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Apple iPad 2 |OT|

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I don't like Air Video because 1) You need a server software running and 2) You need to transcode. Server software and conversion is archaic in this day and age. XBMC shows you can set something up that requires neither.
 
Marty Chinn said:
I don't like Air Video because 1) You need a server software running and 2) You need to transcode. Server software and conversion is archaic in this day and age. XBMC shows you can set something up that requires neither.

I guess transcoding isn't such a big problem for me since all my stuff has already been converted to m4v so there is no transcoding needed. As for the server software, it's really lightweight and if you're not transcoding it basically just updates to show the app what videos are available.

Edit:

Forgot to mention a big reason why the app is useful, it lets you access all of your videos over 3G not just on your home network.
 
Marty Chinn said:
I don't like Air Video because 1) You need a server software running and 2) You need to transcode. Server software and conversion is archaic in this day and age. XBMC shows you can set something up that requires neither.
1) why is this a problem? Unless you're using a 6 year-old computer, it shouldn't have any affect on anything when you're watching something.

2) It converts it in real time while you're watching, so it should have no effect on your experience. So again, why is this a problem?

3) As lyle said, remote access anywhere in the world, including smooth streaming over 3G.

4) No crashing.
 
Dreams-Visions said:
1) why is this a problem? Unless you're using a 6 year-old computer, it shouldn't have any affect on anything when you're watching something.

2) It converts it in real time while you're watching, so it should have no effect on your experience. So again, why is this a problem?

3) As lyle said, remote access anywhere in the world, including smooth streaming over 3G.

4) No crashing.

I think he may be the first person I've ever heard of who doesn't like the idea of Air Video.
 
Dreams-Visions said:
1) why is this a problem? Unless you're using a 6 year-old computer, it shouldn't have any affect on anything when you're watching something.

2) It converts it in real time while you're watching, so it should have no effect on your experience. So again, why is this a problem?

3) As lyle said, remote access anywhere in the world, including smooth streaming over 3G.

4) No crashing.

Are you Ipad2'ing yet, Dreams?
 
Dreams-Visions said:
1) why is this a problem? Unless you're using a 6 year-old computer, it shouldn't have any affect on anything when you're watching something.

2) It converts it in real time while you're watching, so it should have no effect on your experience. So again, why is this a problem?

3) As lyle said, remote access anywhere in the world, including smooth streaming over 3G.

4) No crashing.
AirVideo definitely sounds awesome, but all my stuff is stored on a NAS, not my computer, so I have nothing to transcode with. XBMC ftw in my case.

If i had a dedicated desktop, AV would be awesome. Yeah, i abbreviated it.
 
LyleLanley said:
I guess transcoding isn't such a big problem for me since all my stuff has already been converted to m4v so there is no transcoding needed. As for the server software, it's really lightweight and if you're not transcoding it basically just updates to show the app what videos are available.

Edit:

Forgot to mention a big reason why the app is useful, it lets you access all of your videos over 3G not just on your home network.

Ya, I bought it and used it for a bit but the transcoding was just too intensive for my server to handle it constantly. Combine that with 768kbps upload limit and the quality just wasn't good over 3G.

I may try again now that my upload has increased to 1.8mbps to see what it's like, but then I'd still have to have another computer always on in addition to my server running in order to do it so not totally ideal.

Plus I don't like the thought of a lot of apps running in the background of my server anyway. It's mean to be a clean backup and file server with low maintenance and AirVideo seems to get updated pretty frequently for server software.

Either way, not very ideal. I also wish AirVideo was more like AirMedia so it handled music and pictures. I bought StreamToMe afterward because it handled music so now I sorta double dipped and of course that requires server software. So multiple server softwares for each app also kinda gets annoying after awhile.
 
Marty Chinn said:
Ya, I bought it and used it for a bit but the transcoding was just too intensive for my server to handle it constantly. Combine that with 768kbps upload limit and the quality just wasn't good over 3G.

I may try again now that my upload has increased to 1.8mbps to see what it's like, but then I'd still have to have another computer always on in addition to my server running in order to do it so not totally ideal.

Plus I don't like the thought of a lot of apps running in the background of my server anyway. It's mean to be a clean backup and file server with low maintenance and AirVideo seems to get updated pretty frequently for server software.

