* [gentoo-user] Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo @ 2013-02-21 14:54 James 2013-02-21 16:23 ` Alan McKinnon 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: James @ 2013-02-21 14:54 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Hello, One of the things I've been rearching is how to configure a gentoo server with local sports video so folks can enjoy video on thier smart phones, where some video is open to everyone and other video is limited (password or device id) to only a select set of viewers.... XBMC is in portage. There is a package, loosely based on XBMC getting a lot of favorable reviews called "plex"; not in portage: http://www.howtogeek.com/65590/how-to-stream-video-to-both-ios-and-android-devices-with-plex/ Plex for other linux distros can be found here: http://www.plexapp.com/getplex/ Has anyone any experience with Plex? Know of a (dev)hacked-package of Plex for Gentoo? http://forums.plexapp.com/index.php/topic/30273-how-to-pms-with-gentoo/ Other, better approaches to video steaming to iOs/Android devices from a (gentoo) Linux server? (wiki?) curiously, James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo 2013-02-21 14:54 [gentoo-user] Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo James @ 2013-02-21 16:23 ` Alan McKinnon 2013-02-21 18:52 ` [gentoo-user] " James 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Alan McKinnon @ 2013-02-21 16:23 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 21/02/2013 16:54, James wrote: > Hello, > > One of the things I've been rearching is how to configure > a gentoo server with local sports video so folks can > enjoy video on thier smart phones, where some video > is open to everyone and other video is limited (password > or device id) to only a select set of viewers.... > > XBMC is in portage. There is a package, loosely based on XBMC > getting a lot of favorable reviews called "plex"; not in portage: > > http://www.howtogeek.com/65590/how-to-stream-video-to-both-ios-and-android-devices-with-plex/ > > > Plex for other linux distros can be found here: > http://www.plexapp.com/getplex/ > > > Has anyone any experience with Plex? > Know of a (dev)hacked-package of Plex for Gentoo? > http://forums.plexapp.com/index.php/topic/30273-how-to-pms-with-gentoo/ > > > Other, better approaches to video steaming to iOs/Android devices > from a (gentoo) Linux server? (wiki?) Someone broke xbmc in the tree a while ago (cry...), something about libav IIRC. Is it still busted? Plex forked off xmbc about 4 years ago, the front end is still xbmc-like, the back-end is proprietary. Do you have a special need to use Plex over XBMC for the back-end? I would say XBMC does everything you need. It supports profiles, which give you the password protection you mentioned, and there are many awesome front-end/remotes for android and i* in the markets. Just don't use the so-called "official XBMC remotes", that one uses an obsolete http API to XBMC, the current code base (Eden and Frodo) uses something much better in json. The best remote/front-end currently for android is Yatse IMNSHO Other options: Ditch gentoo entirely for this and use OpenElec instead (openelec.tv). It's XBMC on an appliance, and all of the maintenance issue you will experience (like broken libav or ffmpeg....) just ImmediatelyGoAway(tm) minidlna (in the tree) is a nice minimal media server, you get none of the xbmc awesomeness (like fanart and libraries and posters), but it's quick and fast and delivers content nicely. There are many front ends out there all speaking DLNA, and they support pushing and pulling content to varying degrees. -- Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo 2013-02-21 16:23 ` Alan McKinnon @ 2013-02-21 18:52 ` James 2013-02-21 20:23 ` Alan McKinnon 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: James @ 2013-02-21 18:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon <at> gmail.com> writes: > Do you have a special need to use Plex over XBMC for the back-end? No. > I would say XBMC does everything you need. It supports profiles, which > give you the password protection you mentioned, and there are many > awesome front-end/remotes for android and i* in the markets. Just don't > use the so-called "official XBMC remotes", that one uses an obsolete > http API to XBMC, the current code base (Eden and Frodo) uses something > much better in json. The best remote/front-end currently for android is > Yatse IMNSHO All good to know. > Ditch gentoo entirely for this and use OpenElec instead (openelec.tv). > It's XBMC on an appliance, and all of the maintenance issue you will > experience (like broken libav or ffmpeg....) just ImmediatelyGoAway(tm) This looks promising. I need to drill deeper into the Arm chips (SOC) that support OpenElec, Geexbox and such application. What about geexbox? How does it stack up in a comparision to what you have tried? I just stumbled across it. In fact, is there a good review somewhere that talks about many of these sort of HTPC systems in a feature comparison? > minidlna (in the tree) is a nice minimal media server, you get none of > the xbmc awesomeness (like fanart and libraries