Re: [Freevo-users] Freevo vs XBMC vs Boxee

2011-02-27 Thread Adam Charrett
On Sun, 2011-02-27 at 13:51 +0900, Alan wrote:
> My HTPC usage is similar to yours, I don't have a tv tuner, I use it
> for movies and tv shows, music and occasionally gaming.
> A long time ago I was using MMS (My Media System) but then I moved to Freevo.
> 
> MMS has some advantages over Freevo, namely the ability to create
> playlists through the interface, and then even save them. Its also way
> more stable and doesn't have the plethora of bugs that Freevo has.
> The CPU usage is way lower, probably because it is coded in C++.  The
> user interface is well designed and easy to use.
>
> On the downside, MMS is not so configurable nor themeable, less
> extensible (Freevo has a big number of plugins, although many don't
> work), and there hasn't been any release since 2009, which makes me
> think that its either very mature or it dying.
> 

Interesting I've been using freevo for several years and haven't found
that many bugs... If you do find bugs please report them otherwise there
is no way we can fix them! 

I would add that although there has been no official release in a while
there has been lots of work on svn and a beta before Christmas and
another in a few weeks. One of the changes that the next beta will
introduce is a significant drop in CPU usage. This will lead up to the
last release of 1.x branch but that just means there will be more focus
on 2.x.

Cheers

Adam


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Re: [Freevo-users] Freevo vs XBMC vs Boxee

2011-02-26 Thread Alan
My HTPC usage is similar to yours, I don't have a tv tuner, I use it
for movies and tv shows, music and occasionally gaming.
A long time ago I was using MMS (My Media System) but then I moved to Freevo.

MMS has some advantages over Freevo, namely the ability to create
playlists through the interface, and then even save them. Its also way
more stable and doesn't have the plethora of bugs that Freevo has.
The CPU usage is way lower, probably because it is coded in C++.  The
user interface is well designed and easy to use.

On the downside, MMS is not so configurable nor themeable, less
extensible (Freevo has a big number of plugins, although many don't
work), and there hasn't been any release since 2009, which makes me
think that its either very mature or it dying.

I also tried MythTV for a while, but abandoned it because its strong
point was TV recording which I'm not interested in, and it was too
complex.
I have yet to try XBMC or Boxee.

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Re: [Freevo-users] Freevo vs XBMC vs Boxee

2011-02-24 Thread Jacob Briggs
Oddly enough, I faced a similar situation to you (hell, I even live in 
NZ). I tried out xbmc, and what drove me back to freevo was that is was 
just plain old simpler to configure, run and administer and the 
interface is cleaner. XBMCs interface is just too busy for me.

My freevo box eventually failed, and I got me an acryan mini media 
player. It plays anything I have thrown at it - bar 1 movie - but man 
does the interface suck. I got it because the page was all open source 
this and customisable that, but its bollocks. Its impossible to do 
anything to the interface at all, and its code is poorly written - it 
says it supports online mp3 streams, but really it only works with 
shoutcast - with the connection string hard coded into the binary so 
when shoutcast changes something, no matter how trivial, its falls over 
and you have to wait for acryan to fix it.

All the interesting stuff, like code that plays video and audio and 
receives events from the remote, is contained in this massive closed 
source binary which starts up a copy for each little thing, and it comes 
from realtec. So its a bit of a have really.

There is a project that replaces all the UI stuff with "MMS" - my media 
system, but I can't get it to go. I wish I had freevo back :(

