Podcasts about MythTV

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Best podcasts about MythTV

Latest podcast episodes about MythTV

Self-Hosted
122: Back to the Future

Self-Hosted

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 55:45


How Chris created live TV streaming from his local media collection, Alex breaks down the new Open Home Foundation and what it means for self-hosters. Brent's been trying out an open-source AirDrop replacement for all systems, and much more! Special Guest: Brent Gervais.

This Week in Linux
187: Steam Deck Reviews, Ubuntu Snap Vulnerability, Intel Buys Linutronix and more Linux news

This Week in Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2022 30:52


On this episode of This Week in Linux: Steam Deck Officially Launched, Intel Acquires Linutronix, Podman 4.0, MythTV 32, PeerTube 4.1, Planner 3.0, Vulnerability Found In Ubuntu's Snaps, Mir 2.7, GIMP 2.99.10, Libinput 1.20, NetworkManager 1.36, Slax 11.2. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! SPONSORED BY: DigitalOcean ►► https://do.co/tux2022 Bitwarden ►► https://bitwarden.com/dln TWITTER ►► https://twitter.com/michaeltunnell MASTODON ►► https://mastodon.social/@MichaelTunnell DLN COMMUNITY ►► https://destinationlinux.network/contact FRONT PAGE LINUX ►► https://frontpagelinux.com MERCH ►► https://dlnstore.com BECOME A PATRON ►► https://tuxdigital.com/contribute This Week in Linux is produced by the Destination Linux Network: https://destinationlinux.network SHOW NOTES ►► https://tuxdigital.com/twil187 Chapters: 00:00 = Welcome to TWIL 187 00:39 = Announcement About TWIL Live Streams 01:20 = Steam Deck Officially Launched 05:03 = Intel Acquires Linutronix 07:28 = Podman 4.0 Released 08:46 = DigitalOcean Cloud Services ( https://do.co/tux2022 ) 10:15 = MythTV 32 Released 11:33 = PeerTube 4.1 Released 13:38 = Planner 3.0 Released 15:15 = Bitwarden Password Manager ( https://bitwarden.com/dln ) 17:04 = Vulnerability Found In Ubuntu's Snaps 20:15 = Mir 2.7 Released 21:53 = GIMP 2.99.10 Released 24:02 = Visuex.com: Design & Digital Marketing ( https://visuex.com/dln ) 25:03 = Libinput 1.20 Released 26:51 = NetworkManager 1.36 Released 27:41 = Slax 11.2 Released 28:35 = Outro Other Videos: 7 Reasons Why Firefox Is My Favorite Web Browser: https://youtu.be/bGTBH9yr8uw 17 KDE Plasma Features That You Didn't Know About: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhPIwFC4qFs How To Use Firefox's Best Feature, Multi-Account Containers: https://youtu.be/FfN5L5zAJUo 5 Reasons Why I Use KDE Plasma: https://youtu.be/b0KA6IsO1M8 Thanks For Watching! Linux #TechNews #Podcast

This Week in Linux
187: Steam Deck Reviews, Ubuntu Snap Vulnerability, Intel Buys Linutronix and more Linux news

This Week in Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2022 30:53


On this episode of This Week in Linux: Steam Deck Officially Launched, Intel Acquires Linutronix, Podman 4.0, MythTV 32, PeerTube 4.1, Planner 3.0, Vulnerability Found In Ubuntu's Snaps, Mir 2.7, GIMP 2.99.10, Libinput 1.20, NetworkManager 1.36, Slax 11.2. All that and much more on Your Weekly Source for Linux GNews! Chapters 00:00 = Welcome to […]

Late Night Linux
Late Night Linux – Episode 119

Late Night Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 30:56


The lengths that we’ve all been to for a smooth home media setup, your feedback about SUSE and NFTs, and we hear from some actual young people who use Linux.   Home media setups MythTV, Pis, x86 boxes, and grown-up solutions like the Firestick How to Stream Netflix, Disney Plus, and more on raspberry pi... Read More

Late Night Linux All Episodes
Late Night Linux – Episode 119

Late Night Linux All Episodes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 30:56


The lengths that we’ve all been to for a smooth home media setup, your feedback about SUSE and NFTs, and we hear from some actual young people who use Linux.   Home media setups MythTV, Pis, x86 boxes, and grown-up solutions like the Firestick How to Stream Netflix, Disney Plus, and more on raspberry pi... Read More

TSR - The Server Room
TSR - The Server Room Show - Episode 53 - Kodi and the rest - Part II.

