corsasport.co.uk
 

Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » Geek Day » NAS 4tb and xmbc


New Topic

New Poll
  Subscribe | Add to Favourites

You are not logged in and may not post or reply to messages. Please log in or create a new account or mail us about fixing an existing one - register@corsasport.co.uk

There are also many more features available when you are logged in such as private messages, buddy list, location services, post search and more.


Author NAS 4tb and xmbc
Munchie
Member

Registered: 17th Jul 01
Location: I swap goats for mobile phones
User status: Offline
23rd May 13 at 23:16   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Yo dudes I would like the following to connect to my TV....

4Tb nas
Xmbc PC thingie
Home plug

I would like to connect my TV to WiFi and Stream everything I have saved over The years. I have a nexus 7, Samsung smart TV and Samsung s3.

Would like at least 3-4tb.

Any advice would be excellent
gooner_47
Member

Registered: 20th Jul 04
Location: Bexhill/Croydon
User status: Offline
24th May 13 at 00:02   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

If all you need to do is stream media to your TV (and you know Linux, or at least don't mind playing around with it for the first time), you might consider a Raspberry Pi.

I assume there's no RJ45 port near your TV, hence the need for the home plug? So you'd have CAT6 from the home plug to the pi, then HDMI from the pi to the TV. I would personally go for a wired setup rather than wi-fi to guarantee reliability when streaming your content.

The pi has two USB ports, one of which you can plug your 4TB HDD into for your NAS:

http://www.howtogeek.com/139433/how-to-turn-a-raspberry-pi-into-a-low-power-network-storage-device/

It'll need to be an externally powered one (i.e. have it's own plug) for a drive that big.

The pi will be running xbmc and can comfortably stream 1080p movies.

Your Samsung TV will almost certainly have Anynet+ (their own word for HDMI-CEC), which will allow you to communicate with the pi and navigate through the xbmc menus using your existing TV remote.

The pi is completely silent as it's passively cooled, and can be left on 24-7 and still cost under a tenner per year due to the ridiculously low power consumption:.

Oh... did I mention it only costs £23? OK... more like £40 once you buy a power supply, case, SD card for it, but still....

Downsides with it: you won't have the nice, pretty GUI that you would get with a "proper" NAS. Fancier skins in xbmc may struggle due to the limited power of the computer, but basic ones (google confluence to see how it looks and if you like it) will be fine, you do need to be willing to play around with Linux to get it up and running and maintain it.

My parents have bought a new bungalow and I'm in charge of tech! This exact setup will be going in for all their multimedia needs! Just with another drive attached for a backup solution.
Tom J
Organiser: South Wales
Premium Member


Registered: 8th Sep 03
Location: Bridgend
User status: Offline
24th May 13 at 07:15   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I want to do something similar to Munchie but also with the ability to use and control IP cameras, would that setup work for that gooner? Was considering the synology NAS but the licences for each cam are stupid money
Munchie
Member

Registered: 17th Jul 01
Location: I swap goats for mobile phones
User status: Offline
24th May 13 at 09:28   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Just ordered homelink http://www.amazon.co.uk/TP-Link-PA411KIT-AV500-Powerline-Adapter/dp/B0084Y9N3O/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1369384707&sr=8-2&keywords=home+plug

And my mate is selling me his Pi version 2 for £40 with memory card and case

Next thing is the hard drives!
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
24th May 13 at 11:14   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

As a media streamer the RPi is fine but it's *technically not really up for the role as a NAS and hanging a load of USB drives is a messy solution.
You'd be better off purchasing a decent NAS box (QNap or Synology) and then either seeing what your Samsung TV is like regarding streaming media and then purchase a streamer/use a RPi with a versions XBMC (OpenELEC / Raspbmc etc) if need be.

*USB and Ethernet share the same controller, so performance will never be all that due to bandwidth limitations. Plus if you plan to stream to a number of devices at any one time then a 100Mb link will be relatively easy to saturate.

[Edited on 24-05-2013 by Dom]
noshua
Member

Registered: 19th Nov 08
User status: Offline
28th May 13 at 21:40   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Microserver + Rpi to stream, if you can't get it to stream without stuttering then you're doing something wrong
Rob_Quads
Member

Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: southampton
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 07:37   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by noshua
Microserver + Rpi to stream, if you can't get it to stream without stuttering then you're doing something wrong


I wouldn't quite go that far. it depends what format all your videos are in. The RPi is not good for all of them. I have some that just fail when played through an RPi because the onboard acceleration does not support the codec so its down to the CPU which does not have a hope in hell due to its lack of power. - far from doing anything wrong just not compatible. Yes you could recode all your videos etc
John
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 07:53   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I've not had much success with my collection and my Rpi. I've tried lots of stuff and don't think I'm doing it wrong.

I won't be recoding everything.
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 09:39   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Most of my collection is a mixture of MPEG2, *264 and XVID/DIVX and can't say i've had any issues, even with 20GB rips. Use to get a few stutters when playing high bitrate material but overclocking the RPi seemed to sort that.
noshua
Member

Registered: 19th Nov 08
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 18:27   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I download scene rips, i.e. 1080/720p MKV's and the usual XviD AVI's, they all played fine.