On 24/02/11 10:48, Bill Burroughs wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I had been using Freevo for almost 4 years until about 4 months ago - I  got a
> 720p TV, and as my Freevo box wasn't powerful enough to decode  720p, I bought
> myself a cheap little (Argosy) media box.  Needless to  say, losing the 
> ability
> to customise things has got more and more  annoying over the last 4 months, 
> and
> I'm now so frustrated with it, and  so underwhelmed by 720p, that I'm giving 
> up
> on it.  My freevo box is  still in only a few pieces (4 months is a long time 
> to
> go without  opening up an unused piece of hardware), so won't take me long to
> throw  it back together, and I was thinking of just wiping the HD, and
> installing OS and freevo from scratch.
>
> Obviously, as I'm doing that, I have the opportunity to choose a  different OS
> and different media player, and I've been looking at XBMC  and Boxee.  From 
> what
> I've seen XBMC is the better choice from a OSS  perspective, and seems to be
> very customisable.  The question is, why  choose Freevo over XBMC?  I know 
> under
> normal circumstances a question  like this to an OSS mailing list will end up 
> in
> an endless stream of  flames, and in those situations I would normally
> sirupticiously defect  without anyone knowing or caring.  However, I've found
> the Freevo lists  to be very friendly and fair over the years, so I thought I
> would throw  it out to an open conversation to see what happened.
>
> > From a usage perspective, I don't record TV at all, New Zealand TV is  
> > pretty
> rubbish (unless you like 24/7 rugby and "Australia's next top  singing 
> sheepdog"
> shows), and forces me to have to download UK and USA  TV programmes from the
> usual sources.  Thus, all my content comes from  SMB shares, with the odd net
> radio station.  One very handy feature I've  seen for XBMC is a "latest 
> download
> episodes" script/plugin, which  would save a great number of arguments between
> my better half and I.
>
> Anyway, let me know what you all think, but be gentle... :)
>
> Cheers
> DJM23
>
> P.S. In case it matters, I would describe my python skills as George W  Bush
> Jnr, i.e. clueless, but my linux, windows and perl/php skills are  pretty 
> good;
> and it hasn't stopped me from being able to hack freevo to do whatever I want.
>
> Nothing is true; Everything is permissible...
>
>
>
>
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Re: [Freevo-users] Freevo vs XBMC vs Boxee

2011-02-24 Thread Stephen Rowles
On 23/02/2011 21:48, Bill Burroughs wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I had been using Freevo for almost 4 years until about 4 months ago - I  got a
> 720p TV, and as my Freevo box wasn't powerful enough to decode  720p, I bought
> myself a cheap little (Argosy) media box.  Needless to  say, losing the 
> ability
> to customise things has got more and more  annoying over the last 4 months, 
> and
> I'm now so frustrated with it, and  so underwhelmed by 720p, that I'm giving 
> up
> on it.  My freevo box is  still in only a few pieces (4 months is a long time 
> to
> go without  opening up an unused piece of hardware), so won't take me long to
> throw  it back together, and I was thinking of just wiping the HD, and
> installing OS and freevo from scratch.

 From an HD playback perspective, the processor etc. isn't that 
important, what you really need is a graphics card that will offload the 
HD processing. I have an ASRock Ion330, it's a dual core Atom but it has 
the Nvidia ION graphics which mplayer can use to offload HD playback, so 
I can playback 1080p using about 5-10% cpu :D. Worth noting if you are 
going down the HD route an NVidia card that you can off-load too would 
be a pretty cheap addition if you can fit it in your box. There are even 
fanless versions that can do a lot of HD decoding.

> The question is, why  choose Freevo over XBMC?  I know under
> normal circumstances a question  like this to an OSS mailing list will end up 
> in
> an endless stream of  flames, and in those situations I would normally
> sirupticiously defect  without anyone knowing or caring.  However, I've found
> the Freevo lists  to be very friendly and fair over the years, so I thought I
> would throw  it out to an open conversation to see what happened.

I've tried XBMC on the same piece of hardware. It kept producing lots of 
errors, although the interface was very slick. The biggest bonus I see 
of XBMC is that it has fast forward and rewind controls that work 
properly (not the stupid mplayer/xine skip forward+back controls). It 
took me a long time going through the menus trying to configure things 
properly but it all worked reasonably well.

Having said that I abandoned it purely from the perspective of TV 
recording, which of course it can't do! I actually prefer freevo's 
simpler UI for day to day use, after a while XBMC became a bit of 
sensory overload! If managed to arrange for decent fast forward and 
re-wind (maybe steal the XBMC player?) then I would probably having 
nothing feature wise that I wanted that freevo didn't provide.

Not sure how XBMC behaves with things like auto-shutdown on idle etc? 
Although I guess if recording it's left of an issue

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