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On Dec 5, 2012 4:19 AM, "Jerry" <<a href="mailto:mythtv@hambone.e4ward.com">mythtv@hambone.e4ward.com</a>> wrote:<br>
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> On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 7:53 AM, jdoe <<a href="mailto:mythtv@jd67.de">mythtv@jd67.de</a>> wrote:<br>
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>> Comments are welcome!<br>
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> I recently got a new television which has UPNP/DLNA capability. Unfortunately, for some reason I cannot connect to mythbackend with it, even though I have no problems with a blu-ray player I also own.<br>
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> I installed Serviio on my backend machine. <a href="http://www.serviio.org">http://www.serviio.org</a> It was pretty painless to set up. They have instructions on their wiki for most distributions. Everything installed to one directory so it's very easy to maintain.<br>
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> I had to do a little bit of configuration but everything works well now. It will transcode video on the fly if your player will not support that format or if the bandwidth is too high for your network using profiles. There are several profiles that are configured for common blu-ray players/televisions.<br>
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> It's working great and it's open source. It runs on Windows, too, if you need that, and I think it runs on a Mac. You can install a PHP configuration program on your web server and manage it all from a browser (this was a little harder to install but boiled down to PHP dependencies). You can browse the videos by folder or by metadata. It does music, too. I'm very impressed with it. You can run it alongside mythtv seamlessly.<br>
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> I think there are other options available for DLNA servers. I liked the features of Serviio the best but YMMV.</p>
<p>Just curious, do you get all this with the free vesion of serviio ?</p>