How We Built A Tiny Home Theater Pc With Intel's Nuc
#1
Posted 18 December 2012 - 03:30 AM
#2
Posted 18 December 2012 - 04:15 AM
#3
Posted 18 December 2012 - 05:23 AM
Yes the Zotak Nano is a excellent choice and If I were building something like this I would go that route too.
Some people will want "more ram" or bet GPU or whatever. He isn't saying this is the best just another alternative for someon
Thanks for the advice on the Zotak though!!
#4
Posted 18 December 2012 - 04:12 PM
#5
Posted 20 December 2012 - 11:16 AM
You can't defy Physics!!!! It's impossible to produce "Theater Sound" with tiny equip. & tiny speakers.
Go ahead & buy the tiny + tiny & your wife will be happy because she can't see where the Bad sound is coming from. Just don't call it Home "THEATER", because that's just insulting!!!
MLStrand56
Audiophile
#6
Posted 20 December 2012 - 01:27 PM
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It's a digital signal, the same signal from your cable box or blue-ray player. The size of the PC has nothing to do with it. The equipment you use to decode the signal and reproduce the sound is what will determines the quality of the audio, which this article doesn't go into.
This would be a nice little box to hide behind a good receiver and control with a smart phone. The real downside to this is no hard NIC, only Wi-Fi which really can't handle Hi Def video/audio consistently well.
#7
Posted 20 December 2012 - 04:17 PM
For thise interest in putting together a VERY low cost yet powerful media centre/streamer (inc LAN, HDMI, WiFi, CEC, 2xUSB, etc etc) you can't go past the Raspberry Pi. This will set you back $35 + cables, SD card. Software is FREE.
http://www.raspberrypi.org/
http://wiki.openelec...on_Raspberry_Pi
Cheers
#8
Posted 21 December 2012 - 09:48 AM
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Uh, what? This isn't an amp, and doesn't contain speakers. It is a component you connect to an A/V receiver (or separates, if you go that route), just like you do your BD player or any other component. And I didn't see "HOME THEATER" written on the device in BIG RED LETTERS anywhere.
I have to question whether or not you even read the article.
#9
Posted 21 December 2012 - 10:21 AM
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"Home Theater" in a tiny box, with BIG RED LETTERS, that say, "HOME THEATER" There's one born every minute!!! You can't defy Physics!!!! It's impossible to produce "Theater Sound" with tiny equip. & tiny speakers. Go ahead & buy the tiny + tiny & your wife will be happy because she can't see where the Bad sound is coming from. Just don't call it Home "THEATER", because that's just insulting!!! MLStrand56 Audiophile
It's a digital signal, the same signal from your cable box or blue-ray player. The size of the PC has nothing to do with it. The equipment you use to decode the signal and reproduce the sound is what will determines the quality of the audio, which this article doesn't go into.
This would be a nice little box to hide behind a good receiver and control with a smart phone. The real downside to this is no hard NIC, only Wi-Fi which really can't handle Hi Def video/audio consistently well.
#10
Posted 21 December 2012 - 02:50 PM
#11
Posted 04 January 2013 - 01:47 PM
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Not true. I have a Zotak Nano and a just bought a Intel NUC. The latter is MUCH faster. The Zotak Nano is a very nice piece of hardware but it is really slow campared to this one.
#12
Posted 04 January 2013 - 01:50 PM
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I would recommend the Intel NUC before the Zotak Nano bacause the Intel NUC is so much faster (it is well worth the extra cost).
#13
Posted 19 January 2013 - 01:59 PM
I find a lot of use for it and the plugins, Don't have a feature you want, just find the plugin that suits you.
I remember back when I hacked my old Xbox Classic and the first thing I put on it was XBMC, I could stream a whopping 480p video on that thing.
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work" Thomas Edison
"I have friends in overalls whose friendship I would not swap for the favor of the kings of the world." Thomas Edison
"Hell, there are no rules here - we're trying to accomplish something." Thomas Edison
#14
Posted 21 March 2013 - 07:00 AM
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the base version of the NUC (the all black model) has ethernet only and no thunderbolt.. the version used in this build is the more expensive version with wireless only + thunderbolt. so if thunderbolt isn't something you want/care for then save $50-$100 and get the base version of the NUC if you want to buy one as it'll have the port for wired networking.
#15
Posted 25 March 2013 - 01:51 PM
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You can easily go past the Raspberry Pi. It is far from powerful enough to run any media center. It will play the videos, etc, but it is not powerful enough to actually run the software like OpenELEC. It is SOOOOOOO slow.
#16
Posted 02 April 2013 - 06:14 AM
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I couldn't agree more. I think, for the normal every day person this would fill the void though. Personally, for me, if it won't bitstream DTSHD-MA/TrueHD to my receiver I wouldn't even bother with it for my HT setup...however, it would definitely fill the void for the TVs in the bedroom.
#17
Posted 02 April 2013 - 06:15 AM
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I agree completely. The theory behind the PI is nice the usability is anything but. The system is overall very slow and makes for a bad user experience when running as a HTPC.
#18
Posted 02 April 2013 - 06:17 AM
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This device won't even do passthrough DTSHD/TrueHD.
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