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#11
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In article , Andy
Burns writes Do you want DVB-T or DVB-S? Sorry, should have thought. DVB-T, if my understanding is correct and that means Freeview. If it works out, I'd be interested in a DVB-S card too as I have an unused dish stuck to the wall of my flat. -- Mike Tomlinson |
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#12
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Hiya,
You can do that but it is a bit fiddly with sources. I have started to play with Multicast IP using VideoLan as the streaming server, and each machine being a full backend and frontend setup taking media from the multicast streams. This means you can mix DVB-S and DVB-T (freeview) transparenty, so you can run BBC HD and Freeview on one system, and using the Radio Times XML server, via XMLTV. Have a look at: http://www.mythtvtalk.com/forum/gene...-can-done.html I did get it working in a fashion. The VideoLan side was too prone to crashing to make it production proposition, although I am going back to it just now having built a 14 PCI slot system as my server. I am hoping to produce a VOD server plug in too for pay to view TV for use on hotels etc etc. Rob. Mike Tomlinson wrote: In article , Andy Burns writes Do you want DVB-T or DVB-S? Sorry, should have thought. DVB-T, if my understanding is correct and that means Freeview. If it works out, I'd be interested in a DVB-S card too as I have an unused dish stuck to the wall of my flat. |
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#13
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On Nov 2, 8:58*pm, "Roger R" wrote:
"brushhead" wrote in message o.uk... Hiya, Slight off topic I know but MythTV is hitting v0.22 RC2. *Should be a full release next week. I am a Windows only user but might considering partitioning my hard drive to install Linux for the first time in order to run this application. *Which of the six Linux distributions on this Wiki page would you recommend for Linux novice ? http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/Frequentl...oes_MythTV_run... Roger R I've recently installed Ubuntu against my windows install. I'm getting to like it quite a bit. |
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#14
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"Dave Farrance" wrote in message ... "Roger R" wrote: I am a Windows only user but might considering partitioning my hard drive to install Linux for the first time in order to run this application. Which of the six Linux distributions on this Wiki page would you recommend for Linux novice ? http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/Frequentl...n_Wind ows.3F How about the UK's favourite distro? Last year, using Google-Groups, I checked how many times that DistroWatch's top 30 distros were mentioned in the group uk.comp.os.linux during the previous year, and recorded those that were mentioned more than 25 times. If you want to choose a distro by basing it on the support that you're likely to get in the uk.* Usenet, which is as good a reason as any, then maybe this list will be useful. Interesting, but I hear Nick Griffin's name mentioned a lot in the media these days, does that mean that he is the UK's favourite politician? Also many people only post to newsgroups when they have a problem with something. However I don't dispute that Ubuntu and Debian are probably the most popular. Z |
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#15
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"Mike" wrote in message ... I've recently installed Ubuntu against my windows install. I'm getting to like it quite a bit. Thanks to those who replied to my enquiry for your recommendations. Roger R |
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#16
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Zimmy wrote:
"Dave Farrance" wrote in message ... "Roger R" wrote: I am a Windows only user but might considering partitioning my hard drive to install Linux for the first time in order to run this application. Which of the six Linux distributions on this Wiki page would you recommend for Linux novice ? http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/Frequentl...n_Wind ows.3F How about the UK's favourite distro? Last year, using Google-Groups, I checked how many times that DistroWatch's top 30 distros were mentioned in the group uk.comp.os.linux during the previous year, and recorded those that were mentioned more than 25 times. If you want to choose a distro by basing it on the support that you're likely to get in the uk.* Usenet, which is as good a reason as any, then maybe this list will be useful. Interesting, but I hear Nick Griffin's name mentioned a lot in the media these days, does that mean that he is the UK's favourite politician? Also many people only post to newsgroups when they have a problem with something. However I don't dispute that Ubuntu and Debian are probably the most popular. Z Nicely put. Rob. |
