I actually tried the earlier Shuttle FV24 systems. You're right they do have
more power than the VIA EPIA boards. Biggest problem I had was with getting
everything in the little box. Especially the WINTV boards. They seem to be a
little wider than your average PCI card making it a tight fit. Once you get
the hard drive, cd-rom, cards and floppy in place you might find you have a
pretty compact little unit.

I'm currently working on a VIA EPIA MX board in a case I found through
www.mini-itx.com and have found the type of silent PC you're talking about.
Be careful when you are picking cases some of them have low-profile PCI
slots that make it hard to fit a TV card in to. I ended up going with a ATI
TV/Wonder VE since had a small enough profile to fit in the case I'm using.
The VIA motherboard has a 933 Mhz, support for 133Mhz SDRAM, SVideo and RCA
Composite out which makes it perfect for just this type of project. The
newer boards will have a 1Ghz processor on them and uses the faster memory.

If you can't find the right looking case look at the projects page at
www.mini-itx.com to see what some folks have done. Gives a whole new meaning
to hiding a computer.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Andreas
Leitner
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 8:43 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Freevo-users] Anybody using a Shuttle PC with freevo?


Hi,

I found out about the Shuttle PCs. They seem to have a small form factor
and try to be reasonably quite. I am mostly interested in the SS40G
(http://www.shuttle.com/german/ss40g.htm#ss40g ) , because it has 2 PCI
Slots (for two Win-TV Fm cards :). It looks like they can be purchased
in the EU now for around 250 Euro.

Searching the net I found http://islay.dyndns.org/taz/. So it looks like
Linux support is there for everything important:
* Build in NW Card to connect it to my lan
* TV-Out
* 2 PCI Slots (for two tv tuners, making it possible to watch and record
distinct channels)
* Sound - even SPDIF out -> plugs into my 5.1 amp
* Serial Port -> irman/lirc
* USB/Firewire -> camara support
* 2 ATA-100 -> HDD + DVD reader/CD Burner combo
* Heatpipe and alu case, making it hopefully quite

Looks like a well rounded solution to me, no?

Now my question is has anybody tried using such a box for a dedicated
multi media station (using freevo)?
How is the noise in practice?
Are there any troubles getting freevo to work on such a box?

I know that using a Via Eden board I could get much closer to a silent
PC, but the Shuttle is has much more power, which promises good
time-shifting performance. Also I heard that there is now a SourceForge
project that can program (certain) MoBos so that they will automatically
power up at a given time - making it possible to do scheduled recordings
even when the PC is shut down. Looks like a reasonable compromise to me.

regards,
Andreas



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