FWIW - go to digg.com and search for "myth" - a lot of folks have 
posted links to Myth TV setup HOWTOs.

Josh

Thomas Johnson wrote:
> At some point I am going to want the TV capture feaures (moving in
> with a bunch of TV nuts), but right now I'm just looking to playback
> some DVD disc images, music, and other random video files from a
> remote control, idiot-resistant interface.
> 
> Once I get Myth working right, my desktop will probably cease to serve
> as a desktop. I'll just move it out my my home theater setup and let
> it sit. I rarely use the desktop anyways, I prefer my laptop in bed to
> sitting at my desk. Currently it has an ancient SBLive! that sounds
> great for two channel sound, but I've got the full surround system and
> I would like to take advantage of it. My video card is a Nvidia FX5300
> with an s-video output, so it sould work, although I'm a bit
> corncerned about the quality of s-video compared to component outputs.
> In my experience, s-video outputs seem blurry, and once again, I've
> got the home theater setup with the 16:9 TV, I'd like to utilize its
> capabilities.
> 
> On 3/3/06, Dave Sherohman <esper at sherohman.org> wrote:
>> On Wed, Mar 01, 2006 at 02:20:07PM -0600, Thomas Johnson wrote:
>>> I'm thinking about turning my desktop into a MythTV box to play DVD
>>> images straight from the harddrive.
>> If you're *just* looking to play DVDs, then MythTV is serious,
>> serious overkill.  IIRC, it just calls mplayer, xine, or whatever
>> other external player you've configured when you tell it to show a
>> DVD (or any other video file that's not a MythTV-created recording of
>> a TV show), so, if you're not planning to record TV shows, you're
>> going to be better off just installing mplayer, xine, or whatever
>> other player and just using that directly.
>>
>> Also, from a design perspective, mythfrontend is somewhat desktop-
>> hostile.  Its design is so heavily focused on being run full-screen
>> on a dedicated box and managed with a remote control that it's clumsy
>> to use in any other way.  Running a myth client on my normal desktop
>> system, I've found that it appears to have no way to resize the video
>> window or toggle between windowed and full-screen modes short of
>> stopping playback and wading through the setup screens for every
>> minor change; it completely ignores all mouse input; and (under
>> WindowMaker, at least) it always starts up with no title bar on its
>> window, making it impossible to move the window without bringing up
>> the window settings (via keyboard) and manually turning off 'disable
>> titlebar' each and every time it's run.  (Yes, this is one of my
>> major pet peeves with MythTV...  I absolutely believe that programs
>> should concentrate on doing one thing well, but not to the extent of
>> making it harder to do anything even slightly different.)
>>
>> On hardware recommendations, I can't offer any suggestions for a
>> sound card (I'm perfectly happy with analog stereo, so I've never
>> paid attention to SPDIF and have no memory of ever even hearing of
>> TOSLINK before), but, for video, my dedicated MythTV box is using a
>> plain old Radeon 9200 and I've had no problems with it, although most
>> people on the MythTV mailing lists seem to advocate nVidia cards over
>> ATI.
>>
>> --
>> The freedoms that we enjoy presently are the most important victories of the
>> White Hats over the past several millennia, and it is vitally important that
>> we don't give them up now, only because we are frightened.
>>   - Eolake Stobblehouse (http://stobblehouse.com/text/battle.html)
>>
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>>
> 
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