Wireless HD help , page


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reply posted on 29-12-2011 @ 10:12 PM by LightSpeedDriver
reply to post by Max_TO


I've never heard of a wireless hd but I daresay they exist. I would advise you to look more at something called a media tank. It's basically a mini PC with onboard HD and can do all of what you need and more and the hd is replaceable. Popcorn Hour looks quite promising but will set you back a coupla hundred dollars. This is the latest version of it.

Popcorn Hour


reply posted on 29-12-2011 @ 10:21 PM by Max_TO
reply to post by LightSpeedDriver



Ok, that looks pretty frigin cool !

Definitely looks like an option



reply posted on 29-12-2011 @ 10:31 PM by LightSpeedDriver
reply to post by Max_TO


Had to almost kick myself. Wireless hd's do exist, they are called NAS's. I'm getting forgetful. They can get as fancy as you want to pay for, upwards of a thousand dollars when filled with hd's. Media tank's are more a one size does all device. You can plug it in to stereo installations and tv's and watch movies, stream music via wifi, etc. NAS's are more designed for file sharing with maybe a bit torrent client built in. Both can cost serious dollars though, depending on capabilities.

ETA QNAP make some NAS's, www.qnap.com... Just to be fair in the name of advertising. Must name at least one competitor.
edit on 29/12/11 by LightSpeedDriver because: ETA



reply posted on 29-12-2011 @ 10:38 PM by Max_TO
reply to post by LightSpeedDriver



Well I just tried two nas wireless HD's today from goflex and I can't say I am to happy with the product they have put out on the market


reply posted on 29-12-2011 @ 11:20 PM by LightSpeedDriver
reply to post by Max_TO


As the poster above me notes, some of them can be quite slow. Plugging it in directly to your home router possibly gives it more room to work with and make it feel more responsive. I can't offer much help with brands but even with the same brand some models are better than others. One good thing about NAS's though is power usage. It's not a 300 watt pc you are running, just a hd and a small embedded system. More like running a laptop as far as power is concerned.


reply posted on 30-12-2011 @ 05:41 AM by scottlpool2003
reply to post by Max_TO



There are many media systems available, but it really depends on your needs. One of the best ones I've seen is Boxee.

One of the good features with it is that the remote is radio not infra-red so you can hide the actual box if you like, but I doubt you'd want to cause it's soooo pretty!




It has a built in browser as well so you can use your TV as internet TV if you haven't already got one.



And it has decent conectivity to iOS





www.dlink.com...

ETA

Boxee organises all of your media for you. Say for example you have a movie, it will download the cover and description for that movie and put it all together to make it look neat. Also, you can stream things from online such as YouTube. I had a little play around with it and it seemed to work great. You can download apps too which makes it more fun to play with. The netflix app allows you to rent movies, but you don't necessarily have to as you have an internet browser there.
edit on 30-12-2011 by scottlpool2003 because: More info...



reply posted on 30-12-2011 @ 06:04 AM by Max_TO
reply to post by scottlpool2003



Will boxee stream to an iPad and android devices?


Also , is it commen for an NAS to slow down ones router to the point that it makes browsing very very slow , even when not transferring files to the NAS?


reply posted on 30-12-2011 @ 06:16 AM by scottlpool2003
reply to post by Max_TO



Yeah it will stream to the pad, not so sure about the pod/phone though but you can use the pod/phone as a remote to the t.v.

Are you looking to stream to different locations or just the house? If you're looking to stream to different locations I'm not so sure that boxee would work, best looking into it.

I think that when streaming over your current set up it would slow your network down as it's using bandwidth. Depending on your internet speed you'll encounter this problem with most set ups. I know with boxee, my friend had 2mb internet and it seemed to run fine. The documentaries (mainly around 1 hour long) streamed straight away, but things like movies needed a little time to buffer (as with most streams) but as I say, this was streaming online. If you were streaming your own media that was stored on the device it would run a lot quicker.

Boxee has a few different methods too such as connecting to a remote device (PC, Mac, iPad etc), USB (which should, but don't quote me on it, enable you to plug in an external HD as well as the built in HD) and memory card.

If you click the link in my last post and scroll down, there are a few other things you can purchase for it such as a dedicated router, online storage at 1tb.

I'd definitely look into dedicated media centres though, they'd in my opinion put less of a strain on your network.


reply posted on 30-12-2011 @ 06:22 AM by Max_TO
reply to post by scottlpool2003



Thanks for the info

Basically i want mass storage that I can stream to my computer , iPad and android tablet . I tried out the sea gate goflex home but discovered that 1) it won't stream any video to an android device and 2) just by having the segate goflex plugged into my router it slowed down my router to the point I couldn't even browse the net from my tablets

And yes , I do have high speed Internet
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