2013-02-17, 03:40 PM
Bought a RPi and wanted to see how it did as a NextPVR client. Haven't actually gotten as far as the NPVR Plugin as I just got it home last night after work.
I found a Debian distro called RaspBMC and it has a nice little windows utility that sets up an SD Card to install RaspBMC. Takes only a minute. http://www.raspbmc.com/
I plugged in the keyboard, mouse, SD Card, and power then watched as RaspBMC spent about 15 minutes downloading parts and installing. There ware a couple of reboots as well.
I walked away expecting the install to take a long time, grabbed a coffee, and came back to see XBMC waiting for me to set it up.
First came pointing at my 8 terabyte NAS (with about 5 TB of videos) and it started scanning the files, grabbing info from iMDB including fanart etc. I knew that would take a long time so I started browsing videos. I started watching some 1080HD videos and was immensely impressed when they played flawlessly despite the background scanning and downloading. The mouse movement was somewhat jerky in menus but nothing close to game stopping. I'll have to see today if the background scanning was a big contributor or not.
Set up the pictures folder and that worked quite fast - some are HUGE jpgs directly from my Canon T1i yet the thumbnails came up almost as fast as they do on my Dual core NPVR box.
Next I realized I hadn't set the screen resolution - it defaulted to 1920x1280 - so I dropped that to 1920x1080. XBMC doesn't seem to have changed the screen res to match the videos I was playing so I got letterboxing. With the 1080 setting they look better. I'll have to check into this later.
I'm very impressed so far - RaspBMC hasn't required any kind of work on my part beyond normal XBMC setting. If the NPVR add-on works this easily then I'll probably replace my current dual cord PC client machine with the RPi. Way less power, far less heat (my bedroom gets stinkin' hot with the laptops, two PCs, 42" LCD TV and Wii U/2TB USB Drive running all day.
I bought the RPi for playing with, not actually to be an NPVR Client. I didn't really think it would play videos so well. Guess I may be buying another RPi next week to actually play with.
I found a Debian distro called RaspBMC and it has a nice little windows utility that sets up an SD Card to install RaspBMC. Takes only a minute. http://www.raspbmc.com/
I plugged in the keyboard, mouse, SD Card, and power then watched as RaspBMC spent about 15 minutes downloading parts and installing. There ware a couple of reboots as well.
I walked away expecting the install to take a long time, grabbed a coffee, and came back to see XBMC waiting for me to set it up.
First came pointing at my 8 terabyte NAS (with about 5 TB of videos) and it started scanning the files, grabbing info from iMDB including fanart etc. I knew that would take a long time so I started browsing videos. I started watching some 1080HD videos and was immensely impressed when they played flawlessly despite the background scanning and downloading. The mouse movement was somewhat jerky in menus but nothing close to game stopping. I'll have to see today if the background scanning was a big contributor or not.
Set up the pictures folder and that worked quite fast - some are HUGE jpgs directly from my Canon T1i yet the thumbnails came up almost as fast as they do on my Dual core NPVR box.
Next I realized I hadn't set the screen resolution - it defaulted to 1920x1280 - so I dropped that to 1920x1080. XBMC doesn't seem to have changed the screen res to match the videos I was playing so I got letterboxing. With the 1080 setting they look better. I'll have to check into this later.
I'm very impressed so far - RaspBMC hasn't required any kind of work on my part beyond normal XBMC setting. If the NPVR add-on works this easily then I'll probably replace my current dual cord PC client machine with the RPi. Way less power, far less heat (my bedroom gets stinkin' hot with the laptops, two PCs, 42" LCD TV and Wii U/2TB USB Drive running all day.
I bought the RPi for playing with, not actually to be an NPVR Client. I didn't really think it would play videos so well. Guess I may be buying another RPi next week to actually play with.