November 2006 Archives

Home Media

The next phase of my media center quest is to get some sort of network attached storage solution.  Of course, I could just go and buy a Buffalo Linkstation, or some similar solution from Linksys, but my requirements outstrip what these boxes offer.  I want to be able to run whatever software on the NAS that I want.  For instance, now that the TiVo S3 is here, I want to share my photos and music out from the NAS system, and that requires something that speaks the TiVo beacon protocol.  There are a couple of open source solutions which make TiVo Desktop-like functionality available in Linux, like javaHMO, which, as the name suggests, is entirely written in Java.

Ideally, I should be able to expand the NAS box with USB 2.0, so I can finally set up a backup solution that doesn't involve me burning DVDs.  It should also be nearly silent, and use very little power, as it will be on all of the time, connected directly to my router, on the UPS.  Sounds like a tall order, doesn't it.  Surprise.  I found a box that solves almost all of these problems, the Kuro Box. This tiny box is basically the developer version of the Linkstation, which runs Linux on PPC.  It is BYO storage, so any 3.5" disk can be installed -- from the pictures in the linked article, it looks like the drive must be PATA, though.  The unit even has an integrated USB 2.0 hub, so adding external storage should be a snap..  Very promising!

Welcome back TiVo

After a looooong stint with the Comcast "Hell Box" (TM), TiVo finally released the Series 3.  My initial thought was to wait a bit, see if there were any initial adoption issues, then buy when the price came down after the holidays.  Not to be.  I couldn't wait that long, as the Comcast box started misbehaving again, chopping shows apart, dropping the last N minutes of a show, or being frustratingly inflexible when scheduling recordings.  I don't know why anyone writing PVR software would not support ending a recording before it is scheduled to end (the Motorola PVR with TV Guide software only allows you to record longer than the scheduled end time).

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from November 2006 listed from newest to oldest.

June 2006 is the previous archive.

August 2007 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.2-en