2008-11-05, 03:49
migueld Wrote:That's a beautiful case. I'm surprised since last time I checked, the HTPC cases from silverstone were not very appealing. Nice work, thanks for sharing.
My only issue is... what happens if and when Apple adds blu-ray to the Mac Mini? Suppose that Apple prices such machine at $799. That machine would be capable to play anything you trow at it, would have smallest footprint, and OSX's sleep function means that it's instant on. Wireless N. Completely silent. How would a custom HTPC compete with this? It's tough competition.
Personally a killer HTPC should have an amazing PVR system, equal or better than Tivo. OR should be a server/HTPC combo and should be able to host 5 or 6 drives. Preferably all inside the case, no external devices, and as elegant as possible. That would beat the Mac Mini hands down.
I find that hard to believe that Apple will sell you a 1TB box with Bluray support for $799,-. It can't even play standard h.264. There is very little open source software for it. What sort of remote would it offer? Apple is known to make it hard for third party products to enhance the hardware. This is what they make their money with, essentially radically overpricing it (yes, they make it look pretty but so can I).
A rock bottom Bluray is $120,- as far as I can tell, a 1TB drive is $100,- and Apple surcharges 100%.
You can hook up as many USB drives to a box as you want - I am not sure why you would want to have that in a huge case. I look at it like that: I hook up one or two drives on top of what's inside. In six months they come out with a 2 or 2.5 TB drive and I stick that one in.
I agree with your PVR suggestion but right now I only see the HDPC-20 on the horizon for me. Who knows more about this gadget? From what I see it is Vista proprietary and for good reason: They will stick tons of DRM on it to make sure you cannot record any content. After all, TiVo shut the opensourcce community out after it got them to jumpstart them. The MPAA must be really nervous about DirecTV, in particular since Amazon and Netflix hooked up with them. Does this mean you get get DRM-free Amazon and Netflix Watch Now content? I doubt it.
There will be no open PVR for satellite content and it certainly isn't the comunity's fault.