TSR - The Server Room

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2020 28:58


This is Part II where I talk about Kodi and its alternatives continued on from previous Episode 52 of last Saturday. I talk about Mediaportal, Emby , Jriver Media Center, Jellyfin , Stremio, MythTV, MCE Compatible Remote Controllers and HDTV Tuners Website: https://tsr-podcast.com Email: viktor@tsr-podcast.com

Linux Headlines
2020-03-23

Linux Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 2:46


Folding@home's processing power continues to surge in the fight against COVID-19, Audacious switches to QT5, UBports and Volla join forces, and MythTV rolls out modern decoding improvements.

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
2020-03-23 | Linux Headlines 129

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020


Folding@home's processing power continues to surge in the fight against COVID-19, Audacious switches to QT5, UBports and Volla join forces, and MythTV rolls out modern decoding improvements.

This Week in Linux
Episode 52 | This Week in Linux

This Week in Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2019 60:36


WINE 4.0, LXQt 0.14, Parrot OS, Mastodon, MythTV, Gitea, APT Vulnerability | This Week in Linux 52 On this episode of This Week in Linux, we got some big new releases from the WINE project, LXQt, Parrot OS, Mastodon, MythTV, Gitea, and many more! We’ll also check out a security issue regarding the APT package… Read more

wine linux mastodon apt gitea lxqt mythtv
HDTV and Home Theater Podcast
Podcast #733: OpenHAB and OpenRemote

