My thought process at a high level.<br><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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install HDHomeRun Prime , cable card and get it activated.<br>
Install new VM with latest CENTOS (6.4) distro. update and patch to latest.<br>
Install mythtv , configure and point it to HDHRP and test setup/recording.<br>
shutdown new mythtv backend, drop database,backup db from "old" mythtv server and import to "new" machine<br>
re-setup new machine to utilize HDHRP in place of PVR-350<br>
Enjoy! (or ..profit! for the old /. folks)<br>
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anyone see any flaws in my thought process or additional steps? I'm suspecting I will need to tweak my SchedulesDirect feed a bit as well but I'm not 100% positive.<br>
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Would love any feedback or experiences positve/negative with what I'm doing. In reviewing the archives it seems that Comcast/HDHRP is a pretty good option at this point and seems to be stable.<br></blockquote><div><br>
</div><div>Apologies if this is stating the bleedin' obvious, but you also need a step to add the NAS into the new VM config. I mention this because if you try to add disk as a storage repository it will trash the contents of the disk (on VMware anyway - you didn't mention which hypervisor you're going to use). I guess if it's an external NAS shared over NFS then you'll be OK, but thought I should point it out just in case.</div>
<div><br></div><div>BTW - HDHR works really well in this setup. I run Mythbackend on a VMware Ubuntu 12.04 VM with a HDHR (DVB-T not cable).</div></div>