Either way, not very ideal. I also wish AirVideo was more like AirMedia so it handled music and pictures. I bought StreamToMe afterward because it handled music so now I sorta double dipped and of course that requires server software. So multiple server softwares for each app also kinda gets annoying after awhile.

If you just want one server for all of it, try Plex, it streams Video and Music.
 
Dreams-Visions said:
1) why is this a problem? Unless you're using a 6 year-old computer, it shouldn't have any affect on anything when you're watching something.

2) It converts it in real time while you're watching, so it should have no effect on your experience. So again, why is this a problem?

3) As lyle said, remote access anywhere in the world, including smooth streaming over 3G.

4) No crashing.

See above for some of the reasons, but I have a server, not a computer to handle my files so it's pretty low powered. It will chug at times depending on the video and the bitrate when transcoding. My main computer is a laptop which sometimes I carry with me so I can't rely on that being on or around to have running the AirVideo server. It seems silly and a waste of power to leave another computer on in addition to my server to handle it because there isn't a better solution out there that requires neither.

I like the idea of it, and the idea of streaming over 3G sounds great, but the above issues make it less of an experience for me. I have great 3G, but I'm still bound by my upload data rate from my network and that is what will be the limiting factor on video quality.


LyleLanley said:
If you just want one server for all of it, try Plex, it streams Video and Music.

Plex also transcodes. StreamToMe also does video but honestly, I think Air Video handles it a lot better than StreamToMe does.
 
Marty Chinn said:
Plex also transcodes. StreamToMe also does video but honestly, I think Air Video handles it a lot better than StreamToMe does.

I know Plex transcodes, but at least this way you don't need three different server programs running to stream video, music and pictures. I think the only way to fix your transcoding problem would be to convert all your video or just buy a used mac mini on ebay like I did. Hell I control it entirely with my iPad too using iTeleport.
 
LyleLanley said:
I know Plex transcodes, but at least this way you don't need three different server programs running to stream video, music and pictures. I think the only way to fix your transcoding problem would be to convert all your video or just buy a used mac mini on ebay like I did. Hell I control it entirely with my iPad too using iTeleport.

Or I could go with a non-transcoding solution. XBMC on the iPad works flawlessly without any transcoding and no server software since it uses open standards. Seems wasteful to get a MacMini to leave on just for the purposes of transcoding. Plus like I said, then I'd have the file server running and a Mac Mini running which eats up power.

What's nice about the server is it's low power, low maintenance, flexible since it can run software, is great at file serving, is great at doing backups automatically, and uses open standards to share files so a ton of different content devices can access it without any special needs or software to access media.

Since I have the server running, I don't need any computers on to serve content to either of the two HTPCs, or the multiple Squeezeboxes in the house.

Edit:

To sum it up, I have a very complex but flexible setup that can do more than what most people have or need.
 
Good info. What about picasa web albums, I have a few of those that I would probably want to access as well. Will I have to do with just going in the browser?
 
Copernicus said:
Good info. What about picasa web albums, I have a few of those that I would probably want to access as well. Will I have to do with just going in the browser?

Just checked on the app store and there appear to be a ton of apps that give you access to Picasa, but I'm sure going to it in the browser would be fine.


Marty Chinn said:
To sum it up, I have a very complex but flexible setup that can do more than what most people have or need.

Well I guess that answers that.
 
LyleLanley said:
Just checked on the app store and there appear to be a ton of apps that give you access to Picasa, but I'm sure going to it in the browser would be fine.




Well I guess that answers that.

I'm seriously not against the concept, it just doesn't fit for me. A MacMini can't be used as a file server for me because I have 12TB of storage on there that's in a single pool. As far as I know, OSX, can't pool drives together.

Does Plex even handle DVD ISOs? I store a lot of my DVDs on the server in ISO format because I care about quality and I like having the full menu support. The thought of converting everything seems nuts to me when I have my full DVD library available on the server with full menus in full quality available in any room without the need of special server software or transcoding. But like I said, not everyone is going to have 12TB of storage so they can host all their movies on a server to distribute through the house with each client having scraped info. It's a sight to be seen though.

