Media Center and Me

This blog details my experiences and those of my family living with Media Center, as well as my professional experiences working for or with companies for the past five years to develop and advance the Media Center platform.
  • Vuvuzelas, the World Cup and Windows Media Center

    Hi TGBers:

    This short thread from last week got me wondering if any of you are working some magic to reduce the sounds of the vuvuzelas while watching World Cup matches in Windows Media Center. How would you approach this? What are your ideas? (Update: Thanks to those of you who pointed me to Garry's tutorial to silence the vuvuzelas using FFDShow!)

    Here's what I've tried out so far:

    Let me set the record straight: I like the vuvuzela. I’ve liked them ever since my then six-year-old daughter blew one at a Columbus Crew match and then smiled in amazement at the big, rowdy sound her little lungs had created. I can’t help it, but I always think of that moment when I hear one played.

    For many people, the vuvuzela’s unique appeal does not come across on broadcast television, prompting several enterprising developers to push out Vuvuzela-filters that attempt to reduce the impact of the vuvuzela-drone on the audio for this month’s World Cup games. There are a variety of homebrewed options that come up when searching the Internet on this subject.

    Most of these, however, don’t consider a Windows Media Center use case. For example, the Vuvuzela-killer and SimonH’s Labview filters both are aimed at running an audio line from the TV into your PC’s Line in, and then back out to the TV, whereas the audio, in my case, is coming down the cable and into my TV tuner. This may be why neither of these apps worked for me. Neither did the Devuvuzelator, from Stardock labs, which – if I’m reading their site correctly, seems to be aimed at Internet-delivered broadcasts.

    Does your audio device have an equalizer or offer sound enhancements?

    I also read online how many more recent TV’s have built-in sound equalizers you can use to reduce the impact of vuvuzelas, and I guess this is where I had my “A-Ha, I’m an idiot!” moment. Because if a TV has a built in equalizer, surely the 5.1 sound card in  my Windows Media Center PC has similar functionality? And sure enough, I discover a really nice RealtekHD audio manager. There were plenty of audio enhancements I could test on the fly while watching Cameroon-Netherlands today. (Best. Job. Ever.)

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    This particular program let me simulate different listening environments – from an Arena setting, which shook my room with vuvuzela goodness and deep, throttling bass, to “Padded Room” which seemed to drain the joy right out of the entire match, the audio equivalent of a couple of dementors materializing. I also had a number of equalizer presets to play with, each named for a specific type of music. After experimenting today, I discovered that while “Classical” seemed to reduce the vuvuzelas the most, it also made the announcers sound like they were shouting at me from inside a locked car.

    I ended up going with Jazz, which I thought kept the pop in the announcers voice while taking the edge off of the Vuvuzelas in the background. (You can still hear them, but they’re just not as insistent as they were before.) I’m no audiophile, so there may be better options out there for you.

    My all too simple advice is to see what equalizer features your sound card may offer. In Windows 7 or Windows Vista, select Control Panel | Hardware and Sound and then Manage Audio Devices. Then right click the audio device (speakers, for example) and select Properties.

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    Then check the Enhancements tab and see what enhancements are available. In my case, I could try different filters while watching live, making it easier for me to zero-in on my preference.

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    If all else fails, I recommend trying to embrace the vuvuzela and the spirit it represents. I can assure you that no vuvuzela within ten square miles of my home could have been heard yesterday over the ruckus my son and I made when Donovan scored in extra time, and the US moved on to the next round.

    Now that's something else I'll always think of when I hear the vuvuzela.

     

    Clubhouse Tags: clubhouse, media center, windows media center, media center-windows 7, audio, sound card, ausio enhancements, world cup, vuvuzela, tips
  • FAQs, Regulars and more

     

    Hi TGB:

    A few site changes today I wanted to tell you all about:

    First, we’re turning on a Frequently Asked Questions section today, featuring FAQs written by some of TGB’s most active members, Media Center MVPs and a few by me. Many folks have written in over the past year asking for some sort FAQ are indicating that they have been answering the same questions over and over. WScottCross got things rolling with a single-post FAQ that folks valiantly tried to bump and bump and bump. So, my thanks to all the folks who have been working on this section – writing answers or reviewing them. This has been a community-driven effort from the start, and all credit goes to these folks. We don’t yet have all the questions we want to cover, but there seems to be a good enough base to turn the forums on.

    You’ll notice that these forums are read-only. This is because we don’t want lengthy threads obscuring the core information. Users with follow-up questions are instead encouraged to send a private message to the question owner. These PMs will help the owner further refine their answer. If you notice something in an answer that is not accurate or could be better clarified, then please PM the question owner.

    That’s why we don’t want any one person to adopt too many FAQs; any effort like this will ultimately fail if it relies too heavily on any one person. I still have a long list of questions waiting to be adopted, so if you’re interested in adopting one, please send me a PM and I’ll get you the details. And my thanks again to those folks who have been working on answers over the past few weeks. You’ll know who they are by this sweet new badge rolling out today as well:

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    Are You a Regular?

    A second request I’ve gotten several times over the past year has to do with the membership levels folks on TGB earn. You may have noticed that you’re a “new member” until you hit 50 posts, and then you become a “member.”   Then there’s a big jump – 500 posts – when you become “active member.”

    A number of folks wondered about that jump, so we’ve added in “regular” at the 250 post mark. If you’ve hit 250 posts, then you’re probably working hard to help people out and coming to the site on a daily or almost-daily basis. Thank you!

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    Ask Microsoft now Tell Microsoft

    I’m sure many of you have noticed that the “Ask Microsoft” forums were re-named “Tell Microsoft” recently. Credit goes to Chris Lanier for the idea, helping to resolve something that was creating a lot of dissatisfaction in the community.

    Some background: these forums were created well before Microsoft acquired TGB, at a time when TGB was a much smaller community (in case you haven’t looked lately, we’re about to top 150,000 registered users!). Each forum had someone from the team who “hosted” it. Most of these people have since moved on, and while we have team members in and out of these forums as they are able, we certainly were not clearing the bar that a title like “Ask Microsoft” suggested e.g., you post a question and someone from Microsoft will reply. That is often the case on official support sites like answers.microsoft.com, but TGB is not part of the Product Support group – rather it’s a user community supported by the product team itself, all of whom are volunteers when they are on the site.

    I like Chris’ solution a lot because it let’s you continue to pass along feedback while I continue to monitor these forums and work to increase engagement by team members in them; folks with issues or questions that previously gravitated towards the Ask Microsoft section will hopefully place them in more appropriate forums, and we’re hopefully better managing expectations. (Chris, by the way, continues to volunteer significant amounts of his time to moderating and working on TGB -  I don’t know that I’ve ever thanked him for it publically – so I am. Thanks again, Chris.)

     

    Windows 7 RC Shutdown June 10

    The shutdown date for the Windows 7 Release Candidate is approaching: June 10. The RC is well into it “shutting down every two hours” mode right now, so I am guessing many of you have already upgraded. We will likely close down the Windows 7 RC forum a few days after the June 10 shutdown date (in case there are folks who need to post “why isn’t my RC working any more.”)

