JJussi a écrit : > On Monday, 24. Novemberta 2008 11:37:20 Nicolas Huillard wrote: >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit : >>>> I happened to have my Kill-A-Watt nearby and this is what I found: >>>> With the HD spinning: 180mA / 12Watts >>>> With the HD idle and the PH in standby: 100mA / 6Watts >>> And PCH supports upto 1080p (or 1920x1200 with 16/10 monitor) with no >>> micro judders.. :) Just the UI is needed for full VDR-usage. > >> I guess you're talking about PopcornHour. >> This is another path : much more power efficient, much more integrated, >> but much less open and fun than DIY x86 PC hardware ;-) > > If we are talking about just plain vdr client with DVB cards somewhere in > network (NFS).. How about "Samsung SyncMaster 460MXn 46" Full HD LCD with in > builded PC" (LH46MGTLBC/EN) > * AMD Athlon X2 3400+ 1.8GHz > * 1GB DDR2 > * 4MB Flash > * ATI Radeon HD 3200 > * GBit LAN > * Realtek ALC262 sound > * 3x USB2.0 > * Windows what could be changed to Linux... ;-)
Neat! Pros: * integrated IR receiver that can power up the PC * no audio, IR cables, etc. * Flash disk (is it really it?) for a quick local boot Cons: * no real hardware choice * potential driver/config problems (radeon, flash drive, TV-PC relationship) * have to change the TV set at the same time * power draw (330W vs. 240W for a similar PC-less 46" LCD) -- NH _______________________________________________ vdr mailing list vdr@linuxtv.org http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/vdr