So again, because of my elaborate setup, there isn't much room for transcoding unless I upgrade the server at this point and I'm not ready to go through that hassle quite yet.

I just wish XBMC was available without jailbreaking. Proof of there's no need for transcoding or software servers.
 
To the folks wondering still: Air Video is a dream app. Try it yourself. There is nothing archaic about it. I feel like this thread has become crazy land.
 
krypt0nian said:
To the folks wondering still: Air Video is a dream app. Try it yourself.

I tend to shy away from anything that requires server apps myself as well. Just being a bit irrational and not wanting to install unnecessary stuff. I love the concept though, and home sharing and the airview app seemed to do me well.

That's why I also love Screens (and I guess I would've loved iTeleport if I had it), because it's a screen sharing app that doesn't require server software.
 
krypt0nian said:
To the folks wondering still: Air Video is a dream app. Try it yourself. There is nothing archaic about it. I feel like this thread has become crazy land.

Agreed, unless you're like Marty and have full DVD ISOs you want to stream and don't like transcoding it really is a great app.
 
krypt0nian said:
To the folks wondering still: Air Video is a dream app. Try it yourself. There is nothing archaic about it. I feel like this thread has become crazy land.

It's great unless you don't like transcoding, don't like server software always running in the background, and have the upload speed to handle quality video. I seriously liked it when I first tried it and it was cool, but ever since XBMC came out, it's replaced Air Video for me. I know people swear by it and I totally understand it, but there are a few gotchas that are associated with it. I just happen to prefer open instead of closed standards because it works cross platform. I recommend everyone try it out, but just know what's involved. But it is archaic to have to transcode in this day and age and I'd even say having special software instead of using open protocols is also archaic. Why have the two when there is no need?
 
Marty Chinn said:
It's great unless you don't like transcoding, don't like server software always running in the background, and have the upload speed to handle quality video. I seriously liked it when I first tried it and it was cool, but ever since XBMC came out, it's replaced Air Video for me. I know people swear by it and I totally understand it, but there are a few gotchas that are associated with it. I just happen to prefer open instead of closed standards because it works cross platform. I recommend everyone try it out, but just know what's involved. But it is archaic to have to transcode in this day and age and I'd even say having special software instead of using open protocols is also archaic. Why have the two when there is no need?
Some people don't like Jailbreaking, and if they have the means to use it, AirVideo and a machine to run it is probably far easier.
 
LyleLanley said:
Agreed, unless you're like Marty and have full DVD ISOs you want to stream and don't like transcoding it really is a great app.

It’s like he has technical asperger's, combined with a set of OCD rituals.
 
julls said:
Some people don't like Jailbreaking, and if they have the means to use it, AirVideo and a machine to run it is probably far easier.

Ya, I don't expect everyone to jailbreak. I'm just saying XBMC is proof you don't need software server or transcoding on an iPad, especially now that it's even more powerful. The hardware is fully capable of it.
 
I think Marty's way is actually the more sensible. In this day and age of cheap disk space, why would anyone sacrifice the quality or the time to transcode/rip their DVD's?
Marty Chinn said:
It's great unless you don't like transcoding, don't like server software always running in the background, and have the upload speed to handle quality video. I seriously liked it when I first tried it and it was cool, but ever since XBMC came out, it's replaced Air Video for me. I know people swear by it and I totally understand it, but there are a few gotchas that are associated with it. I just happen to prefer open instead of closed standards because it works cross platform. I recommend everyone try it out, but just know what's involved. But it is archaic to have to transcode in this day and age and I'd even say having special software instead of using open protocols is also archaic. Why have the two when there is no need?
Yeah, it is a pain in the ass to get content to the iPad, no question about it.

I mean, I was amazed that there is no officially supported solution to have the iPad access files hosted on a usb drive attached to an AirPort Extreme (an "AirDisk"). What the Hell is the point of an AirDisk then? It would seem tailor made for that purpose.

iPad's wireless syncing/network access is really poorly thought through and I can't believe with all the "Post PC" rhetoric they're spewing that no one has called them on it.
 
krypt0nian said:
It’s like he has technical asperger's, combined with a set of OCD rituals.

