- Possibly the most popular name in this space in the slingbox. If you have not heard of a slingbox it is device that basically connects your set top box to the Internet and streams whatever channel your box is set to. You then install a client software that connects to the slingbox and is capable of sending remote control signals to the set top box.
- A second option is a HAVA box. While similar to slingbox, but less well know and therefor cheaper this may be a good alternative. One feature the HAVA has available is the ability to add a hard drive to the HAVA box and use it as a DVR.
- A software solution, among many, is ORB. Orb works as a media server you can access from anywhere in your house or over the Internet. The software is free to download and use, however if you want to use it to stream your TV service you will need a video capture card.
- While not technically watching "your TV" online services like HULU.com, the newly relaunched TV.com and FanCast allow you to watch popular and sometime not so popular TV show, movies and clips.
Showing posts with label Home Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Technology. Show all posts
Feb 9, 2009
Watching TV Away from Home
From time to time you may want to watch you TV somewhere other then your living room. Maybe you have to work the night shift? Maybe you Travel a lot on business? Or maybe you just don't have a TV hookup in your den. When this happen you may want to look into some alternative for getting to you TV service, whether it be Cable, FIOS or Satellite.
Feb 8, 2009
How to protect digial photo library
The first thing my wife and I did when we found out we were pregnant was buy a new digital camera. We bought a nice Canon PowerShot S3 IS. We take a ton of pictures and videos (we even sometimes upload them to youtube). It has become increasingly important for us to backup the picture and for a while I would burn them to DVD and take them to our safety deposit box. This did not last long as the library got to large to fit on a reasonable about of DVD's. I then came up with three possible solutions:
- Manual Backup to an external disk. As the cost of these disks continues to fall this works well and is not very costly. You do run the risk of loosing pictures if your computer crashes and you have not backed up the library in a while. It is possible to schedule the backup if you keep the computer on all the time. Alternatively a backup script can be run every time you login to your computer, but that may get annoying quickly and required the external hard drive to be on all the time and increases the risk of drive failer.
- Hardware RAID in a computer. RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disk) has been used by corporations for years. There are several RAID levels, but most consumer level computers these days will run level 0, 1 or 5. RAID 0 uses 2 disk simultaneously to increase speed of the computer, but does not provide redundancy of data. This is good for computers that need speed, such as PC gaming or video editing. RAID 1 also uses two disks, but in this configuration one disk is an exact copy of the other. This is not any faster, but if one drive crashes the other should still have all the data. Finally RAID5 uses 3 or more disks. It writes the data across all 3 disks, but keeps parity so if one disk is lost the data can be recreated from what is on the other two disks. RAID5 is the best option but the most expensive and can be slow so RAID1 may be the work best for most people.
- NAS device. A NAS (Network Attached Storage) again has been used in by corporations for years and is now becoming more popular for home use. As people start having more then one computer at home as well as devices like XBOX360 and Playstation3 having pictures and music even movies available on the network all the time can be very useful. Many of the consumer level NAS devices available have built in media servers, iTunes server even FTP options for remote access to files. The can range in price from around $100 to $500 without disks.
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