     

    Finally, a Twitter Question

    We’ve not done too much to publicize it, but TGB is on Twitter (@thegreenbutton). When news comes out, we push it out via Twitter as well. For those of you who tweet about Media Center, I’m wondering what hash tag you prefer? I’ve seen #windowsmedia center, #mediacenter and #wmc, but if there’s something else I should be using, let me know.

  • CES 2010: Reflections, ruminations and pandas

     

    CES 2010 was a great show for Windows Media Center, which enjoyed several minutes of demo time during the pre-show keynote address. The ability to watch and record four streams of HD programming (using the forthcoming Ceton CableCARD tuner) received an enthusiastic round of applause from the audience. Meanwhile, a lot of Media Center features - like Internet TV – were highlighted on their biggest stage in some time.

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    Above: Showing Media Center and a Ceton MOCUR card recording 4 HD programs at one time during the CES keynote.

    What’s more, the keynote really highlighted the kinds of unique experiences to be had when you connect a PC to your TV. While this may be self-evident for most folks on TGB, the wider population is only beginning to embrace these possibilities.

    In light of the growing popularity of TVs with the ability to display Internet-based content via widgets, or the emerging category of set-top media streamers (like the Boxee box, Nuu, Popcorn Hour, Roku, etc) – designed to aggregate and deliver Internet-based content on your big screen, the focus on Media Center in the keynote served as a reminder that a much larger world of rich, digital entertainment experiences are possible when you hook-up a Media Center PC to your TV.

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    Media Room 2.0 integration with 7MC machines was the only ‘new’ announcement about Media Center in the keynote, but the time given the platform hopefully pleased those who expressed concern that the 2009 keynote was too light on Media Center, as well as those who’ve felt the recent marketing focus of ‘TV on the PC’  takes a limited view of Media Center’s capabilities.

    CableCARD Tuners getting shot of innovation

    I saw the Ceton tuner in action in the Microsoft booth, as well as in MSI’s booth, where I found it running on an unattended PC and immediately told it to begin recording four HD shows at once so I could try it for myself without any marketing dudes around. This task was accomplished without missing a beat. I wanted to shout out to the people all walking by not noticing: Don’t you see this! Can you see what’s happening here? Four streams of HD content from one CableCARD!

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    Above: The Ceton card in a MSI media center PC on the CES show floor.

    Silicondust’s CableCARD tuner combines the company’s advancements in networking a digital TV tuner with CableCARD , something of especially great interest to folks considering a small form-factor PC that may not have room internally for a full-sized tuner card. I have to admit that when the time comes for me to retire my franken-rig, I’ll be sorely tempted by these small form factor PCs, and the Silicondust tuner makes the idea that much more attractive.

    Both of these advancements really demonstrate how innovation can grow when restrictions on a technology are relaxed. It was only this past September, after all, that relaxation of the OEM-only and Copy Freely restrictions for OCUR tuners was announced.

    What about extenders?

    As many have pointed out on TGB, Media Center extenders were not mentioned in the keynote, a disappointment for some hoping for news on this front. Instead, the keynote focused in on a variety of small form-factor PCs (sometimes called net-tops) that are packing a full-featured PC into the size and space of extenders from year’s past, as well as a range of all-in-one PCs. 

    Both of these form factors were all over CES – in every major manufacturer’s booth, suggesting we’ll see more models and competition on this front in the coming year. Some of the small form factors can even be mounted to the back of the TV.

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    Above: Some small form factors from msi.

    It will be interesting to see if this model gets any traction as more of these PCs roll out. Already on TGB I’m seeing folks cite additional costs, maintenance and the lack of a unified EPG as concerns.

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    Above:  I actually thought this was an extender when I first spotted it – small form factor PC from Asus.

    Even if you were disappointed by the lack of extender news at CES, there was plenty more of interest to Media Center users at the show.

    Touch PC: Coming soon to your kitchen?

    If ‘net-tops’ catches on as a term for small form-factor PCs, then one day we may refer to all-in-one touch PCs as ‘counter-tops.’ I first saw the HP Touchsmart at CES in 2007, where it was announced. In fact, we had it in the Life|ware home a few days before it was officially announced. It was covered up with a sheet. My job was to stand by the sheet and when somebody asked what was under it, say “Nothing. Go away.” I did this for two solid days.

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    Above: CES 2007: Before this was unveiled, I guarded it. For two days.

    With the focus on touch in Windows 7, we’re seeing more of these devices join the Touchsmart in this blooming category. A former colleague recently ordered one from Dell and has had great things to say about it. At CES, I tried all-in-one ‘counter-tops’ from Asus, Shuttle and MSI, the latter of which I found particularly impressive. I even tried out a prototype all-in-one touch from Samsung.

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    Are these PCs really on their way to our kitchens? Are they resistant enough to smudges and fingerprints to hold up? Can the masters of our kitchens get used to using a counter-top PC for recipes, schedule keeping and what not?

    Kitchen

    I think about these PCs as an opportunity because I feel like I’m still waiting for the PC to solve one of the biggest issues in our home life – the crazy flow of paper. With two kiddos in grade school, every day brings home a new flurry of papers. Plus there are the bills, notes from the homeowner’s associations, newsletters and so on that come in the house every day. When we’re on our A-game, the papers get processed straight-away. My wife will add school events, conferences and whatnot to a big desk calendar on the countertop. Bills get put in my pile, other papers get recycled.

    Problem is, the pace of life with kiddos – the running to and from karate, swimming lessons, soccer practice,  the vet, the doctor, flu shots, chess club and so on, means we are rarely on our A-game. Rarely. The papers start to spread until every few days we push them into a pile or two in the corner by the microwave with the hopes of running through them and getting events on the calendar soon. (By ‘soon’ I mean before someone comes over for a visit.)

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    Above: The Big Calendar on a good day. Can a touch PC on the countertop solve this problem?

    And while the big calendar provides a unified view of our schedule, it is, after all, still paper. I sure can’t pull it up from my laptop or on my phone when I’m at work. If we have a frantic morning and I am out the door without checking it, odds are good that I’m going to miss one of my assigned pick-ups or drop offs.

    The company that solves this problem – provides the easiest, fastest and soccer-Mom-approved way to get items from paper into a unified family calendar via a ‘counter-top’ PC station, that allows me to check that calendar from my TV (via Media Center), at the office or on my phone, as well as allows access to our family’s entertainment, pictures and music will have a winner on their hands.

    That’s asking a lot, I know. But from what I saw at CES, I believe we’re on the right path with touch PC hardware, and Windows 7 is well-positioned for the shift. Now if some innovative software developers can tackle the flow of paper into our lives….

    Media Center Remotes…

    Speaking of Innovation, it was nice to see new ground being broken around Media Center remote controls. The voice-controlled remote by Amulet Devices looked, felt and performed with the certain elegance that marks a well-made product. Unlike the old  remotes where you had to push a button to talk, the Amulet has an internal accelerometer, and begins “listening” to you when you tilt it up towards you. Its performance in demos in the noisy hall was spot-on.

    Both the SilverPAC and the Elan Microcontroller remotes also looked pretty cool, although I had a hard time getting used to the latter.

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    Above: Remotes from Elan Microcontroller with dual touch pads on the back.

    I have to admit, too, I really appreciated the simplicity of the Boxee Box remote, which features a simple navigation/Enter control on one side and a full thumb keyboard on the back. Would love to see this,or a similar remote, working with Media Center.

