Sell your Squeezebox and wait for Apple's own streaming device to be
announced in just under two weeks at Macworld. TV-out connection that
will let you browse album art as well as watch movies.
If you're going to connect your computer directly to your TV to view
album art then there's not much p
You could "Tv-out" from the computer to your TV, it would look pretty
nice if you had an HDTV. I'm not sure if this is exactly what you're
looking for...
--
Ross L
Ross Levine - Slim Devices Technical Support
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - +1.650.210.9400 ext. 3
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Andrew Heald;66590 Wrote:
> One idly wonders if there are visualisation libraries out there that
> could be included in SoftSqueeze. Just a thought.
>
>
Ryan Geiss open-sourced Milk Drop - the popular vis plugin for WinAmp.
It is on my list of things I'll probably never get time to do to see
Jim Larson Wrote:
> I've finally got my SB2 working (& sounding) great now. What I'd like
> to do next is to sync the music playing on the SB2 with iTunes (or
> MusicMatch) running on the same PC as slimserver. Then turn on the
> G-force visualization, run a cable to my big-screen Sony TV, turn
I purchased G-Force Platinum for $30 -- it comes with a Standalone
version that will work with anything going thru my sound card. I just
start up SoftSqueeze first, then set the G-Force toolbar preferences >
Audio Source to "What U Hear". Works perfectly! -- no delay at all.
It's way too late
Jim Larson Wrote:
> I've finally got my SB2 working (& sounding) great now. What I'd like
> to do next is to sync the music playing on the SB2 with iTunes (or
> MusicMatch) running on the same PC as slimserver. Then turn on the
> G-force visualization, run a cable to my big-screen Sony TV, turn
One idly wonders if there are visualisation libraries out there that
could be included in SoftSqueeze. Just a thought.
ceejay wrote:
Not sure about your exact setup, but the easiest way to get the sound
into your visualization software is probably the remote MP3 stream.
While this is we
> Not sure about your exact setup, but the easiest way to get the sound
> into your visualization software is probably the remote MP3 stream.
While this is well worth a try, I think you're not going to get very
close on synchronisation this way, and I suspect that being even a
fraction out might