rfunk: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] rfunk at 01:47pm on 13/09/2007 under ,
My car now smells like cedar inside.

This is because I have not yet unloaded it from shopping for my next project: a music/movie shelf unit. At some point in the past (probably raiding the garage to populate my first apartment) I acquired an extremely useful shelf unit that's perfect for CDs, movies, and small paperbacks, because the shelves are only about 6 inches deep and maybe 8-10 inches high; the whole thing is about 4 feet high. I decide I want more of these, so I'm going to try to build one myself.

So last night at Home Depot I bought a bunch of 6-inch wide cedar pickets, mostly 4 feet long but a couple of 6-footers too (let's see if we can make a tall one), plus some backing board (not sure about this one) and hardware. The total was about $40, including some things that'll last beyond this project.

I probably won't have time to work on this until October. But if this goes well I hope to make more, since I doubt that it'll be enough.
Mood:: 'ambitious' ambitious
rfunk: (check this out)
posted by [personal profile] rfunk at 03:25pm on 13/09/2007 under , , , , , ,
This week we heard the latest news in the digital TV saga: cable TV operators will allow customers to use analog TVs until at least 2012. Which basically means they'll continue having analog video outputs on their boxes; I figure those output will stick around quite a few years longer than that.

On the other hand, those of us in the U.S. who get TV the old-fashioned way, through the antenna, are currently scheduled to lose the old NTSC signal on February 17, 2009, about a year and a half from now. The federal government is supposed to provided $30 coupons for digital-TV (ATSC) converter boxes, but when I checked the Best Buy website today I found only one such box available, and that was $180. It's slightly tempting to run out to buy one to add to the entertainment center.

Then consider that, for anyone still recording shows with a VCR, the tuner in the VCR will also become obsolete, so the VCR will no longer be programmable to record the appropriate channel at the appropriate time. The solution for that, of course, is a DVR, preferably a dual-tuner one.

But the only DVR I've found so far that handles digital broadcast signals is the third-generation TiVo, and that currently costs $800, plus a monthly TiVo service fee. (Other TiVos are more like $250.)

So since digital-broadcast DVRs are so rare, the next thought is to build a super-DVR (plus other capabillities) out of computer parts, using MythTV or Freevo software. Lots of geeks are doing it these days, but that starts a big adventure of choosing the most-compatible tuner cards, video output cards, and fast-enough processors that are still quiet and cool. Who knows what the price would turn out to be. (Update: [livejournal.com profile] ah_graylensman says about $685.)

Maybe I should wait a bit to work on this one. There will, by the way, be a talk at the upcoming Ohio LinuxFest that seems tangentially related to this: "The Path to the $100 Linux Media Center"
Mood:: 'intimidated' intimidated

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