    Project Natal: Home for the Holidays

    It’s difficult to say which news I brought home from the show was more exciting for my 9-year-old son: that Project Natal will be available this holiday season on XBox, or that Lego is launching a massive multiplayer online universe game (and that I signed him up for the beta). I’ve not yet seen Natal demo’d live – instead having watched clips online or saw it on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. But given Microsoft’s commitment to natural user interfaces (and I often wonder why more companies aren’t talking about this idea), and their emphasis on touch in Windows 7, one can’t help but hope that some of the technologies used in Natal will one day appear elsewhere in the ecosystem.

    And, of course, I think we’ve got a lock on what we’re asking Santa for next Christmas.

    USB 3.0: faster data transfer than eSATA, FireWire

    Picked up a Parks and Associates report at the show that suggests that by 2013, the average home’s data storage needs will be in the range of 1.5 TBs. That’s the average home – not the power user’s home. That’s a lot of data we are accumulating.

    Saw a few demos of USB 3.0 data transfer at the show and can say that it sure looks impressive as heck, way faster than USB 2.0 and much faster than FireWire and eSATA. When the time comes to upgrade my main Media Center PC rig, I sure hope to have hardware options that support USB 3.0, especially since I tend to add storage as I grow and need it. USB 3.0 is also two-way – meaning it can upload and download information simultaneously. A huge improvement looming when this begins to make its way to the mass market.

    3D Gaming and 3D TV

    Calling the presence of 3D offerings at CES this year a “trend” is to minimize the extent that this technology was present. Every hall featured major vendors and small companies with 3D offerings – from gaming, to home theaters, TVs and more. I tried them all. I tried so many of them, in fact, that I couldn’t possibly begin to tell you who has the best offerings: it’s all a sort of blur in my mind now (albeit, a blur in 3D).

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    Windows Media Center was also in on the act, showing a 3D Bluray disc playing via Media Center. They had used Total Media Theater to run the Bluray player, and were using a graphics card that supported NVidia’s 3DVision kit. I’m told, too, that the display itself was critical – a Viewsonic LCD that supported 120 Hz. It’s tough to accurately capture a 3D experience on the web, but Ian Dixon posted a short video of the Media Center solution here.

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    There were always big crowds around the 3D demonstrations; people jostling to get a pair of 3D glasses. Some made snarky comments to each other (‘oh something else to lose in the couch’) others were quietly impressed. I tried 3D gaming, though not being a huge gamer, can’t tell you how much it enhanced my experience. I do know that while the game’s characters certainly seemed dimensional, I didn’t feel any more immersed into the game’s world as I would have been on a 2D display. (Then again, it may be that the jostling of the crowd around me was keeping me from feeling a more immersive experience).

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    I found the 3D experiences completely in line with any 3D movies I have experienced over the past few years – that is to say, it was always most effective when a scene seemed to be staged for gratuitous 3D exploitation – an alligator jumps from the water right at you, for example; or a character reaches a long arm right towards you.

    If 3D is indeed destined for the home (although the Times’ David Pogue points out a slew of challenges to be solved before this happens), it will be interesting to see how content producers take advantage of it. Will my local news be in 3D one day? Live sports? Will we start to see special channels dedicated to 3D broadcasts like we wee HD channels today? Will I one day sort my Media Center EPG by 3D TV?

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    Prior to this year’s CES, I would have guessed that at best, 3D productions would be the occasional exception rather than the rule, but after seeing the sheer investment by so many companies, I have to suspect that content producers are also preparing to make a similar leap. I asked the folks at Parks and Associates if they had recently produced a report showing some huge pent-up demand for 3D in the home, but was told that their “Trends in 3D Television” report is slated to be published this year.

    Then it occurred to me that the data these companies needed to justify their investments may already be out there. If you’ve gone to any CGI movie with a kiddo in recent years, you probably have noticed that many theaters offered it in 3D for a few bucks more than in regular old 2D. My kids always want to see the 3D version, so we usually pick it. It would be interesting to know how 3D versions of films performed against their 2D counterparts, and if this information is at all driving the move of 3D into the home.

    To be sure, almost all 3D demos at CES used a CGI film, often a kid’s movie like Scrooged, or an older one like Toy Story, meaning the same animation can be re-rendered as a 3D offering, I would imagine fairly quickly.

    Then, of course, there’s Avatar. If a 3D demo wasn’t using a kid’s movie, it was surely using Avatar clips. I haven’t seen the film as yet (not sequentially, at least, though I saw so many clips from it at CES that it is possible I have seen the whole film – just not in order). Like may of you, I’ve read the articles about the new technologies James Cameron pioneered to make the film. Are new production techniques going to make 3D content more easily produced?

    I shot video at CES with a Kodak Zi-8 pocket camcorder that can shoot up to 1080p. Will we one day be shooting our kiddo’s birthday parties on pocket 3D camcorder and upload the files lickety-split via USB 3.0 to my Media Center, where I can browse through and select them with simple waves of my hand in front of a wall-mounted Natal camera? Why not?

    Thin is in

    This year’s CES seemed to mark the end of the Biggest Flat Screen competition. I didn’t see one “World’s Largest (technology type) TV” throughout the entire show.

    Instead, it was all about the thinnest screens possible – as measured in millimeters. I saw some truly amazing edge-to-edge or almost edge-to-edge TVs scarcely as thick as my pinky. I don’t think I would want my kids anywhere near these TVs – some looked like a hard enough sneeze would break them in two, but oh – the picture. Amazing.

    LG had some amazing TVs. Samsung also had some nice looking sets, but like last year, they stationed some chachi next to them to tell people not to take pictures (usually after you have just taken the picture). What’s the deal with that, Samsung? Why are you bothering to trot them out at CES if you don’t want people taking pictures of them? Is there some sort of CE espionage you are avoiding with that one, single chachi who tells people not to take pictures? Is he that good? What should I do with the picture I took before he got all up in my grille? Sell it on e-bay? 

    Here’s the side view of LG’s thin screens. LG seemed to realize and accept that if you show a product at the world’s largest consumer technology show, you’re going to probably have to make peace with people taking pictures of it. Look closely – see that black line in the middle of the photo? Nice job, LG.

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    Above: See that thin black line in the middle of the picture? That’s the TV.

    Slate PCs, e-books and more

    I have yet to be tempted by e-book readers, even though reading is my main downtime activity and I read 50+ books a year. It’s not that I haven’t tried them out – well before CES, I checked out a friends’ Kindle (which he loves) and spent a good deal of time with a Nook at Barnes and Noble over the holiday. The thing is, I get most of my materials either at the library or from the local used bookstore, and find myself reluctant to drop a few hundys on a device that would have me paying $10 or so per title thereafter.

    But the sheer number of e-readers at CES suggests to me the prices on these devices will drop radically this year. In the International section of CES, you couldn’t go more than two feet without hitting an e-reader waiting to be re-badged and picked up for distribution. There were e-readers of all sizes and shapes. There was one just for comic books, and another for cookbooks and recipes.

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    Above: The scene next to my bed. Will an e-reader replace this? 

    Will my local library one day offer e-books for e-readers? Would that make the waiting list a thing of the past? Will publisher’s embrace this technology? Will they find creative ways to monetize their out-of-print titles? How far away are we from the 99 cent e-book or from the two-week, $1.99 e-book rental? Will those business models make it?

