2 hours ago
(For background, see this thread.)
I continue to struggle with watching recorded programs manually copied onto an offline laptop for viewing from the treadmill, on any player other than Windows Media Center. Had a chance today to play with the system, and here are my notes:
1.
I got Kodi to play WTV (Windows Media Center) files without stuttering, and without freezing up for unpredictable amounts of time when skipping (not FF, skipping) forward and back. This is good. However, Kodi does experience these stuttering and freezing-up issues when I try to play .TS or .MP4 files. This is bad, since it means that, for the foreseeable future, I'd have to do the additional step of converting Hauppauge/NextPVR's .TS files into .WTV files.
2.
Is yauiclient a 64-bit program? When I try to launch it on this 32-bit machine, Windows informs me that I can't run the program on this PC.
3.
Launching the NextPVR web app yields the following screen:
(Recall that this machine is not allowed online. There must be a way to reach a local address via the browser that doesn't trigger a complaint that it's not online?)
4.
I can launch the NextPVR UI client, but I can't get it to play any videos. Clicking on Videos in the menu in the left panel, leads to this long error message:
Evidently, this has to do with the proper folder for the videos not being indicated in Settings. But this is where the next problem arises. The window that pops up when I select Settings in the right-click context menu from the UI client, allows me to add a new folder in the Settings window... but the window is so huge that the button to Save the change is located far below the bottom of the screen. No display resolution that Windows allows, lets me see the buttons at the bottom. I can neither drag the window past the top of the screen, nor scroll down the window with a scrollbar, nor resize the Settings window so that I can see all of it within the confines of the laptop's screen. To confirm the creation of the new folder for NPVR, what else can I try?
Thanks in advance for any ideas or insights.
I continue to struggle with watching recorded programs manually copied onto an offline laptop for viewing from the treadmill, on any player other than Windows Media Center. Had a chance today to play with the system, and here are my notes:
1.
I got Kodi to play WTV (Windows Media Center) files without stuttering, and without freezing up for unpredictable amounts of time when skipping (not FF, skipping) forward and back. This is good. However, Kodi does experience these stuttering and freezing-up issues when I try to play .TS or .MP4 files. This is bad, since it means that, for the foreseeable future, I'd have to do the additional step of converting Hauppauge/NextPVR's .TS files into .WTV files.
2.
Is yauiclient a 64-bit program? When I try to launch it on this 32-bit machine, Windows informs me that I can't run the program on this PC.
3.
Launching the NextPVR web app yields the following screen:
(Recall that this machine is not allowed online. There must be a way to reach a local address via the browser that doesn't trigger a complaint that it's not online?)
4.
I can launch the NextPVR UI client, but I can't get it to play any videos. Clicking on Videos in the menu in the left panel, leads to this long error message:
Evidently, this has to do with the proper folder for the videos not being indicated in Settings. But this is where the next problem arises. The window that pops up when I select Settings in the right-click context menu from the UI client, allows me to add a new folder in the Settings window... but the window is so huge that the button to Save the change is located far below the bottom of the screen. No display resolution that Windows allows, lets me see the buttons at the bottom. I can neither drag the window past the top of the screen, nor scroll down the window with a scrollbar, nor resize the Settings window so that I can see all of it within the confines of the laptop's screen. To confirm the creation of the new folder for NPVR, what else can I try?
Thanks in advance for any ideas or insights.