Chapter 4: Prepping your old PC
Before we get into all the specific software options for running your DVR-PC, we need to get your computer ready. These steps will give you the best chance of a streamlined installation and keep skips when playing down to a minimum by removing everything that you do not need for entertainment.
A few general rules and things to consider for a media center (or PVR) PC
• You will be dedicating it for entertainment applications so strip it down
o Remove any extra cards, interfaces, and connections you don’t need for media center
o You can always add things back in later but get a good baseline of playback before you start taxing the computer
• Remove all software that is not critical to entertainment applications - both to save hard drive space and cycles
o It is ok to leave office application on there but be sure to disable all startup and tasktray services so they do not tax the processor when not running
• Use msconfig (from the run menu) and disable everything that starts that is not critical - get rid of desktop and launch icons
o This is a biggie – stop as much as possible. Look through even the Microsoft services. Any service you do not recognize, Google them and a variety of sites will describe exactly what they are and whether they are critical. This application does not uninstall anything, it only prevents it from loading on startup so if anything gets flaky, you can always turn services back on one at a time until it clears up. Be sure to look in all the tabs – services, startup in particular.
You simply uncheck any service or program to prevent it from starting next time you boot. Once you clear everything you can, just press OK – It will ask you to restart – do that now. When your system restarts it will notify you that changes have been made – tell it ok and not to tell you about it again.
• Consider a low overhead antivirus like AVG
o This is like the PC vs. MAC discussion, everyone has their favorite. I would, however, proffer that an AV program that uses as little system resources and adds the least overhead as possible is a better choice for a media center/DVR. I’ll even go out on a limb and say that I firewall mine up, limit access, don’t use it for real browsing or typical applications and leave off an AV program altogether.
• Make sure you have a good codec pack in place - Google XP essential codec for some good packages
o Codecs – huh? This is the HUGE benefit of using a PC as a media player as opposed to one of those cool little stand alone boxes – you can update your codecs yourself. The more you have the more file types you can play. I’m not going into the different ones and options here in detail other than to say you need the one that best matches your tuner card, you need xvid/divx, and if you are going to be playing DVDs you need a specific MPEG2 one as well.
• Is your hardware adequate? 1GHz per encode or decode stream (less if you use a hardware encode option), an 1GB total memory is recommended. Check the specs for your tuner card – they are usually a good guage of power.
• Is it quiet enough? Fans and hard drives tend to be the loudest things - consider a quieter fan and/or hard drive. Again, a quick internet search will quickly reveal a whole subculture of – well – lifeless folks who are obsessed with eeking every last tenth of a dB of noise out of a media center PC. The largest things that effect the output are fans, the structure of the case, the hard drive itself and how it is mounted, and the CPU fan/cooler. A brief note that overclocking typically raises the temperature of a CPU, requires a bigger fan/cooler, reduces the effective life of the CPU, and by extension makes things louder in general. (I mean lifeless with a huge amount of respect by the way)
• Does it have bright blinky lights on the front that will be distracting when watching a movie?
So - there is an order to things:
1. Double Check BIOS settings to make sure nothing is set up for the PC’s “old life” - CD first boot, HDD Second, on board video activated, not over-clocked etc.
2. Is your OS OK? If so, strip it down, if not install the new one now. Consider at least 100-150GB for the primary partition where the media center and or PVR resides for TV recording - some of them prefer to store recordings only on the same drive where the PVR program is running
3. If your on-board video card does not support the outputs you need, consider installing a second one now - make sure that is all up and running before proceeding. You will need at least a composite output – preferably both a component/DVI/HDMI AND a composite. Note that many on board video GPUs have a composite output – some already support simultaneous output, some require you to choose one. Adding another video card is usually a low cost addition and will give you huge flexibility. Enabling the “TV OUT” is sometimes tricky – with Nvidia cards a “detect display” button is usually provided that almost never actually
4. Install tuner cards and verify they work using the software that came with them
5. Install your PVR program of choice and get it functional - EPG is usually the hardest part, but make sure network connections, radio, proper recording all function
6. Verify video quality of live tv and recordings - different codecs have different performance with various tuner/video card combinations
7. Get Sound working - depending on your setup, spdif/optical is usually the best choice, but if you intend to use the computer for gaming as well, you might need analog 6 channel outputs to your amp (depending on your audio card and drivers and whether they translate everything to spdif or not)
8. Setup the second drive partition as a shared resource and consider installing other Network Attached Storage if your library grows.
9. Install whole-home distribution system like BOCS so every TV in the home can access your new creation
OK – ready to actually put a PC together – if you are starting from scratch, watch this video on
that covers all the basics.