• Simon

    Matthew mentions ways of moving around media at the end of his article. Just thought I’d mention my favourite method, RoboCopy. It’s a Microsoft tool that used to ship with the Server Administrator Toolkit. It now ships with Vista and is being positioned as the natural replacement for XCopy. It has a vast array of options (http://www.ss64.com/nt/robocopy.html), will copy/move/mirror files(s) and directories, skipping files that are already at the destination (if you’d like it to), it handles network blips and will retry any failed transfers.

    I have an iPod & I run iTunes on my Media Centre PC, keeping the music synced locally and copying the files to the Music share on my WHS with a scheduled Robocopy bat file. If I remember rightly the switches I use are /MIR (mirrors local directory. Attention! This means files at the destination that are not at the source will be deleted.) /Z (deal with network blips) /LOG (so I can see what it did on the last sweep)

  • Martin

    I was looking forward to this instalment to see how you had managed to get blu-ray working. I had similar issues to you, and now pretty much exclusively use my PS3 to play blu-ray, because the VMC integration is inconvenient enough that I might as well put the disk in a different device and use the PS3 remote as get the mouse out for Power DVD.

    It’s interesting that you keep all of your files on WHS. I found that pictures in particular didn’t work well like that. I have a gigabit connection to my home server, but the network never seems to go much above about 15% of the max speed, and when I display my picture gallery from the home server, there is an unacceptably long pause that I never get when running locally. Videos are never an issue, but then we are talking about a hundred videos instead of tens of thousands of photos. I use sync toy to copy my photos between WHS and my media centre on a nightly basis, and that works much better for me.

  • Rex

    Just a note of caution if you are considering ATI tv cards:
    “ATI ditches TV division”
    http://www.theinquirer.net/gb/inquirer/news/2008/07/21/ati-ditches-tv-division

  • Matthew Miller

    @Martin
    That is interesting. My WMC does pause a bit when opening the picture library and again when opening each individual folder, but no more so than any other network-stored media. I will play with some of the possible library settings and see if it is possible to identify a reason for such a slowdown. Also, there is another good reason for keeping all of those pictures on the local machine that I plan on touching on in the next article.

    @Rex
    There has been a lot of confusion about what exactly the impending sale to Broadcom means for AMDs future TV cards. AMD’s digital TV unit was focused on consumer electronics and set top boxes. It is a business that ATI has only been in for several years. Prior to the development of the Theater chips, Ati used Broadcom and Philips tuners in their TV tuners and AIW cards. I know AMD has said that this sale will not affect their multimedia unit which is responsible for their TV and pc cablecard tuners, but they have been a bit vague about whether the chips used in these parts are part of the sale. Either way, the theater 650 based cards have gotten strong reviews and should continue to be a strong contender, but future products may not fare as well.

  • Scott

    This series of articles had me so excited about Media Center, which I had all but forgotten, but everytime I use Media Center it crashes when the thumbnails try to load. This is a new system with Vista and great specs. I searched the error message and from what I read there is no fix for it. Is this a pretty common problem?