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    CES suggests that the e-reader accessories market is set to boom. Above: A waterproof holder for your e-reader. I am going to pass on the ‘for when you read underwater’ jokes.

    The e-book readers that caught my attention were those that were hinged with two screens. In one demo, a college textbook appeared on the left-side screen, and then on the right, related interactive content: videos, click-throughs, etc. It was a slick demo, but the thought occurred to me that publishers, who are already operating on razor-thin margins, may not yet be positioned to begin producing textbooks with embedded rich media interactive pieces (of course, if you are such a publisher and need a tech-savvy communications firm to produce some interactive modules, be sure to drop me a line).

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    Above: All the joys of Reading In Your Hand. As opposed to books, which you hold with your feet.

    Then it occurred to me that a college textbook on one screen could be easily paired with a web community on the the other. Imagine being able to immediately hit a forum filled with all the other college students in the world using that particular text at that moment, to ask questions and discuss ideas. Not to mention that web-enabled textbooks could be updated dynamically – not each year with the publication of a “new edition.” In this way, the textbook moves away from its roots as a stable location of certain knowledge and more into the dynamic flow of information that marks this age. No longer a foundation on which conversation is built, but rather a dynamic part of the conversation itself.

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    Above: e-readers from Copia are Wi-Fi enabled to power what they call “social reading.”

    But if we are talking about an e-reader with embedded rich content and an associated web community, I guess we’re really just talking about the web, are we not? Which is why the slate PCs shown in the keynote and around CES loom so large; Are they the all-in-one device that the UMPC, the tablet and the e-reader have all tried to be? Will they create a new category the way netbooks stormed the scene a few years back? Will Steve Jobs make all of these questions seem irrelevant the next time he announces a new product? Will manufacturers continue to use shiny black finger-print loving plastics to house touch-based devices? Will it always bother me as much as it does now? 

    The Art of Moving and Not Moving

    One thing that consistently causes me to stop in my tracks at CES: Art. Real art. The kind that savvy corporate marketers are wise enough to employ strategically on a crowded trade show floor.

    First, the Zune team, which pairs a display of their Zune graphics package with a big, vertical display that scrolls through the art packages offered on Zunes. One image in particular shows a sad, old-school panda bear hoisting a boom box on his/her shoulder. It made me ache for the 1980s of my youth, my bright yellow plastic walkman and a ride to the mall so I could buy the brand new Police album on cassette.

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    Above: A full-screen tableau of rotating Zune art always caused me to pause and look for a while whenever I passed the Microsoft booth at CES. This one is by artist Andrew Pommier. I had a stuffed panda teddy bear as a kid, which is probably why it resonates with me…his name was Choo-choo…wait a second, am I over-sharing?

    And sure, I gave Samsung a hard time earlier for their ‘’don’t take pictures of these TVs that we have put on display for the 120,000 attendees here” policy, so let me give whomever decided to do their “Digital Media Art Gallery” their props. Along one long wall of their show floor area, a sort of alley was created between their booth and their neighbors. It could easily have been left alone as simple, negative, empty space that people cut through on their way across the floor. But someone at Samsung had the idea to drop some dark cubbies in along the wall and then commission some digital media artists to create looped pieces that would run on Samsung displays. (Will get some video of this up soon).

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    Fantastic. I never was one to go in for digital media art, and yet all of the pieces along this aisle way mesmerized me (and, in the process, made me think those Samsung displays sure looked great). In one, an artist slowly photographed (and by slowly, I mean, took 20,000 photos) of small CE devices (two phones and a camera, I think) being crushed by an industrial press of some sort, then set the loop to run backwards – so that the devices emerge slowly from a pile of dust.

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    In another piece, three Samsung displays were used. On the left, a video of a woman making a cake. On the right, a man eating the cake. In the middle, a simple close-up of the cake rotating around – over the course of four weeks! Getting all moldy and decrepit with each subsequent turn.

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    I have to say I’m impressed  with whomever approved this piece, because I could easily imagine being in a meeting where some I-don’t-get-art chachi cleared his throat and said “Why do we want to associate our product with decaying cake?”  (Probably after he managed to push a “No photos of the new TVs at CES policy” into place).

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    Here’s why: the piece itself is moving and mesmerizing, and your product displayed it so well that I stood on the show floor at CES for ten minutes and watched it two times through.

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    Accessories

    An entire subculture exists at CES among companies who make things to cover or carry other things – cell phone cases, carriers, bags, and so on. Apparently, the key to succeeding in this field is to 1) convince the consumer that their personal identity and well-being is hinged on the graphics package/bling that they choose for their portable electronics and 2) that the designs and styles they offer are, in fact, the coolest and most adroit available.

    Two such companies found themselves booth neighbors. One went down the “bikini-clad women” route – to an extent I’ve never quite seen it taken to that level in all my years at CES.

    The other chose to have two of their artist set-up with giant easels working on new paintings.

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    So sure, while the bikini-company had large groups of slightly-to less-than-slightly embarrassed men grouped around waiting to get their pictures taken with the models before walking away shaking their heads and feeling just a little bit queasy, the company that highlighted its artists had a small, consistent grouping around the painters for five and ten minutes at a time, watching them work, asking questions and seeing the designs come to into existence.

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    I can’t remember either company’s name, though. I’m way to old to worry about my cell phone case.

    Props for Polaroid

    The final bit about art that I wanted to mention – and yes, we are coming to the end of my CES Odyssey, was from Polaroid. Yes, that Polaroid – the instant camera company still searching for its footing in a digital world.

    Polaroid’s booth included several large cases filled with great framed Polaroid photography. Museum-BLOCKED EXPRESSION. Totally analog in the midst of a whirling dervish of digital mayhem. The images, I learned, were from Polaroid’s corporate collection, and are set to be offered for auction by Sotheby’s later this year. (Hey, revenue’s revenue, right?)

    113_0289

    Whether intentional or not, the photographs themselves drew me well into Polaroid’s booth, where I found myself looking over a glass encased collection of old instant cameras – it was liking walking through my photographic childhood – no less than five of them were in our home at one point or another – including the classic Swinger of the 60’s and culminating with the Joy Cam, which someone got me when I graduated from High School and I had fun with during my first few years of college.

    113_0292

    Above: Cameras from my youth – my dad had an original Land (left) and a Swinger (right). I picked up a Swinger at a flea market last year because it had one of those Dyno label maker labels on it that said “Parran Crump” and my wife said “Why are you buying this camera?” and I said “Because it belonged to Parran Crump,” and she said “Who’s that?” and I said “I don’t know, but man, what a great name to find on an old camera.”

    I ended up learning a lot about Dr. Edwin Land, who invented the Land camera – Polaroid’s first instant, which he invented after taking a walk with his daughter and she asked, after he took a photograph, where the picture was. That’s what got his wheels turning and led to the birth of instant photography.

    In a way, too, digital cameras are the culmination of instant photography. Sure, there’s no film, paper or processing involved, but the instant gratification of sharing a photo you’ve just shot is, as they used to say in Texas, the sizzle that sells the steak. Polaroid is pushing a variety of products these days – including TVs, camcorder, digital frames and the like – but it’s their PoGo line of cameras I like best, because they print out 2x3 sticky-back prints right from the camera, the same way the old Land camera and Swinger and all the Polaroid’s of my youth did. I like that Polaroid is moving into the digital age with a nod to the ideas that got them where they are today.