I spent a lot of money for my setup because I care about quality. I've networked my house to make it so media is accessible in every room no matter where you are. I've networked it in a way that requires no computer to deal with files. Just because you don't appreciate the quality, doesn't mean others don't. That's why I prefer Blu Ray over Netflix HD. I have a setup that fully takes advantage of it but I don't expect others to go to that level of quality.
 
Your way makes perfect sense. The thing is, it's actually easier. Why anyone would waste time transcoding DVD's nowadays is beyond me. Full iso is so much faster and it's perfect quality.
 
Marty Chinn said:
It's great unless you don't like transcoding, don't like server software always running in the background, and have the upload speed to handle quality video. I seriously liked it when I first tried it and it was cool, but ever since XBMC came out, it's replaced Air Video for me. I know people swear by it and I totally understand it, but there are a few gotchas that are associated with it. I just happen to prefer open instead of closed standards because it works cross platform. I recommend everyone try it out, but just know what's involved. But it is archaic to have to transcode in this day and age and I'd even say having special software instead of using open protocols is also archaic. Why have the two when there is no need?
Translation : Marty has a shitty computer.


Air video rocks.
 
Marty Chinn said:
I spent a lot of money for my setup because I care about quality. I've networked my house to make it so media is accessible in every room no matter where you are. I've networked it in a way that requires no computer to deal with files. Just because you don't appreciate the quality, doesn't mean others don't. That's why I prefer Blu Ray over Netflix HD. I have a setup that fully takes advantage of it but I don't expect others to go to that level of quality.


Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Not good enough.

Post complaints on GAF. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3.


Meanwhile, krypt0nian opens Air Video, browses to file, presses play. *sips wine*
 
funkmasterb said:
Translation : Marty has a shitty computer.


Air video rocks.

Learn to read. i have a perfectly fine computer. But unlike most, I also have a server. Most people don't have file servers because they don't expand their scope enough. Something meant to constantly feed data should always be on and available. My laptop, while fully capable, isn't always at the same place so it doesn't make any sense to rely on it to serve video via Air Video. While I don't expect everyone to go with a server, at least understand why one might want a server.
 
krypt0nian said:
Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Not good enough.

Post complaints on GAF. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3.


Meanwhile, krypt0nian opens Air Video, browses to file, presses play. *sips wine*
Damn you and your setup. I have to jailbreak to even get to my content :P
*mourns old laptop*

That said, XBMC is great on the iPad.
 
funkmasterb said:
Translation : Marty has a shitty computer.


Air video rocks.

Your translator sucks.

Home servers are inevitable in terms of how people save their information. They'll end up right next to circuit breakers in home construction.
 
krypt0nian said:
Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3. Not good enough.

Post complaints on GAF. Tapx3. Twistx3. Tapx3. Twistx3.


Meanwhile, krypt0nian opens Air Video, browses to file, presses play. *sips wine*

Funny, I do the same thing. What a crazy world and yet I don't need server software or transcoding. And you know what my setup does that Air Video doesn't? Scrapes data from the Internet giving full details and info on everything that is available.
 
The last thing I'll say on Air Video is that I have a Mac Mini and a Drobo that I use as my home server set up. It's a wonderful set up for me, I can watch all my ripped tv shows and movies, listen to all my music, look at all my photos and grab all my documents over 3g from anywhere in the world, which is a big deal for me as I am constantly traveling. This set up may not be for everyone but for me I don't think it can be beat.
 
Marty Chinn said:
Funny, I do the same thing. What a crazy world and yet I don't need server software or transcoding. And you know what my setup does that Air Video doesn't? Scrapes data from the Internet giving full details and info on everything that is available.

It matters not how I get the pretty picture because I don't not have tech asperger's. I don't worry about, well anything. Why would I care about scraping data? I'm watching a movie. More OCD.

"It just works"
 
LyleLanley said:
The last thing I'll say on Air Video is that I have a Mac Mini and a Drobo that I use as my home server set up. It's a wonderful set up for me, I can watch all my ripped tv shows and movies, listen to all my music, look at all my photos and grab all my documents over 3g from anywhere in the world, which is a big deal for me as I am constantly traveling. This set up may not be for everyone but for me I don't think it can be beat.

Wait, I thought Air Video didn't do music or photos. Did they upgrade it?
 
