On 29/04/2013 18:38, Randy Westlund wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 05:31:52PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>> On 29/04/2013 17:26, Randy Westlund wrote:
>>> Hey guys,
>>>
>>> I have a nice set of speakers, but they aren't near my desk in my home 
>>> office.  I used to carry them back and forth when I wanted good music, but 
>>> that was a pain.  I currently have a RasPi running arch connected to the 
>>> speakers -- I've been cat-ing audio files over ssh to mplayer, and that 
>>> mostly works (no fast-forward/skip).  I also tried using reverse-ssh and 
>>> sshfs to mount my files on the RasPi, but that seems silly.
>>>
>>> What I really want is to be able to stream audio from my browser to the 
>>> RasPi's speakers (pandora, grooveshark).  I'd like to set up an audio 
>>> device that maps to the RasPi.  Something like /dev/dsp1, perhaps.  If I 
>>> could have some audio sent to the RasPi and leave mcabber's chat 
>>> notifications on my laptop's speakers, that'd be fantastic.
>>>
>>> Does anyone have a setup like this?  Know of any good options?
>>>
>>> Randy
>>>
>>
>> Run OpenElec on the Pi - it's a minimalist distro running XBMC, must
>> like an appliance. Then you can stream whatever you want to the Pi using
>> just about every known protocol from just about every known device
>> (phones included!)
>>
>> XBMC also has plugins for all manner of web-based interfaces.
>>
>> It's a bigger solution than you asked for, but possibly one that gives
>> you more than you thought you'd get
>>
>> -- 
>> Alan McKinnon
>> alan.mckin...@gmail.com
>>
>>
> 
> Interesting, I hadn't heard of XBMC.  I may not stick with it, but I'm going 
> to play around with this for sure.

Spoiler alert :-)

XBMC is /addictive/. The more you fiddle with it and the more cool stuff
you find it can do, the more searching you do, and ... well you know
where that goes :-)

Themes are the worst. Especially the translucent ones that go and fetch
artwork off the internet then fuzz the menus just enough so you can see
the pretty girls in the artwork...

.. don't say I didn't warn you :-)


-- 
Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com


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