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IMHO, the Lite-On Series is more impressive with DivX and XviD support plus ethernet jacks for streaming content. (And NOT RCA )
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Originally posted by isochar
IMHO, the Lite-On Series is more impressive with DivX and XviD support plus ethernet jacks for streaming content. (And NOT RCA )
http://www.liteonit.com/DC/english/l...0/lvd_2010.htmGo Bunny GO!
Titan:
MSI NEO2-FISR | Intel P4-3.0C | 1024MB Corsair TWINX1024 3200LLPT RAM | ATI AIW 9700 Pro | Dell P780 @ 1024x768x32 | Turtle Beach Santa Cruz | Sony DRU-500A DVD-R/-RW/+R/+RW | WDC 100GB [C:] | WDC 100GB [D:] | Logitech MX-700
Mini:
Shuttle SB51G XPC | Intel P4 2.4Ghz | Matrox G400MAX | 512 MB Crucial DDR333 RAM | CD-RW/DVD-ROM | Seagate 80GB [C:] | Logitech Cordless Elite Duo
Server:
Abit BE6-II | Intel PIII 450Mhz | Matrox Millennium II PCI | 256 MB Crucial PC133 RAM | WDC 6GB [C:] | WDC 200GB [E:] | WDC 160GB [F:] | WDC 250GB [G:]
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Originally posted by isochar
Isn't that a bit impractical at this point in time?Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
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Originally posted by isochar
Isn't that a bit impractical at this point in time? Might as well compress the MPEG2 to MPEG4 and fit 6-10 times more movies in the same amount of HD space. That way a terabyte array could hold about 1500 movies!Go Bunny GO!
Titan:
MSI NEO2-FISR | Intel P4-3.0C | 1024MB Corsair TWINX1024 3200LLPT RAM | ATI AIW 9700 Pro | Dell P780 @ 1024x768x32 | Turtle Beach Santa Cruz | Sony DRU-500A DVD-R/-RW/+R/+RW | WDC 100GB [C:] | WDC 100GB [D:] | Logitech MX-700
Mini:
Shuttle SB51G XPC | Intel P4 2.4Ghz | Matrox G400MAX | 512 MB Crucial DDR333 RAM | CD-RW/DVD-ROM | Seagate 80GB [C:] | Logitech Cordless Elite Duo
Server:
Abit BE6-II | Intel PIII 450Mhz | Matrox Millennium II PCI | 256 MB Crucial PC133 RAM | WDC 6GB [C:] | WDC 200GB [E:] | WDC 160GB [F:] | WDC 250GB [G:]
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Who said anything about converting to Mpeg4.
Just rip a DVD to HDD, remove encription, store in folder.
Takes about 15 minutes.
The only problem is IMO since while HDDs are cheap, RAID5 array with proper case, 64-bit PCI slots motherboard and quality controller adds to cost.
Despite that, I saw some discussions about such projects and some people have Terrabyte fileservers at home already. Since next year terrabyte HDDs are expected, few terrabyte array to few 10 terrabyte array to hold ~1000 DVD rips and your entire CD collection in lossless format, conencted to clients that output music to hi-fi or TV in few years won't be out of consumer reach.
For instance rough server specs:
- Chieftec big tower or a server cube
- Supermicro single P4 board with 64-bit PCI/PCI-X slots and onboard rage PCI
- Slow single P4 (2.4 or so)
- 512MB of ECC registered RAM
- 80GB boot drive
- 3Ware Escalade 8-channel SATA RAID controller
8X250GB drives in RAID5 (you have a cold spare packed in case one drive goes, you could also have a hot spare and 6-drive capacity) or 4-channel controller with 4 RAID5 drives and you can add another 4 channel controller with bigger drives latter.
Promise TX4000 also supports pseudo hardware RAID5 and costs significantly less than 3Ware controller.
If it's a personal project, you can start with old motherboard and CPU and regular SATA controller and couple of drives and grow incrementally....
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Why bother with PCI-X/64? DVD's are only about 2GB/hr, which is <I>way</I> below what regular PCI can manage.
And a simple RAID 0 should cover him.Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
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And to add to Wombat's point, if you're only storing the actual movie from a DVD, then a 250G drive can store roughly 125 hours, or maybe 60 DVDs.
It's not too expensive these days to keep a reasonable size DVD collection on hard disk.
(on PriceWatch, the best price/capacity ratio is at the 200G mark, for $104 including shipping - about $1/hour or $2/movie in this context)
- Steve
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