    One last thing I learned about Dr. Land, by the way…among his 400+ patents was…wait for it …3D glasses.

    113_0294

    Yeah! There, set among their quiet photography gallery in the middle of a hall full of vendors touting 3D gaming and 3D TV as the next Big Thing for your home, were a few pairs of the original 3D glasses, sitting quietly, even humbly, one might say, on a shelf, waiting for their chance to change the world.

    113_0295

    ***

    Some Random Bits

    113_0177

    Above: The famous Landmark…parking lot.

    113_0194

    Above: Replica of Captain Kirk’s chair. This would have been really cool if the buttons had done something, but they were just fakes. They didn’t even depress.

    113_0197

    Above: CNBC broadcasting from the show floor on Day One. Steve Ballmer pointed out some good signs, economy wise, in the keynote – PCs sales in the fourth quarter of ‘09 lifted a dismal year to a 3% increase overall, with a 12% jump in PC sales predicted this year. He also said (and I’m looking for the source on this) that the global middle class is set to grow to four times it current size.

    113_0253

    Above: I took this picture because I wasn’t sure if it was a real Giant Cup of Coffee or I was hallucinating because I needed a giant cup of coffee.

    Below: I’ve got nothing.

    113_0345

     

    113_0266 

    Above: The Jewelry HTPC from Monueal. I’ve always seen their ads in PC magazines, but this was the first chance I had to check out their HTPCs.

      113_0334

    Above: a keyboard with a sidecar touch screen that I spotted in the Asus booth. Seemed to have XP embedded or something powering the touch screen.

    Below: Haier devoted a wall of their booth to sticky notes that said “Hello…my idea is….”

    113_0356

    I couldn’t think of what to ad, especially after seeing the request for a beer TV. 

    113_0357

    Below: A new pocket camcorder from Ion has a lens on both sides so you can record your own reactions along with the subject. This could be the ultimate blogger Interview tool.

    113_0361

    Below: USB-powered fans that look like flowers. Believe it or not, I got chased down by a “No pictures” lady here. Clearly this is top secret stuff.

    image

    In: Pandas

    image

    Pandas are clearly in. In the ChangHong booth,a Panda with human hands passes out candy. Moments later, it removes its head to get in a big discussion with ChangHong marketing lady over the best way to “Panda it up.”

    image

    Above: So, I’m a Panda with human hands that wants to give away candy. I get it. But what’s my motivation?

    This is the end.

    CES (like this blog post) is long, rambling, loud and interesting, but ultimately an exhausting endeavor. It rolls right into the weekend and most of us travel home on Sunday, arriving in the evening and having to rise for work the next day. 

    I got home Sunday evening and was immediately tasked with helping the kiddo’s review their homework before heading off to bed. My 9-year-old son, who to this point in his life has been showing every sign of being a little engineer that there is – presented me with his weekly writing assignment. This week’s topic was “If I owned a store…”

    “If I owned a store, it would be called the BB Gun Phone store and sell BB Gun phones.”

    And with CES still buzzing in my ears, I said “A phone that’s also a BB gun? That’s a great idea!”

    And my nine-year-old sighed and said “It’s not a phone that’s also a BB Gun. It’s called the BB Gun phone because your calls connect as fast as a BB Gun can fire.”

    Turns out, there may be a little marketer in there yet.

     

     

     

     

    Clubhouse Tags: clubhouse, media center, media center-windows 7, ces, e-readers, zune, 3D tv, pandas

     

     

     

  • Two Media Center remotes win CES Innovations awards...(videos)

    LAS VEGAS - You couldn't miss the green button on two remote controls in the CES Innovations award showcases outside the central hall at CES 2010. Here are demos of each...

    Elan Microcontroller Mutlitouch Remote 

    First up is a remote by Elan Microcontrollers, outof Taiwan. While the remote ostensibly resembles a Media Center remote on one side - flip it over and it has two thumb-touchpads for mimicking a touch interface.

    Click here to watch

    If I understood Deng, the demo'er, correctly, Elan's plan is to work with existing OEMs to offer the remotes in their packages. After shooting the demo, I tried the remotes out for myself. The dual touchpads took some getting used to, but the remote performed everything I asked of it.

    evolution 5500 by SilverPAC
    The second award winner is the evolution 5500 by SilverPAC, a high-end sideshow remote and home controller that works via IR, Wi-fi and Z-wave (presumably it can control any Z-wave lights, thermostats, drapes, etc. you may have in your home - they have a full working demo over at the Venetian that I haven't been able to see yet).

    Click here to watch.

    Expect these to be available on Amazon in Feb.-March of this year, ranging from a $200 low-end model up throgh the high-end 5500 for $1200. SilverPAC also makes a speaker dock for the remote to enable you to stream music from your PC to the remote/dock combo using PlayTo technology.
     

  • Media Room 2.0 - Windows 7 Media Center integration demo... (video)

    LAS VEGAS - Several folks have hit the @thegreenbutton on Twitter asking for more details about the Media Room 2.0 / Windows 7 Media Center integration announced during Microsoft's keynote on Wednesday night.

    Microsoft's John Hargarve demos in in the video below.

    Click here to watch

    Here's some background for those of you not familiar with Media Room:

    Media Room is licensed by service providers (aka "operators") to power experiences from a set-top box. In the US, it is the technology that powers AT&T's U-verse offering.

    Media Room 2.0 is the new version, and it offers the ability to integrate other Windows 7 Media Center PCs, Xbox 360's and mobile devices in with the STB. The end result can be some very cool experiences, as we see in the demo. For this integration to happen, the operator has to choose to offer it to and enable it for their customers. On the Media Center itself, an app has to be downloaded and installed. Operators have yet to announce their Media Room 2.0 strategies.

    In the demo, Microsoft uses a fictional operator (ContosoTV) to show how their STB experience, Media Center and Mobile experiences integrate, how you can access operator-provided services from the Operator on Media Center, and how the operator's brand can be included on the Media Center.

  • Amulet Devices forthcoming voice-controlled Media Center Remote...(video)

    LAS VEGAS - Amulet Devices is bringing a voice-activated Media Center remote to market this quarter. In this video, Amulet's Gary McMullan demonstrates the remote.

     

    Click here to watch 

     

    You can also check out a two-part demo of the Boxee Box, from D-link, coming soon. I also had some time with the Nuu Player, a small STB that runs Boxee, but adds in a 160 GB HD and additional apps for FB, Twitter and so on.

  • A few minutes with Silicondust's Jason Ludka...(video)

    LAS VEGAS - Silicondust's Jason Ludka discusses the prototype for their forthcoming networked CableCARD tuner in this short video. Check the Silicondust website just after CES for details on how to apply for their upcoming beta.

     

     Click Here to view

     

     

  • A few minutes with Ceton's Jeremy Hammer...(video)

    LAS VEGAS -

    Hey, TGB! Had a few minutes to chat with Ceton's Jeremy Hammer to talk about their forthcoming tuner...

     

    Click here to play

     

    More to come....

