On 7/30/06, Mike Miller <mbmiller at taxa.epi.umn.edu> wrote:
>
> I'm probably missing some info here because I just skimmed the thread, but
> I would think that a good plan would be to have a central server that
> smaller computers can read files from.  I can't envision one server
> sending out many video and audio outputs simultaneously, but I can see it
> serving many files at once to smaller machines that then display the files
> on their default audio and video outputs.
>
> I ripped all my CDs to MP3 and put them on one machine, then I put a small
> computer on my stereo system, and I have several other computers.  When I
> want to play a song, I can play it from where I am (computer or stereo) by
> grabbing the file from the server.  I can also connect remotely from out
> of town and download MP3s.  A couple of weeks ago I was out of town with a
> rental car.  I had forgotten to bring some CDs, so from the hotel room, I
> downloaded some of my songs, burned a CD and listened to it in the car the
> next day.
>
> Mike
>

One of my design goals is to avoid having a computer in every room where I
want to listen to music or watch video. I would much rather run A/V cables
from a central server out to various wall jacks, where I can simply plug in
speakers and/or a TV.

-- 
Dave Sherman
MCSA, MCSE, CCNA
Linux: Because rebooting is for adding new hardware.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20060731/ee75a621/attachment.htm