practicality: (I do believe in phosphorylation! I do!)
practicality ([personal profile] practicality) wrote2009-02-09 11:09 am

Nerdy

Question for more techy people on my flist - desktops and wireless networking, how do you do it? I expected it to be an add-on card, but after searching New Egg, I can find no such thing. My last experience with desktops and networking was something like seven years ago, installing a ethernet card in an old Dell, so I'm really behind the times.

The reason for this is that I'm planning on using my income tax refund to build a media box/NAS, because I have 250 GB of disks scattered across my desk, and am tired of my roommate's PS3 refusing to play any of my older AVI files and mucking up sound decoding on some of the newer ones. My basic plan is to install MythBuntu to provide a video front end, and then use Samba for file sharing - if MythBuntu won't let me install Samba, I'll probably go for a normal Ubuntu build, strip out the extras and then toss in MythTV and Samba.

The two biggest planning hurdles so far are aforementioned wireless networking - I have absolutely zero access to the router in the house, so wired is basically out of the question - and trying to find a motherboard/CPU/graphics combo that's both cheap and space-efficient. The big flaw there is that this system will run fine on a 1.8 GHz single-core CPU and integrated graphics - but I need an S-video or composite video out. And it seems like integrated video + s-video or composite = nonexistant. Which means putting in a cheap dedicated card, which is 1) more space and 2) another $30.

Also, another sign that I haven't touched desktop stuff for a while - my jaw dropped when I saw that you can buy a DVD burner for $25. Mostly because I remember being excited when I bought a CD burner for $60 in like...2001.

[identity profile] doctorskuld.livejournal.com (from dreamwidth.org) 2009-02-09 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833315041

Wireless cards are easy and cheap.

And it seems like integrated video + s-video or composite = nonexistant.

Yes, that is pretty much true. You'll have to find a cheapo video card.

[identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org 2009-02-09 08:02 pm (UTC)(link)
\o/ I knew they had to be there somewhere, but I just couldn't find it @.@

Yeah, it looks like there are some ones in the $30 range with nVidia chipsets that work with Linux. I'm contemplating leaving out the tuner if I can configure MythTV to work with it, as I don't actually have a tv package at the moment and the cards are like $100 for an okay one.

[identity profile] doctorskuld.livejournal.com (from dreamwidth.org) 2009-02-09 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Don't spring for a TV tuner, it's way too expensive. Besides, everything you want to watch these days is downloadable anyway, which I assume is what your media box is for in the first place. :3

[identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org 2009-02-09 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Very good point, and it's true, most of that 250 GB is tv XD I'm going to do a quick test install of Mythbuntu to a partition - running it without a tv tuner is an 'unsupported configuration', but anecdotal evidence seems to be that it works out okay. It's got a nice frontend for organizing and displaying files, works with media center IR remotes, and apparently can be set up to run transcoding jobs while it's idling, despite the fact that it's main functionality is DIY PVR XD

[identity profile] phaseonehundred.livejournal.com (from dreamwidth.org) 2009-02-09 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Making a network or just hooking up to wireless wherever? Building your own network takes a couple things, but just hooking up in hot spots is just a wireless card like skuld found

[identity profile] momijizukamori.dreamwidth.org 2009-02-09 10:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Just adding to the network - I've got high-speed DSL, but the modem and wireless router are upstairs in my landlord's half of the house, so I can't run a wired connection to it. I guessed that there were network cards, but I was going crazy trying to find them - turns out that the Networking category doesn't show up in NewEgg's main drop-down menu XD