     

    Pete

     

  • Media Center Demo in CES Keynote (video)

    LAS VEGAS -

    Hi everyone. Microsoft's keynote just wrapped up.

    Below is a quick video of the Media Center portion ot.f tonight's keynote. Internet TV, EPG and the Ceton tuner cards all demo'd. Check it out....the video picks up at the end of a Bing maps demo. More than five minutes spent on Media Center.

     

    click here

    You can also view the whole video here: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/events/ces/

  • Catch Microsoft’s CES Keynote live stream tonight – 6:30 PT, 9:30 EST

     

    LAS VEGAS – Hi Green Button! I’m on the ground in Las Vegas and will be tweeting and blogging from tonight’s keynote and throughout the show.

       -  You can catch tonight’s keynote in a live stream here: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/events/ces/ at 6:30 Pacific, 9:30 pm EST.

       -  Follow http://http//twitter.com/thegreenbutton for more dispatches from the show.

    Finally, a quick two-minute piece on “the day before the show” that I pulled together today to get familiar with some new software and the netbook I am using on this trip. Hope you like it.

     Pete's YouTube Channel

     

    More to come – Good times.

    - Pete

  • The top threads of 2009...

    Greetings, Green Button:

    Hope the New Year finds you all well. TGB topped 140,000 registered users in 2009. Here are the top threads we were looking at or discussing:

     

    2009 Top 5 Threads by Views

    108,465    Hulu / Internet TV Plug-In coming VERY soon...    

    84,227     Windows 7 OFFICIAL BETA (Media Center) - Your issues, requests and feedback    

    78,829     vmcPlayIt Beta 1.3.1 (10/23/2009) NEW GALLERY UI : PlayOn (Netflix/Hulu/YouTube/...) media server front-end for VMC    

    59,635     Make your PC OCUR compliant – OSFRLoader    

    58,934     Netflix comes to Windows Vista Media Center    

    55,668     vmcNetFlix Beta 1.1.13 w/ Vista Extender Support (3/5/2009)    

     

    2009 Top 5 threads by Replies

    1,220    Yammm: Auto Rename, Metadata, Artwork, Playlist...

    1,032    vmcPlayIt Beta 1.3.1 (10/23/2009) NEW GALLERY UI : PlayOn (Netflix/Hulu/YouTube/...) media server front-end for VMC

    687     Ceton MOCUR Q&A

    636     vmcNetFlix Beta 1.1.13 w/ Vista Extender Support (3/5/2009)

    606     Make your PC OCUR compliant - OSFRLoader

     

    Happy Birthday, TGB

    Alexa.com informs me that thegreenbutton.com went live on January 4, 2003 – seven years ago. Happy Birthday, TGB, and thanks to all of you who keep this community vibrant and spirited.

     

    Coming Up Next: CES

    I’ll be heading to the Consumer Electronics Show next week, so keep an eye out for more posting here, or follow TheGreenButton on Twitter. If you’re on Facebook, you can also become a fan of TheGreenButton.com and see updates in your new feeds. And you can still check out my video reports from last year’s CES here.

     

  • Checking out Black Friday deals...

    Hi TGB:

    In the US, the day after Thanksgiving is Black Friday – the busiest shopping day of the year, a day marked by lots of sales and loss-leading, door-busting deals to be had.

    I’ve been reviewing the PC-related deals listed at GottaDeal.com, but if you’re finding better deals out there – post them in the comments, below. I also like ZDNet’s Black Friday guide, because you can check out their reviews of the items as well.

    I’ve learned a lot of lessons about Black Friday over the years. All of them, the hard way. But if you’re looking to enhance your Windows Media Center experience by picking up some new hardware to add to your rig, here are a few things to keep in mind:

    Adding Storage: Hard Drives

    There are lots of deals on hard drives on Black Friday, making adding more storage a attractive option. Now my opinion is if you’re not interested in a portable hard drive (e.g., one that is easy to take with you to and from places), there’s no reason to go less than 1 terabyte.

    The majority of deals I have seen are for external hard drives. Now, a USB-connected external drive is not as fast as one connected internally.

    Some external drives now have eSATA ports, the fastest connection type. If your PC has an eSATA port, you are styling. I use an external 500 GB drive for my pictures, and the USB 2.0 connection is sufficient for this purpose. If I was going to use an external drive for recorded TV, though, I’d want to use an eSATA connection if possible, then FireWire, and finally USB.

    GottaDeal is reporting a number of external HD deals:

    1 TB

    • 59.98 Western Digital at Target
    • 69.99 Seagate at Staples
    • 79.99 Verbatim at Office Depot
    • 79.99 Seagate at Meijer
    • 79.99 Western Digital at Wal-Mart

    1.5 TB

    • 99.99 Seagate at Office Depot
    • 139.99 Seagate at Staples

    2 TB

    • 179.99 Seagate at Office Depot

    Also check out ZDNet’s Hard Drives, Flash media and storage page.

    Adding RAM

    Three lessons learned the hard way:

    1) Make sure you are buying the right kind of memory. Memory comes in a lot of flavors – DRAM, SDRAM, SRAM, DDR, DDR2 – just to name a few. Make sure you are getting the right flavor for your PC.

    There are some freeware apps out there that you can run to tell you what kind of memory you have, but I’ve not tried any of them (so I’m not linking to any).

    Instead, I’ve always shut the PC down, opened the case, took out the memory and wrote down what kind it was. This also let me see how many extra slots were available in there.

    2) You can stuff more RAM in there than you can use! It’s true. I put 6GB in my PC once before learning that only 3 GB were usable because I have a 32-bit OS. 64-bit systems can make great use of larger amounts of RAM. Microsoft has a pretty decent FAQ on this subject here.

    3) Finally, in the “Maybe if it wasn’t 5 am, I would have noticed” category, one recent Black Friday, I picked up 2 GB of the DDR2 RAM I needed for my desktop. Not until I got home did I realize I had picked up the Laptop version of the RAM. No, the two don’t mix.

    I haven’t seen MicroCenter’s Black Friday ads, and typically they have some good deals on RAM. And NewEgg.com started offering early Black Friday deals online last week.

    Network: Wireless Routers

    I have a collection of disappointments wireless routers I’ve used over the years. They are in a cardboard box in the basement, and collectively, they have one thing to tell me one thing that I want to share with you:

    You get what you pay for with routers.

    I went for some of those $20 deals on a few consecutive Black Fridays, and have never been satisfied with the results.

    Now, the good news is that this year, the 802.11 N spec is no longer a draft, but an approved protocol, and there are plenty of deals for Wireless N routers popping up for this Black Friday running from $19.99 up through $89.99.

    I would describe the wireless needs in my home as modest – we stream music, Netflix movies and on occasion push recorded TV around the HomeGroup using a D-Link DIR-615, which I’ve been happy with after spending about $50 for it earlier this year. Office Depot is offering it for $19.99 on Black Friday, though.

    If you plan to push a lot of digital entertainment / HD around your house wirelessly, these deals may disappoint you as well. A lot of enthusiasts would recommend a simultaneous Dual Band router, where you can specify one band for data and the other for your media. Simultaneous means it will broadcast both bands at the same time.

    Staples is offering a dual band (although not simultaneous) router from Linksys for 89.99. I’d check out the product reviews on this one before jumping in.

