with ADM. Tuners: 4 tuners via (2) HDHomeruns (100% OTA, DIY antennas in the attic). Clients: Several HD300s, HD200s, even an old HD100, all on wired LAN. Latest firmware for each. Last edited by pjpjpjpj; 06-20-2011 at 10:47 AM. |
#416
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Your HDHR's will work on Media center. they won't become useless.
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SERVER: Gigabyte EP45-UD3R | Intel Core 2 Duo 2.67 Ghz | Geforce 8500GT | 4 Gb Corsair DDR2 1066 | 2 Hauppauge HVR-2250 | Win 7 64-bit | Sage TV 6.6.2 | 1.6TB (4 Drives) | Client: Sage TV STX-HD100 HD Extender |
#417
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I was off the grid most of this weekend, and didn't see this until my daily troll through the forums today. Just spend 60 minutes readying this thread.
I'm somewhat sad, but it's probably more anxiety than anything else. I just hate the thought of having to devote time to learning/installing something new, if, for some reason, my Sage server stops functioning. Like many on here, Google knows what color underwear I have on today. If they can create something that allows me to record TV, watch DVDs, listen to MP3s, watch photos, etc, on my TV, then I'm sure it'll be fine with me. I've put money into my setup, but also benefited greatly from the software and hardware too. I'm cautiously optimistic about all this, although, as I said, a little nervous too. I just hope we get some additional details within the next few weeks. Good luck to everyone
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Server: Ubuntu 16.04 running Sage for Linux v9 |
#418
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I don't know about anyone else, but Netflix only streams in stereo, not 5.1 (unless you have a PS3). That is why I stopped subscribing. Same with most streaming services - lousy audio.
Britney, here we come
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Sage 9 server = Gigabyte AMD quad-core - 4 gigs - integrated ATI HD4200 chipset - SSD boot, Hitachi Deskstar show drives. HD-PVR - Colossus - Win7 32 bit. HD200/300’s networked. HDHomerun tuner. "If you've given up on Weird Al, you've given up on life" - Homer Simpson |
#419
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In the past, I remember hearing from Sagezillas on this forum that have multiterabyte arrays and something like 8 tuners in their setup. I wonder if any of them have jumped off a bridge?
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#420
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Why? It's still working...
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unRAID Server: Intel Core i5 7600K, 48GB DDR4, 2x512GB PCIe M.2 Cache Pool, 2x10TB SATA3 Parity Drive, 3x8TB SATA Array, 1x hdHomeRun DVB-T2 Quattro, IPTV via xTeVe, unRAID 6.8.3, tvHeadEnd for recording back end, Emby Clients: 3 Nvidia Shields, 3 FireTV, 3 Win10 Pro PC Clients |
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acquisition, beer, google, googletv |
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