
Originally Posted by
MegaByteMe
If I hadn't come across the WD player, I think I would have gone the same direction as you for media playback. There is so much that can be put into a PC- yet alone inexpensively AND with fairly easy upgrade-ability that I am somewhat surprised there is such a thing as "high-end" audio these days. With digital switching amps, software upgrades, etc.
The reasons for a PC based system running XBMC are many. First of all running a PC expanding storage is simply a matter of either upgrading the size of, or adding another hard drive. The LC16M silverstone home theater case can support up to 7 3.5 internal drives + DVD/BD-Rom drive + multicard reader so the expansion capabilities are large. the two 3.5" cages at either end support 3x3.5" drives each with an optional 120mm fan mountable at the front of the cage.
XBMC itself is a great application, it is skinnable with multiple skins designed by the community. The real beauty though is the database scrapers. You can set the contents of a drive to be scanned by a scraper and it will load media information for the contents of the drive. This means with a movie drive, the scraper will load the movie poster, along with a synopsis of the movie and fan art. You can also have it scrape additional information like actors etc.
If it is a music drive it will download the album artwork as well as synopsis info about the album, tracks list etc, and has separate categories for movies, TV, music, music videos. There are also many plugins available, for instance I have a couple of movie preview plugins and can watch movie trailers at fullscreen resolution on my TV via XBMC, it even lists the latest, most popular etc movie trailers. I also have plugins installed to access content from the local tv stations, so if there is a show I have missed I can watch it via XBMC.
As to the second part of the quote, HDMI has greatly simplified interconnecting A/V devices and with a decent modern graphics card installed into a computer connected via HDMI the signal quality is superb. There will always be an argument for separate components, when I had the money I had a monster of a monoblock setup, but a family has a habit of changing your priorities. Separate components will always give better fidelity simply because there is less interference, but the cost of separate components these days is quite prohibitive, you can spend the cost of a new car quite easily, but there is a difference. The competition for the home theater market has seen alot of 'high-end' features become mainstream and this is a good thing, but there will always be the true audiophile experience.
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