    Final Thoughts

    The worst Black Friday for me was a few years back when I got caught up in the frenzy and bought several hundred dollars worth of stuff I didn’t need. I picked up power strips and corded telephones because they were “free” (after rebate, if I had ever bothered to send in for the rebate). I’ve bought flash drives even though I already had more than I needed. One year I got an office chair that I hated, and also a paper shredder I’ve never used.

    I used to always pickup a stack of blank CDs and DVDs, until I realized how infrequently I use them (I still have several hundred of each). And of course, I’ve found buying printer paper in bulk tends to beat the deals they offer on Black Friday as well.

    You can find a great deal to update your rig on Black Friday – just be sure you’ve got both eyes open when you do. Do your due diligence – check your product reviews and read the fine print. And don’t go for a “rebate” deal unless you’re committed to sending it in – the same day.

    Seen any good deals? Got any plans? Add them to the comments, below.

     

  • I'm thinking netbook....again

    Let’s talk about netbooks, the small form, low-cost mini-laptop phenomenon that Asus kicked off a few years back with its Eee PC. As C|net reported this summer:

    Netbooks are projected to grab a 20 percent share of the worldwide (laptop) market for 2009, according to a report released Monday by researcher DisplaySearch

    I have to admit it, I jumped in way too early in this category – ordering, in late 2007, one of the first Eee PCs (a 2GB Surf). I loved the idea behind it, but in practice found the keyboard too small for my fingers, and was no fan of the Linux OS it shipped with. It had a 7” screen that seemed like it was getting bullied by the speakers on either side.

    Also, uh, let’s just say I thought I was getting a black one, and instead a light aqua one arrived, and that the CEDIA dealers who saw me using this to write blog updates from tradeshows were particularly ruthless in their mockery.

    Asus Eee PC 2GB Surf (blue)

    Above: My manly 2 GB surf….

    The category has come a long way since that time. I spent some time at a big box retailer recently trying out the variety of netbooks now available. Keyboards and screens have gotten larger, but for the most part, they are still coming in under 3 lbs. I could pound away at the keyboards with relative ease and the larger screens were welcome. 

    And, I find I still love the idea.

    Mostly, I like the idea of a very portable tool I can take with me when my travels won’t involve video editing or photo manipulation. I like how easily it moves around the house – how it can live comfortably next to the reading chair or on my night stand.

    The new era of netbooks that add Nvidia’s Ion graphics processor to the mix suggests a whole new reason to like the idea: the netbook: as another element of the Media Center ecosystem in my house. 

    A search on TGB shows folks have been toying with Media Center/netbook scenarios since they first launched, but I’ve not found anyone posting to the site about their experiences running a netbook with the Ion processor and Win7 Home Premium. Which is something I'm thinking of doing.

    Now while my use case is not entirely media-focused (for example, I don’t envision watching live TV on it), I do like the idea that I can add it to my HomeGroup and watch our backlog of recorded TV, or access our music collection and videos. When my kiddos are home sick from school, I can bring it into their room and let them watch recorded TV, stream movies from Netflix or play web-based games on it.

    Nvidia’s website shows three models currently available with the Ion – HP’s Mini 311, Lenovo Ideapad S12 and a Samsung N510. Of these, I could only find the HP and Lenovo actually for sale, and I should note that these beefed up specs mean a beefed up price – pushing the low-cost netbook into laptop-pricing territory.

    I’m leaning toward the HP at the moment. Of the three, it is the only one offering any significant customization options, including wireless-N, which I would have thought would be a no-brainer for a device whose primary purpose is Internet connectivity. Other than the cost, there’s really only one thing holding me back: They only come with these swirly-circle designs on them:

    Above: Do I have to?

    Have any of you jumped on an Ion netbook yet, or planning to? Have you integrated a netbook into your Media Center ecosystems? What were your results? What advice can share?  If necessary, talk me off the edge before I drop five bills, peeps.

     

  • Welcome to the Family, Windows 7

    Like many Media Center enthusiasts, I jumped on the Windows 7 Family Pack deal, which provides three upgrade licenses to Windows 7 Home Premium for about $150 bucks. Like many who preordered at Amazon, my Family Pack came on Oct. 21, the day before the big release.

    My home network has gotten a bit wily over the past two years – different Windows OSs, different virus protection programs, different network connections, different sharing permissions on each PC, different program versions, you know the drill. It got to be this way organically, of course, because as our computing needs changed, we simply added in or downloaded what we needed. The arrival of Windows 7 lets me rethink some of these decisions and put together a high-level plan to make managing things easier and more direct.

    High-level plan

    Upgrading all three of our PCs to Windows 7 Home Premium (thank you, Family Pack) and setting up a Home Group will resolve a lot of the sharing/network issues we’ve had for the past year. The pictures, videos, recorded TV and music on our PCs will be shared for all. I’m also going to standardize us all on Microsoft Security Essentials for virus protection, and download Windows Live Essentials so that we all have Photo Gallery, Movie Maker and so on. Finally, I want to make sure that each PC has the latest versions of Zune software (we have a Zune pass and have multiple Zune’s in the family), as well as some of the non-Microsoft apps we use like Skype and Adobe Reader.

    So here’s the situation in our house:

    1. Dedicated Media Center PC connected via HDMI to our 50” LCD TV. This started life as a Dell low-profile Inspiron, but over the past two years, I’ve upgraded it a good deal as components went on sale: better OS, more RAM, TV tuners, better video card, additional hard drives, etc. I believe the best ten-foot Media Center experience comes with connecting the PC directly to the TV, and the low-profile case fits well in our cabinet.

    Strategy:

    The Media Center has been running the Win7 Release Candidate beta since March. Since there’s no approved upgrade path from the RC to Win7 Home Premium, I rolled it back on Wednesday night to the version of Vista Basic that it showed up with. I have the OS on its own drive on this PC, while all of my music, pictures, videos and recorded TV are on separate drives. This makes changing the OS much easier since it only affects one drive.

    2. General Purpose Laptop – This is an old work laptop that I brought home last year for the teen-age foreign exchange student we hosted to use. Since she returned home, we use it for general web surfing and e-mail checking, and it tends to move around the house. There’s no tuners for live TV, but we have used to watch movies – either DVDs or streamed from Netflix. It was running Vista Business Edition.

    Strategy:

    There’s no in-place upgrade from Vista Business to Windows 7 Home Premium, meaning I had to do a custom install – one that would wipe away the existing OS and apps entirely and create a Windows.old folder for all the old stuff to live in. I have a 500 GB Western Digital My Book external hard drive with a lot of space on it, so on Wednesday night I backed up all the files to it.

    Tip! See what versions of 7 can support an in-place upgrade and which require a custom install on this chart.

    Basically, I plugged the drive in and then dragged-and-dropped all my user file folders onto it and let it work on its own. It took about 10 minutes to finish. In Vista Business and Ultimate versions, I also could have done a complete PC backup using the Windows Backup and Restore feature (Start | All Programs | Accessories | System Tools |Backup Status and Configuration, or simply type ‘backup’ into the Start | Search box.)

    image

    3. My Wife’s Laptop is, of course, the PC that gives me the most worry. It’s been a rock solid performer for her for the past year, so I’m worried about upgrading the OS when everything is going well (if it ain’t broke…). Still, I’m not crazy about the third-party virus protection she has, which frequently and inexplicably pops up messages that seem to be more about marketing a more expensive version of itself instead of actually protecting the PC, but they’re worded in such a way that she always calls me when one appears. And adding her to the HomeGroup will make it much easier for her when she wants to email pictures to her parents that are on the Media Center downstairs.

