S

slamking18

Enthusiast
Has anyone gotten into this at all? I am networking my house and am trying to think of a good way to be able to play all of my mp3's or live streams through my receiver. I was considering just setting up a small computer in my living room right next to my receiver and getting a sound card that has optical output. Any of you have any other ideas or setups already?
 
N

nm2285

Senior Audioholic
I originally considered a music server and tried the Kenwood Entre. Its technology was a little outdated and hard drive was too small. However, it was the only reasonably priced thing I could find. I know there are better ones out there that may be worth a look.

Anyway, I ended up with a D-Link DSM-320. It wirelessly (or wired) streems media (photo, music, video) from my computer to my system and has an on-screen display. I've been very happy with it thus far. The best part is you can go to Best Buy, get one, try it out, and if you don't like it, return it.
 
SilverMK3

SilverMK3

Audioholic
Before I built my HTPC, I was seriously considering getting a Squeezebox. Building a PC for this purpose is a cumbersome, heavy-handed approach; a dedicated set-top box is much faster and easier to use. I think I'm going to retire my HTPC as soon as I buy a networked DivX player.
 
Jazzwyld

Jazzwyld

Audioholic Intern
Other choices

Depending on the amount of control and interface you want you can go with a computer. Another option is the AudioRequest units. Or Yamaha's hard drive unit. Just some other options i'm throwing out there.
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
There are three big players that I know of in the dedicate digital music server business, and then there are 10,000 versions you can run on any PC. The advantages to an actual manufactured digital music server are pretty straightforward.

1. They do not run on a Windows backbone and tend to be very stable.
2. They have companies that exist entirely to support that product, most of which have been around for a while, so you get decent support.
3. The product is geared around digital music & audio. So, the sound cards are typically good, the drives are good, etc. It acts less like a PC and more like a piece of audio gear.
4. The interface, the interface, the interface. The better units can be run by anyone in the home, and it is run via remote control, not keyboard & mouse.

Who are the biggies?

As far as I know they are still:
Escient - with the Fireball.
This is, in my opinion, the single best bang for the buck digital music server but is not integratable nearly to the level of the competitors. If you just want to be able to plug it in and use it - it is the way to go. If you want more power, it is most definitely NOT the way to go.

iMerge - Their stuff definitely seems to fall between for overall quality. One of the big plusses is they offer units with something like 16 DIFFERENT outputs. So, put a couple thousand CDs onto the hard drives, then you, your wife, and your 14 kids can each listen to something from that collection at the same time. It integrates decent into advanced systems like Crestron, but is not nearly as robust as AudioRequest. The iMerge product is the father of XivaNet which has been licensed by a dozen other companies for their music server. I believe Yamaha is one who has licensed XivaNet - which all ends up looking like an iMerge. This also happens to be the unit I own... like it a lot (2 zones) but still wish I had...

AudioRequest - The guys making this product, in the USA, are into it big time. Their programmers are there and if a problem occurs they will put you on hold, then 2 minutes later you will be speaking to the programmer who actually programmed the specific section you have a question about. These guys were trained on control systems (AMX/Crestron) and they write their interfaces in-house and make the macros available to the world so anyone can make use of them and they are always aiming to improve their product. Firmware updates are free and are just part of what you get. Multiple zones can be handled with zone units, and if you happen to be a person with multiple homes throughout the world, the units can sync up your music collection to everywhere, automatically. The best interface, the most stable system, and excellent sound. Two and a half thumbs up. One half thumbs down for $$$$$.
 
J

jbracing24

Junior Audioholic
The previous post is an excellent beginning. Many music/video servers and receivers are starting to come on line, a much better approach than a small computer. Check out the June issue of Sound and Vision. They have started running issues called the Connected Home. The June issue will give you some alternatives. Also check their archives on the website.
I am running Media Center 2005 from my office to a media receiver in the HT via 11g wireless, but there are better alternatives developing every day.
 
porksoda

porksoda

Audioholic Intern
Build a pc throw in couple of 250gb hds and you got a internet/mp3/dvd library avail.

I have a normal pc connected to my hdtv wiht dvi (nvdiia) and audigy 2s coaxial digital out...

i can watch movie surf the websites and listen to music all in one and it cost me not that much.

If you want it to look "cool" u can get a desktop case from silverstone and/or some other companies out there.


slamking18 said:
Has anyone gotten into this at all? I am networking my house and am trying to think of a good way to be able to play all of my mp3's or live streams through my receiver. I was considering just setting up a small computer in my living room right next to my receiver and getting a sound card that has optical output. Any of you have any other ideas or setups already?
 
newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top