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Pi Media Centre

Former Member
Former Member over 12 years ago

My son bought me a RPi for my birthday just before Christmas.  I'd read about it months ago and marked it down as something to look at down the track but like many tech items these days, you just never get the time to check out every product that comes along.  In the back of my mind I think I'd already filed it in the toy/gimmick/cheap/no practical use/boring folder.  So when I opened it my first thought was that it would give me something to play with over the holidays.  Like most of us, my first port of call with something new is Professor Google, and I was surprised by the vast number of websites for such a fairly newish product.  I must admit that I was not too inspired by the stock Rasbian OS that came with it even though I'm a fan of Debian and have been running Mint Debian Edition on my desktop PC for quite some time.  I tried a number of OS's including Risc OS which made me feel like I'd warped back to the 80's - no offence implied but it was a very quaint experience.  The RPi was growing on me and I started to think about it as a media centre.  The many postings I'd read about RPi media centres were putting to rest my reservations about the RPi's small size and limited power.  At that point I downloaded XBMC, flashed it onto an SD, and booted up the Pi.  During the set up it did a number of reboots (just like in the world of Windows,) and then everything was just working exactly as it should.  Prior to this I'd used several media centres and there was always something that wasn't quite right.  Whilst Mythbuntu has some excellent features, I personally found it a little bloated - not as bad as Windows MC - but sometimes a bit on the slow side.  Our need for a media centre is driven by a massive collection of music, photos, and movies totalling almost 2 Tbytes.  My conclusion is that the combination of the RPi and XBMC  makes an excellent MC.  The proof of the pudding being that my non-tech wife took to it in an instant and has so far failed to break anything. image

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  • Nate1616
    Nate1616 over 12 years ago

    Good to hear the pi running xbmc is working out for you.  I also run this and like it.  I like when you said even your wife is taking to it.  I was a little worried my wife wouldn't like it but so far that hasn't happened.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to Nate1616

    Cheers Nate - let me know if you find any interesting mods for your MC and I'll do the same.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    I put retroarch on my media center pi, and made a simple menu using dialog that it loads whenever I log in to let me choose what I want it to load up (xbmc, a text based pandora (internet radio) player, or retroarch, a retro video game selector).  As a bonus I had an IR keyboard lying around so I was able to use my learning remote to learn keyboard presses and I can control the whole thing with a single universal remote!  Of course I do switch back to a wireless controller for playing my retro games (games which I promise I own physical copies of, lol!)

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  • Nate1616
    Nate1616 over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    I like that idea mynameisJim.  I will have to look at doing that for my media player.  Then im not stuck using one thing.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to Nate1616

    I don't know how the various XBMC distros auto-load the software, but for me, I made a simple script that runs the dialog menu, and put the path to the script at the end of my user's ~/.profile.  It does has the downside that it will always be pulled up even when I'm remoting into the pi to do other things, but it is a (mostly) dedicated media center so that doesn't come up too often.  I got the idea for the universal remote and IR keyboard off some thread in the R-pi forums, but if you hit any problems with it I can tell you how I ended up doing it.  I've also heard good things about FLIRC, which is a little usb adapter that you can program, it might be a better option if you don't already happen to have an IR keyboard lying around.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Sounds like you have a good handle on your MC Jim - will have a look at the kit you mentioned in due course.

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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Here is an email that I sent to my mate about an alternative for XBMC.  He currently runs an MC on some very heavy duty hardware using a Win 7 platform (why would you do that?)  It is very unreliable and slow and he has been looking for a replacement for some time.  If he does as I suggest then he will see a huge improvement straight away,  If he likes it he can set up a nice low-resource MC on a Pi and sell his massive box on eBay ..... and still have a far better system.

     

     

     

    Hi Duncan.  I was thinking about your comments about the Ultimate Edition that you liked and that I mentioned that there was a 3.5 gig upgrade available.  I would urge you not to bother getting it as it is very bloated and is based on an older version of Ubuntu.  There is a much better solution...


    As I was saying, the XBMC suite is excellent on the Pi.  XMBC also shows up in the Ubuntu repository and I installed it on my desktop today.  Reason?  I can try mods and upgrades in that space without risking any stuff ups on the Pi.  XMBC is just as good on the desktop as on the Pi with plenty of options for expansion.  On to the solution....


    Download Xubuntu 12.10 and install it on your MC  - or VBox it inside Win 7 if you have little faith in my thoughts ! :-(    I'm pretty sure Synaptic isn't packaged with this Xubuntu version so you will need to get it via Ubuntu software manager.  Search in Synaptic for XMBC and install it and the dependencies.  It will appear on your App(lication) Menu under Multimedia.  Select it and your world of home entertainment will be transformed!


    You can also download a dedicated distro  ( http://wiki.xbmc.org/index.php?title=XBMCbuntu  ) but again it is based on an old version of Ubuntu - stick with Xubuntu 12.10 as it's so much faster in every respect. (  http://www.dedoimedo.com/computers/ubuntu-quetzal-boot-times.html    )


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  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago

    Thank you. I was looking for a media player for my RPI and I will try XMBCimageimage

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