Teddman said:
Your way makes perfect sense. The thing is, it's actually easier. Why anyone would waste time transcoding DVD's nowadays is beyond me. Full iso is so much faster and it's perfect quality.
Hardware decoding (more battery life) and bandwidth if streaming outside I guess. There's reasons for everything, I don't get why everything seems to be unfathomable or wrong for someone, or that someone's setup is inherently right/the one true way. It's all just different ways of going about it.
 
krypt0nian said:
It matters not how I get the pretty picture because I don't not have tech asperger's. I don't worry about, well anything. Why would I care about scraping data? I'm watching a movie. More OCD.

"It just works"*
*If you have a computer where all your media is stored.
 
krypt0nian said:
It matters not how I get the pretty picture because I don't not have tech asperger's. I don't worry about, well anything. Why would I care about scraping data? I'm watching a movie. More OCD.

"It just works"

You have a bunch of TV episodes and wanted to watch a specific ep or you forgot which ep you left off of. It's nice to look at a description to see what the ep is about. There are plenty of reasons people like to scrape data from the Internet. People with HTPC don't do it because they have OCD. Maybe you should expand your horizons a bit. Imagine if Netflix was just a bunch of names with no description; it would sorta suck and be painful. That's just silly to say it has no use.
 
Marty Chinn said:
You have a bunch of TV episodes and wanted to watch a specific ep or you forgot which ep you left off of. It's nice to look at a description to see what the ep is about. There are plenty of reasons people like to scrape data from the Internet. People with HTPC don't do it because they have OCD. Maybe you should expand your horizons a bit. Imagine if Netflix was just a bunch of names with no description; it would sorta suck and be painful. That's just silly to say it has no use.

I don't have that problem. Last time I watched ep 10. It's that easy.

What if what if what if. Well hypotheticals don't matter.


julls said:
*If you have a computer where all your media is stored.

I wouldn't have it any other way. Cloud>>>>local storage.
 
japtor said:
Hardware decoding (more battery life) and bandwidth if streaming outside I guess. There's reasons for everything, I don't get why everything seems to be unfathomable or wrong for someone, or that someone's setup is inherently right/the one true way. It's all just different ways of going about it.

You mean software decoding right? =)

For the record, I'm not saying my setup is right and everyone should do it my way. I've said that many times now. It just seems very narrow minded of others to not at least try to understand why there is a different way to do things.
 
krypt0nian said:
I don't have that problem. Last time I watched ep 10. It's that easy.

What if what if what if. Well hypotheticals don't matter.

So you always remember exactly where you left off? There's not a time where you get busy and you don't get back to something like a week or two later? You never rewatch a specific episode of anything? Like I have all of Star Trek The Next Generation and sometimes I'm in the mood to watch a specific ep. How do I find it? I just have the entire database memorized in my head? Come on now....
 
Marty Chinn said:
So you always remember exactly where you left off? There's not a time where you get busy and you don't get back to something like a week or two later? You never rewatch a specific episode of anything? Like I have all of Star Trek The Next Generation and sometimes I'm in the mood to watch a specific ep. How do I find it? I just have the entire database memorized in my head? Come on now....

I was kidding with the technical Asperger's diagnosis, but now I'm writing it on your chart.

Julis, nothing to be confused about. you said if you have a computer where all your media is stored. I do. Then I play my files sent down from that cloud storage. Where's the confusion?

Obviously the local storage I was disparaging in my equation was my iPad. Not my content dump that is my desktop.
 
krypt0nian said:
Yes, because that's difficult. Crazy town, this thread when you're here.
I like how you can't respond with a reasonable answer about the use of scraping information on video information so you have to resort to just trying to laugh it off like someone is crazy for thinking its useful.

Apple must be crazy for including all their meta data on the videos they sell and rent to display on the iPhone, iPad, iTunes, and AppleTV.
 
Marty Chinn said:
So you always remember exactly where you left off? There's not a time where you get busy and you don't get back to something like a week or two later? You never rewatch a specific episode of anything? Like I have all of Star Trek The Next Generation and sometimes I'm in the mood to watch a specific ep. How do I find it? I just have the entire database memorized in my head? Come on now....
Can't you just google/wikipedia episode guides?
 
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