[mythtv-users] Intet NUC as frontend?

Stephen P. Villano stephen.p.villano at gmail.com
Fri Nov 8 05:01:58 UTC 2013


On 11/7/13 11:37 PM, Nick Rout wrote:
>
>
>
> On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 2:57 PM, Gary Buhrmaster
> <gary.buhrmaster at gmail.com <mailto:gary.buhrmaster at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:35 AM, Mike's JdJ
>     <stepsisters at comcast.net <mailto:stepsisters at comcast.net>> wrote:
>     .....
>     > I am using an Intel DC3217IYR NUC as a Front End
>
>     For anyone looking to purchase "today", I would look
>     at the new Haswell based NUCs with HD4400 (the i3 NUC)
>     or HD5000 (the i5 NUC) graphics support.  They should
>     use even less power than the 3rd generation processor
>     NUCs at only a slight increase in price, and the new GPU
>     has some additional capabilities (although I do not think
>     the current Linux driver can use those capabilities yet).
>     The current weakness for a potential front-end is known
>     to be the GPU de-interlacing support in Linux.  For some
>     (those that do not see artifacts, those that can tolerate
>     artifacts, or those whose TV can support de-interlacing
>     on its own), that may not be an issue today.  The codes
>     committed to the master tree by Intel suggests that some
>     improvements will be seen in the future, but that is the
>     future.
>
>     As many know, Intel has decided to end development
>     of their reference design desktop motherboards.  The
>     NUC is where Intel is putting its resources (and moved
>     at least some of the desktop motherboard team).  It
>     expects the that (about) 4" x 4" NUC motherboard
>     (another half inch or so with case) will meet the needs
>     of most of the consumers who desire desktop systems
>     (other than the enthusiast market, where all bets are
>     off, and 200 watts just for the first graphics card is not
>     unusual).  With Intel announcing some interesting
>     processors are currently only available in soldered
>     (not socketed) versions, the entire desktop market
>     is transitioning in interesting ways.
>
>
>
> I referred to the XBMC market in an earlier post in this thread, and a
> couple of points need to be made from my extensive reading about the
> NUC on their forum:
>
> 1. XBMC users tend to be watching progressive video (rips, downloads
> whatever) and therefore deinterlacing is less important to those
> people. Mythtv users OTOH tend to be watching recorded, interlaced
> material - eg 1080i. I still have a gut feeling that nvidia
> deinterlacing via vdpau will come out top in this contest.
>
> 2. Many XBMC users use windows, so their positive results may be
> skewed from a linux user's perspective.
>
> 3.  For general purpose use the celeron version of the NUC is seen as
> sufficient, without getting into the expense of an i3 or i5.
>
> 4. There is an Intel bug when playing 24.976 (or whatever that ugly
> frame rate is) video. This has apparently been fixed in Haswell. I am
> also unsure whether this is is windows issue only. Worth remembering
> if a flicker every few minutes in a movie bugs you.
>
> 5. There are other small form factor options. This is quite a decent
> machine
> http://www.aliexpress.com/item/X-26-2G-RAM-8G-SSD-ULP-Dual-core-INTEL-C1037U-smallest-windows-pc-linux-arm/1236469668.html
>
> The shipping was quite expensive, but compared to a NUC in my market
> (New Zealand) it is great value. There are options for a bigger SSD
> and more ram. There is also apparently a version with an alloy case
> and no fan. I have mine loaded with Openelec at present, I will try
> mythbuntu on it.
>  
>
>
> _______________________________________________
That looks like a relatively nice, inexpensive unit. However, it would
fall down for my usage, as I use optical output for my audio.
I use a Cubox in my bedroom, with the audio out going to my surround
sound system.
I am looking for an inexpensive unit with video out (ancient CRT
television that he enjoys) for my elderly father's viewing in the
livingroom.
So far, I'm thinking of an Aios unit, as it has the capabilities I need,
loaded with Linux and using XBMC to "talk" with MythTV.

Later, I may build my full HTPC for my bedroom. Less bugs, superior
hardware to handle deinterlacing, etc.
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