If you're downloading or ripping the full m2ts rips, you've clearly got plenty of disk space (and cash), chances are you're using something more powerful already anyway
Tiesto
Member

Registered: 6th Jun 02
Location: Hinckley, Leicestershire
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 18:46   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I recently set up mine with a Zyxel NAS, then got a Intel NUC (Celeron version) which I use to read from the NAS and output to the TV. Works are treat and no issues. Running XBMC on Openelec, with Aeon Nox skin.

Abit expensive, but wanted something small and near silent which the NUC is basically, be able to run full rips and stream everything around the house (the NAS has an itunes server built-in which is quite handy)


[Edited on 29-05-2013 by Tiesto]
Bart
Member

Registered: 19th Aug 02
Location: Midsomer Norton, Bristol Avon
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:13   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I'd Echo what Dom has said.

My own experience with Powerlines is that they're ok for small avi rips, but anything of any size will stutter.
Also, will the other powerline device be connected on the same power ring? If not, that'll loose you some connectivity speed as well.

The same really applies to the Rasberry Pi, I don't own one by my friend does and has made the same comment above, it seems fairly restricted in terms of what files it'll play without stuttering.

Popcorn Hour (now called Cloud Media) offer a Popbox for $99 which is essentially they're great media player with a few menu features stripped out. That should play everything you can throw at it.

It might be a pain, but if you can run a Cat5e cable outside the house and back in again, i'd say that's your best option.
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:37   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Yeah, £300 on a XBMC streamer is a bit OTT Better bet would have been a Dune or something a lot cheaper like a WDTV - each to their own i guess

noshua - Can't say i've tried m2ts rips on my RPi although i imagine you'd be better off remuxing a m2ts rip to a mkv container considering the overheads with m2ts.
John
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:43   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I bought one of the mpeg2 licences for my rpi when I had my dodgy sky box but never got around to using it. Should in theory decode that flawlessly.
noshua
Member

Registered: 19th Nov 08
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:51   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Might be able to pick up an Intel Atom based unit, like the Acer Revo, pretty cheap these days. That's what I stream all mine through
Cavey
Member

Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:52   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I still use PC and ps3 through home lines. Works fine
John
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:57   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Just getting a TV with it built in is easiest.
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 20:58   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by John
I bought one of the mpeg2 licences for my rpi when I had my dodgy sky box but never got around to using it. Should in theory decode that flawlessly.


I've read a few forum posts of people running Dreambox's or GigaBlue's and using a RPi as a remote and it seems to work well for SD material (HD material seems to be a bit more hit or miss depending on the sat box you're using).


quote:
Originally posted by John
Just getting a TV with it built in is easiest.

Depends massively on the TV; if you have one with great media support and decent UI then great, otherwise it can be a massive ballache especially if you have to start transcoding everything.
I've got an LG and a Toshiba and both are utter shit in terms of playing media, hence why i use a RPi.

[Edited on 29-05-2013 by Dom]
John
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 21:00   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I didn't have much luck the times I did play with it.
gazza808
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 08
Location: Peterborough
User status: Offline
29th May 13 at 23:36   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I use a RPi with xbmc,

Never had hassle playing any films,
Probably watch one most nights,
Dead links are the only hassle I get,

Control it with either my tv remote or phone,
Lucky my router is behind the tv so it's hard wired to my fibre too.
John
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 03
User status: Offline
30th May 13 at 07:40   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Dead links, does that mean you have some plugin for a streaming site? That won't be of any decent quality so you won't see the problem.
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
30th May 13 at 11:14   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by John
Dead links, does that mean you have some plugin for a streaming site? That won't be of any decent quality so you won't see the problem.


Icefilms plugin probably.
gazza808
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 08
Location: Peterborough
User status: Offline
1st Jun 13 at 23:52   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I'll check what plug in it is, it's all through xbmc, have a plug in for bbc etc channels for when I'm working abroad as well,
Why won't they be decent quality? All the films I watch are 1080p...
Dom
Member

Registered: 13th Sep 03
User status: Offline
2nd Jun 13 at 00:54   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by gazza808
All the films I watch are 1080p...


That's just the resolution, quality depends on compression and what you're watching will be heavily compressed compared to a Blu-ray or higher bitrate material.
gazza808
Member

Registered: 30th Jun 08
Location: Peterborough
User status: Offline
2nd Jun 13 at 12:12   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Dom
quote:
Originally posted by gazza808
All the films I watch are 1080p...


That's just the resolution, quality depends on compression and what you're watching will be heavily compressed compared to a Blu-ray or higher bitrate material.


Ah I get you now,
I'm not really techno minded in this sort of stuff lol!!
But tbh the quality is more than watchable, better than normal DVDs but not totally hd.

 
New Topic

New Poll

  Related Threads Author Forum Replies Views Last Post
External HDD Vs NAS Doug Geek Day 8 1349
11th Nov 07 at 16:01
by Dom
 
storage help bigboykarl Geek Day 2 980
8th Aug 09 at 20:38
by AndyKent
 
NAS Boxes Doug Geek Day 4 1288
20th Apr 10 at 19:22
by stubs
 
Any XMBC users? Simon Geek Day 5 434
10th Apr 11 at 18:23
by noshua
 
Data Recovery Advice Bart Geek Day 9 4380
24th Sep 11 at 07:27
by Bart
 

Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » Geek Day » NAS 4tb and xmbc 29 database queries in 0.1839020 seconds