and posters), but it's > quick and fast and delivers content nicely. There are many front ends > out there all speaking DLNA, and they support pushing and pulling > content to varying degrees. Another interesting offering. Do any (all?) of these video servers mearly work over wired ethernet or the HDMI output port, or do some of them broadcast locally over wifi, which can be picked up by apple and android phones? My video camera can stream into a linux device via the the usb or the mini HDMI port. I'm not sure how to set up a hdmi port on a linux host to receive input from the hdmi output on the camera? What I want to do is then rebroadcast over wifi so every phone in the local (wifi) area can watch the video live on their phone as well as playback and other intersperced content (player stats etc). What would you recommend ? Which apps would the iphone or the android phone run to receive the wifi re-broadcasts? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo 2013-02-21 18:52 ` [gentoo-user] " James @ 2013-02-21 20:23 ` Alan McKinnon 2013-02-22 20:55 ` James 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Alan McKinnon @ 2013-02-21 20:23 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 21/02/2013 20:52, James wrote: > Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon <at> gmail.com> writes: > >> Do you have a special need to use Plex over XBMC for the back-end? > > No. > >> I would say XBMC does everything you need. It supports profiles, which >> give you the password protection you mentioned, and there are many >> awesome front-end/remotes for android and i* in the markets. Just don't >> use the so-called "official XBMC remotes", that one uses an obsolete >> http API to XBMC, the current code base (Eden and Frodo) uses something >> much better in json. The best remote/front-end currently for android is >> Yatse IMNSHO > > All good to know. > >> Ditch gentoo entirely for this and use OpenElec instead (openelec.tv). >> It's XBMC on an appliance, and all of the maintenance issue you will >> experience (like broken libav or ffmpeg....) just ImmediatelyGoAway(tm) > > This looks promising. I need to drill deeper into the Arm chips (SOC) > that support OpenElec, Geexbox and such application. > > What about geexbox? How does it stack up in a comparision to what > you have tried? I just stumbled across it. In fact, is there > a good review somewhere that talks about many of these sort of HTPC > systems in a feature comparison? > > >> minidlna (in the tree) is a nice minimal media server, you get none of >> the xbmc awesomeness (like fanart and libraries and posters), but it's >> quick and fast and delivers content nicely. There are many front ends >> out there all speaking DLNA, and they support pushing and pulling >> content to varying degrees. > > Another interesting offering. > > Do any (all?) of these video servers mearly work over wired ethernet > or the HDMI output port, or do some of them broadcast locally over wifi, > which can be picked up by apple and android phones? > > My video camera can stream into a linux device via the the usb or the > mini HDMI port. I'm not sure how to set up a hdmi port on a linux host > to receive input from the hdmi output on the camera? What I want to do is > then rebroadcast over wifi so every phone in the local (wifi) area can > watch the video live on their phone as well as playback and other > intersperced content (player stats etc). > > What would you recommend ? > > Which apps would the iphone or the android phone run to receive the > wifi re-broadcasts? My setup: Content on an HP microserver with regular consumer SATA drives (5400rpm). Network is 100mb FastEthernet (it's a gig nic but the switch is 100m). It runs FreeNAS and serves content over NFS, SMB and DLNA. XBMC is latest OpenElec Frodo RC3 on an Xtreamer Ultra2, HDMI 1.4 straight into the TV. Sound is plain 2.0 into the the TV. Network is 802.11n locked to 145mb (the AP is too unstable at 300 at my house). Uses NFS to get to backend storage. I went with this setup as I'd been burnt trying to go cheap. A RaspberryPi just barely managed to run 1080p and would stutter badly with any audio it couldn't just pass through direct to the TV. And there's the MPEG-2 license thingy as well.My research showed that even the latest ARM chips from 6 months ago were still not quite there yet (hopefully that will change real soon now), and the XBMC gui was annoyingly sluggish. Chaps at work had Popcorn hour boxes and other similar ARM based devices, with without the rich XBMC experience - the gui on all of them sucked. Probably because the device didn't have spare resources for a GUI. So I went for Intel based with a good nVidia card, and the XBox is the backup (also wireless at 145) if the Xtreamer goes south - that's what the DLNA is for :-) Network performance is great, even when playing full 1080p Bluray rips or .vob rips off dvd. I can get the network to max out, but have to do much crazy stuff at the same time as watch a movie to pull it off :-) I haven't looked into Geekbox at all, I understand it's a nicely packaged XBMC so all the same performance comparisons should hold. The