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#17
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Dave Farrance wrote:
brushhead wrote: Ubuntu is Debian in a dress.. I'll take your word for it. :-) I use Mandriva, because I prefer the bleeding-edge update rate, the KDE-orientation, it's "Cooker" program for transparent development, the well-maintained "backport" repositories, and the availability of all the patent-encumbered and DMCA-dodging multimedia apps and codecs which are packaged for Mandriva by the "Penguin Liberation Front". I like Debian for the exact opposite. Rob. |
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#18
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The message
from brushhead contains these words: Dave Farrance wrote: "Roger R" wrote: ===snip=== Ubuntu 539 Debian 460 Fedora 225 SUSE/openSUSE 194 Mandriva 121 Kubuntu 106 Slackware 55 Gentoo 65 Puppy 47 Knoppix 41 Red Hat 40 PCLinuxOS 34 Mepis 32 BSD 26 Ubuntu is Debian in a dress.. Rob. Nicely put! ![]() I was wondering whether anyone was going to point out (what aught to have been) the bleedin' obvious (and I'm only a closet newbie![1] ;-) [1] Someone who managed to install SuSE from off of the CD in the back of that "Linux For Dummies" book and then promptly thought "Now What?" but dabbled off and on over the next ten years or so and _still_ uses the Dummies book as a reference when doing something 'arcane' in a Knoppix Live CD session (usually when trying to fix a borked winXP box or else repairing USB induced FS errors on my Ext2 formatted external drives that I normally use with a win2k box ![]() -- Regards, John. Please remove the "ohggcyht" before replying. The address has been munged to reject Spam-bots. |
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#19
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Johnny B Good wrote:
I was wondering whether anyone was going to point out (what aught to have been) the bleedin' obvious (and I'm only a closet newbie![1] ;-) It did occur to me that the list would be partly reflective of the number of people that are forced to call for help by a given distro, which of course is not good thing. However, in recent years, newbies tend to go to one of the multiplicity of linux-help web-forums -- and Usenet tends to be the haunt of the more experienced user. Since Google-Groups just gave me a list of occurrences of a keyword between two dates, it would also catch most of the followups to a given query, which would be reflective of the usage, and especially of the number of people ready to give advice on a given distro. Anyway, the final result did seem to reflect my impression of UK usage. I doubt that you'll find Debian placed just off the top of any other distro popularity survey. Distros that I've seen in the workplace, used as servers, tended to be RedHat/Fedora or SUSE. If the content of uk.comp.os.linux is a guide, then the Linux gurus tend to use Debian as a server, although I've not personally bumped into any. UK magazines (which are probably less of an influence now in the wide-pipe broadband era than they were in the past) have tended to provide cover disks that invited readers to install Ubuntu, Mandriva and SUSE, in that order, and that seems representative of the usage by home user enthusiasts that I've happened to meet - and those distros are fine for those that mainly use their PC as a multimedia machine or net-top. I've not visited any Linux user groups, where I suspect that Debian would rule the roost, especially among those that get involved in coding (and also it seems, among those that choose a distro out of pretension). Not that I've got anything against Debian. Now that my laptop is over five years old, I'm considering switching it to the current distro that is most stable on older hardware, and yet has good community support, and that *is* likely to be Debian. -- Dave Farrance |
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#20
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FWIW, I also use a copy of Debian at home, but running on an XBox (v1).
Once the distribution is installed (which for an XBox was easy as someone else had already figured out how!) maintenance is quite painless - surprisingly so for a Windows user like myself (but be warned, I program for a living so the lack of a GUI doesn't phase me ;-) ). The XBox has a 500GB disk installed (huge at the time) and was an amusing way for me top build a file server rather than buy one off-the-shelf. My employers also use RedHat Linux and that seems simple to use to. In many ways with things like Myth you get down to the platform being used (has someone tailored a Linux distribution for it) and what user interface is available. Paul DS. |
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