    Strategy:

    Luckily, this is a direct Vista Premium to Windows 7 Home Premium upgrade – meaning it can be done while keeping her files and apps in tact. Still, I copied her files to the external hard drive, just in case, and then I did a complete PC image backup with Backup and Restore, too. Overkill? Probably. But when you’re working with your wife’s PC, you can’t be too careful.

    10.22.09: Windows 7 Upgrade Day

    With all of the PCs backed up the previous evening, I started the upgrade process Thursday morning just after getting the kiddo’s on the school bus. Here’s how it went down:

    9:31 am     

    I begin with general purpose laptop, dropping in the Upgrade DVD. Windows tells me I have to do a custom install, which will replace the OS entirely. Bring it on, I say.

    10:20 am    

    Windows 7 finishes the installation and restarts itself. I take the DVD and get the upgrade rolling on the Media Center PC before returning to this laptop and entering my product key and finishing the upgrade – setting my time zone, setting up the HomeGroup, and some other housekeeping tidbits.

    10:20-10:50 

    I download and install Microsoft Security Essentials and Windows Live Essentials on the laptop.

    10:55 am   

    On the Media Center, Windows 7 has detected the HomeGroup set-up when upgrading the laptop. I enter the HomeGroup password to join.

    11:00-11:15 am   

    I download and install Zune 4.0 software and the latest versions of Skype and Adobe Reader on the laptop. Then I attach the external hard drive and begin copying my files back over.

    11:20 am

    Windows 7 installation completes on the Media Center PC. I take the DVD to my wife’s laptop, say a little prayer, and begin the upgrade process there. I select in-place upgrade, and Windows begins examining everything on my wife’s laptop.

    Also, I start wondering if it’s possible that I will complete all my tasks by lunchtime.

    11:25-11:50 am

    On the Media Center PC, I download and install Microsoft Security Essentials, Windows Live Essentials and the Zune 4.0 software.

    11:52 am

    On the laptop, all of my files have been copied back in good order. I delete the Windows.old folder that was created in the upgrade, which frees up a ton of space.

    12:00 noon

    The upgrade on my Wife’s PC is still running. It’s given me a list of potential issues with programs/drivers that the upgrade to Windows 7 may cause, but these are minor items that I anticipated. I tell it to go ahead.

    Back on the Media Center PC, I run Media Center Express Set-up and then TV set-up. I know from experience that scanning for channels is the longest part of TV set-up, so I want to get it going before breaking for lunch.

    The only hitch to this process is that I have to have Windows go look for and reinstall drivers for my AVer Media Tuner card before I can run setup in Media Center.

    Check out “Compatible with Windows 7” tuner cards here. There’s even an AQ (Advanced Qualification) certification for Media Center that tuner cards can earn.

    12:15

    There’s no bread! Why is it every time I want a danged sandwich, there’s no bread in the house. Lunch consists of Cheez-its and dry cereal (yeah – we we’re out of milk, too).

    12:30

    TV setup completed on the Media Center, I edit the guide listings, looking for more channels (as described in Ben Reed’s post, here). I find about 15 additional channels, but once I rule out the shopping and foreign language channels, have about seven. These are mostly ClearQAM digital versions of channels I am otherwise receiving via analog cable, so I combine them with the analog listings.

    1 p.m.

    I wrap up Media Center setup by installing the Internet TV and Netflix apps and logging in to my Netflix account. I also change where Media Center will record TV (directing it to the 1TB hard drive I put in for this purpose) and add additional locations to the picture, video and music libraries.

    1:15 p.m.

    On my wife’s PC, I join the HomeGroup. Shortly thereafter, her in-place upgrade is done, and I have to admit, I am amazed. It took the longest of the three, but for all intents and purposes, on the surface, her PC seems exactly the same – down to the wallpaper and icons on her desktop. (I even do an aero shake just to make sure the upgrade actually worked).

    1:15-2:00

    Maintenance stuff on my wife’s laptop – uninstalling the old virus protection and replacing it with Microsoft’s Security Essentials, installing Windows Live Essentials, Zune 4.0 and removing a few other unused programs. This lappy is feeling lean and mean when I’m done.

    2:00-2:30

    I set up Media Center on both laptops; although neither has TV tuners, I want them to be able to access recorded TV on the main Media Center PC. Also, install Internet TV and Netflix apps on both and log in to our Netflix account.

    2:30-3:00

    Still plenty of time before the kids get home from school, so I head back to the Media Center PC to install some of my favorite plugins for weather, Internet radio, Hulu desktop and so on.

    (Not sure how long hulu will be part of my life after today’s news – charging? Hulu? Really?)

    3:05

    In the new Internet TV, I immediately get involved in an episode of The Love Boat, season one. In it, both Isaac’s Mom and girlfriend come for a cruise on the Pacific Princess when- surprise! Isaac’s Mom also brings her new boyfriend – some Dentist that Isaac does not like one bit. Also, Gopher sneaks a pet baboon onboard and almost gets fired for it. Best quote was by Captain Stubben: “Kids these days – when they do the Bump or the Hustle, it’s fun, but when we do them, we’re being silly and immature.”

     The Love Boat tv show photo

    Above: This new Internet TV content is going to pose a serious threat to my productivity this year.

    So there you have it – in one day I’ve upgraded all of our PCs, created a Home Group, re-set-up my main Media Center (and gained some digital channels in the process), am sharing content among PCs, have standardized our virus protection and removed the various apps and downloads that accumulate over time but aren’t being user or adding any value.

    So of course, it’s time to start thinking about…MORE! What’s next? A netbook with 7 would be nice downstairs, and of course there’s my recurring dream of moving the PCs out of the media room entirely and into a dedicated AV rack…

    I hope your upgrade experiences are as smooth as mine. Here’s the basic checklist I used for our house:

    1. Run Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor on each PC you plan to upgrade, checking for potential issues.

    2. Back-up files and/or do a complete PC backup using Vista’s Backup and Restore center.

    3. For in-place upgrades, remove any unused programs and applications.

    4. Run Windows 7 upgrade from provided DVD.

    5. Set-up/join HomeGroup.

    6. Download and install Microsoft Security Essentials.

    7. Download and Install Windows Live Essentials.

    8. Download and Install Zune 4.0 software.

    9. Run Media Center set-up. For PCs without TV tuners, be sure to add recorded TV location to media library.

    10. Install any additional, missing programs (Skype, Adobe Reader, Media Center plugins).

    Want more? I learned a lot from Lifehacker’s Complete Guide to Windows 7.

    - Pete

  • CEDIA news roundup, part I

    Hey TGB:

    A look at some of the news coming out of CEDIA…more to come…

    EngadgetHD was Live from the Microsoft Windows Media Center event, as was Product Reviews, and Andres from My Network Project.

    Tuner News

     

    Ultimate Media Center Install Winner

     

    Media Center PCs

     

    Microsoft Booth

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