way I use it on the tablets and phones is to use the functionality of the remote. AFAIK it asks xbmc for stuff and it comes over the network as uPNP, but I'm a little fuzzy on the details. It works for me, that's what I care about :-) I have a Samsung10" first gen tablet and an S2 phone, both cope well. XBMC doesn't transcode, so the device has to be able to deal with the content as delivered. Or, just download the file and watch later (that's why the content server supports smb) As for your camera, maybe OpenElec isn't the solution for that - it's a barebones appliance and might not support everything you need. Check out XBMC Live (it's also an installer) which is Ubuntu based, and you could use v4l to deal with the camera's video stream and broadcast that way. You would have to give up emerge in favour of apt-get thoguh.... Which did I go with FreeNAS and OpenElec? Because I got sick and tired of dealing with gentoo on what is essentially a single-purpose appliance. I want the NAS and media front end to work like a DVD player - switch on, wait 10 seconds max, be good to go. It must also update like a DSL router - upload a 70M single image, reboot, be good to go. My notebook is Gentoo because it does 100s of things and it must work *my* way, the media server does 1 thing and it must JustWorkRight always -- Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-user] Re: Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo 2013-02-21 20:23 ` Alan McKinnon @ 2013-02-22 20:55 ` James 2013-02-24 8:59 ` Alan McKinnon 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: James @ 2013-02-22 20:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon <at> gmail.com> writes: > My setup: Alan, thanks for your information. I just purchased a cab over camper from my 4x4 pickup. Also will be towing a boat and traveling extensively. Freelance videoing and web site creation is the business goal. As usual, you have given me ample to muse over as I go from for the ultimate low power, off- grid rig possible. I have to completely rethink-redesign the electrical systems and hence the network for video, security, 12VDC (when possible), entertainment, internet, and general hackery. Kids and I will be traveling round-a-bit. Once I get something plausible on paper, I'll post back for review/enhancement ideas. Going OFF_GRID dis summa! (can't get away from petro through). PS, I'm also looking for a portable fold up ceramic smoker that mounts over an open fire, cause I like to smoke up some chow in the envenings; in case you know of any superstrong lightweight cerramic materials (good insulator, strong, hi temp resistant) to build a portable smoker. Nothing like seafood or game hot out of a smoker for 3-5 hours........ Hell, I just might not return home, if I get this right....! James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo 2013-02-22 20:55 ` James @ 2013-02-24 8:59 ` Alan McKinnon 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Alan McKinnon @ 2013-02-24 8:59 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 22/02/2013 22:55, James wrote: > Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon <at> gmail.com> writes: > > >> My setup: > > Alan, thanks for your information. I just purchased a cab over > camper from my 4x4 pickup. Also will be towing a boat > and traveling extensively. Freelance videoing and web site > creation is the business goal. That changes things a lot :-) I assumed you had a mostly-regular HTPC setup in mind, this is obviously not the case. [...] > Going OFF_GRID dis summa! (can't get away from petro through). > > > > > PS, I'm also looking for a portable fold up ceramic smoker > that mounts over an open fire, cause I like to smoke up > some chow in the envenings; in case you know of any superstrong > lightweight cerramic materials (good insulator, strong, hi temp > resistant) to build a portable smoker. Nothing like seafood > or game hot out of a smoker for 3-5 hours........ I'm South African, we do things different here. The core of our camping community are serious hard-core campers - we use whatever we have to accomplish whatever we need to do :-) Barbeques are a flat wire grid on two blocks of whatever happens to be around - bricks, rocks, you name it. A smoker is often the cardboard box the chow was packed in! Wrap the outside bottom in aluminium foil, put another layer inside, spread wood chips on inside, place on cool fire, close box. Hey, it works :-) The big problem is not the material, it is how much space the thing takes up and I don't think I've ever seen a collapsible smoker. -- Alan McKinnon Systems Engineer^W Technician Infrastructure Services Internet Solutions +27 11 575 7585 -- Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon@gmail.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-02-24 9:00 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2013-02-21 14:54 [gentoo-user] Steaming to iOs and Android from Gentoo James 2013-02-21 16:23 ` Alan McKinnon 2013-02-21 18:52 ` [gentoo-user] " James 2013-02-21 20:23 ` Alan McKinnon 2013-02-22 20:55 ` James 2013-02-24 8:59 ` Alan McKinnon
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