Help me decide strategy for myTV? (1 Viewer)

IronStove

Portal Member
December 6, 2005
7
0
Stockholm, Sweden
I have been playing around with MP for a few days now and I like it a lot. Now I want to start using MyTV, so I need a TV-card. My environment is this:

Current TV environment:
Digital Terrestrial TV.
Nokia tv-reciever whith only two out's: Scart and RF-out.
Boxer(Viaccess2) smartcard
CRT 16:9 32' TV with S-Video in/SCART

Computer:
AMD Athlon64 3200
Palit Radeon X300 (DirectX9) with S-video out
Gigabyte K8NF Mobo with S/PDIF out to DD/DTS Reciever

My investigations have led me to conclusion that there are a few alternatives to take into mind when deciding(In no specific order):

* Analogue TV-card connected to the STB's RF-out and have the TV-card(or Media Portal) control the STB.
Pros: I get all channels including (pay-channels), cheap
Cons: Lower image quality, I cannot whatch one channel while recording another.
Probably not a good alternative since I want to be able to record and watch simultanously.

* DVB-T TV-card(without CI) connected directly to RF-antenna after split so the other one goes into STB.
Pros: I get perfect quality recording. I can record with MP and watch another channel via the STB.
Cons: I only get Free To Air channels into MP
Pretty good choice since most of the programs im likely to record are on Free channels.

*DVB-T TV-card with CI connected directly to RF-antenna after split so the other one goes into STB.
Pros: Same as above plus I get ALL channels including pay-channels.
Cons: Expensive and I would have to move the smart card from STB to CAM to be able to watch/record paychannels with MP. Could be fixed with a cardsplitter:http://www.smartwi.net/, even more expensive...

I am leaning towards one of the DVB-T alternatives. Given the stats of my computer do you think i really need a card with hardware-encryption or would it work to let the CPU do the work with software? The difference in price is pretty steep.

Also the differences in price is not so big between DVB-T CI and without CI so maybe its worth the money.

Thankful for some feedback on my thoughts

Best regards
 

sciutand

Portal Member
February 4, 2005
36
0
Ironstove,

What do you mean by Hardware-encryption?
Your spec are good to go for anything to be honest. The decryption of PayTV channels doesn't need a lot of power, decoding of MPEG files/streams are easily handled by today's codecs an CPU, so definetly don't worry about that.

AS
 

IronStove

Portal Member
December 6, 2005
7
0
Stockholm, Sweden
sciutand said:
Ironstove,

What do you mean by Hardware-encryption?
Your spec are good to go for anything to be honest. The decryption of PayTV channels doesn't need a lot of power, decoding of MPEG files/streams are easily handled by today's codecs an CPU, so definetly don't worry about that.

AS

Sorry wrong use of words here.... I mean the process of encoding programs to file which can be done by the TV-card if it has hardware support, otherwise the encoding will be handled by software and increase the load on the CPU.
 

kamrat

Portal Pro
May 24, 2005
147
1
Stockholm, Sweden
If you are going to use a DVB-T card encoding is not necessary. The datastream is already in MPEG2. Only analog cards have MPEG2 coders. If you are going to use an analog card I recomend one with an MPEG2-chip. They are not expensive and the MediaPortal support is much better for these cards.
I also live in Sweden and have chosen alternative 2 on your list. A Hauppague DVB-T card without CI. Excellent picture quality on the free channels and anamorphic 16:9 AND 5.1 AC3-audio on SVT1 and SVT2. Almost like watching a DVD!
 

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