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2016 34:47


OpenHAB and OpenRemote There is this dream we have to be able to automate everything in our homes, but do it ourselves, without hiring an installer, and do it for cheap without breaking the bank. So far we have used a lot of Insteon devices, and tied them into other systems to expand the overall reach of what we could build. Luckily, we aren't the only ones with this dream and a few open source projects have popped up to help us DIY-ers achieve our dreams. OpenHAB OpenHAB is a vendor and technology agnostic open source automation software for your home. Their claim is that you can build your smart home in no time. The name stands for Open Home Automation Bus, and for those familiar with electronics, you know the bus in computer terms is less like a real bus and more like a highway. It is a set of conductors carrying data and control signals within a computer system, to which pieces of equipment are connected and how they communicate with each other. So OpenHAB is the central nervous system of your home automation environment. It is used to connect all your devices and allows them to communicate, and also allows you to act as the brain to send commands to each of them. They describe it as “a software for integrating different home automation systems and technologies into one single solution that allows over-arching automation rules and that offers uniform user interfaces.” This means openHAB is designed to be absolutely vendor-neutral as well as hardware and protocol agnostic. Drilling down on that, it is pretty flexible, it can run on any device that is capable of running a JVM (Linux, Mac, Windows). It allows you to integrate a plethora of different home automation technologies into one cohesive system. And also has the brain: it includes a powerful rule engine to fulfill all your automation needs. Out of the box it comes with different web-based UIs as well as native UIs for iOS and Android. It is fully open source, so new devices and protocols can be added at any time. You can even add them if you want to contribute and become a member of the passionate and growing community responsible for maintaining it. If you don't want to contribute code, it is easily extensible to integrate with new systems and devices and provides APIs for being integrated in other systems. The openHAB website provides a great description of the core philosophy behind the project: “openHAB does not try to replace existing solutions, but rather wants to enhance them - it can thus be considered as a system of systems. It therefore assumes that the sub-systems are setup and configured independently of openHAB as this is often a very specific and complex matter (including “pairing” processes, direct device links etc.). Instead, openHAB focuses on the “daily use” side of things and abstracts from the devices themselves. A core concept for openHAB is the notion of an “item”. An item is a data-centric functional atomic building block - you can think of it as an “capability”. openHAB does not care whether an item (e.g. a temperature value) is related to a physical device or some “virtual” source like a web service or an calculation result. All features offered by openHAB are using this “item” abstraction, which means that you will not find any reference to device specific things (like IP addresses, IDs etc.) in automation rules, UI definitions and so on. This makes it perfectly easy to replace one technology by another without doing any changes to rules and UIs. A very important aspect of openHAB's architecture is its modular design. It is very easy to add new features (like the integration with yet another system through a “binding”) and you can add and remove such features at runtime. This modular approach has been a huge enabler for the active community around openHAB with many engaged contributors.” OpenHAB has a huge list of supported technologies including: Benq, Epson projectors, Denon, Onkyo and Pioneer receivers, LG and Panasonic TVs, DMX lighting, ecobee and Nest thermostats, Insteon Hub and PLM, Z-Wave devices, Google calendar, Twitter, Logitech Harmony remotes, Plex and XBMC media servers, Sonos devices, and the list goes on. No mention on the website of any support for Amazon Echo or Apple HomeKit. Our gut says someone in the passionate and growing community is working on it, but we have no proof of that. We haven't had a chance to toy with openHAB ourselves yet, freetime has been pretty scarce lately. But it looks very promising and we've added it to our list of todo items. From the forum and other various internet posts we've read, it looks very promising. Yes it is bare-bones. And yes it requires a lot of setup and configuration, but that also means it allows for a very deep level of customization. For those who have the time and the patience, it could be awesome. For those who want something to “just work” out of the box, you're probably better off going with a commercial solution. OpenRemote Just like we talked about when we discussed Play-Fi a few episodes ago, there can never be just one protocol or system or methodology for something. Thus in addition to OpenHAB, you have another option in OpenRemote. From the descriptions on the website, they feel almost identical in capabilities and philosophy. OpenRemote has more references to commercial applications, and a few more links for professionals like installers, distributors, integrators, etc. So it feels like OpenRemote's plans are a bit more grandiose while OpenHAB is targeted more at the DIY-er. The OpenRemote website describes the project as: “OpenRemote is software integration platform for residential and commercial building automation. OpenRemote platform is automation protocol agnostic, operates on off-the-shelf hardware and is freely available under an Open Source license. OpenRemote's architecture enables fully autonomous and user-independent intelligent buildings. End-user control interfaces are available for iOS and Android devices, and for devices with modern web browsers. User interface design, installation management and configuration can be handled remotely with OpenRemote cloud-based design tools.” Reading through the About page at openRemote.org gives you the distinct impression that the project is aimed at professionals, but can also be used by someone in their home, just instead of deploying the solution to a commercial building, you run it in your house. Because of this the project feels more mature or more feature rich than OpenHAB. It has to support a demanding user group who are supporting demanding customers. It can't just break when the automation of a commercial or retail establishment are built on it. Several forum posts claim OpenRemote has better support for more devices, but to be fair, most of those were posted at the openRemote website. So they're already invested. For example, on the About page they have info about the main components of the system: “OpenRemote Designer is an online software application designed to rapidly and easily create touch-driven control panels. You can create multiple user profiles and customize user interfaces for each one: each user profile can have its individual preferences, branding, favorites and individual set of controls and tailored for panel hardware capabilities. With OpenRemote Designer you can remotely maintain device configurations and update user interfaces as your customer's preferences evolve. Remotely managed updates, system diagnosis and device discovery means more efficient service and less travel time between office and customer sites. OpenRemote Controller is deployed on customer site and autonomously manages intelligence in the building. Reacting to schedules, sensor events and user actions, it handles the overall runtime performance after initial design has been created. OpenRemote Controller also provides the device and protocol integration capabilities in the OpenRemote platform. We support deployment of panels on Apple iPhones, Apple iPad, Android phones and tablets and standard desktop web browsers.” OpenRemote will connect and control devices from: AMX, KNX, Lutron, Z-Wave, 1-Wire, EnOcean, xPL, Insteon, X10, Infrared, Russound, GlobalCache, IRTrans, XBMC, VLC, panStamps, Denon AVR, FreeBox, MythTV, and more. No mention of Amazon Echo or HomeKit. The brain of the system allows you to create Intelligent buildings (or homes) with automated rules, scripts and events. And you can install and run it on Windows, Linux, Mac, Raspberry Pi, Alix, Synology, ReadyNAS, QNAP and others. Like OpenHAB, we haven't tried OpenRemote. On one hand OpenRemote seems like a great option because of the additional supported devices. On the other hand, it does feel quite a bit heavier, and if we don't have any of those additional devices, that support is somewhat irrelevant. OpenHAB feels like it was built more for guys like us, the DIY-er who isn't trying to create automated solutions for commercial or retail environments. We're just trying to make our homes a little smarter. But we would love your feedback. If you have experience with either, share it with us so we can share it with the other listeners. You might be able to help us set priority for which one we try first.  

On Digital Media
On Digital Media 94: Media Mogul Jumps the Shark

On Digital Media

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2010 69:44


In this episode, John Federico (twitter: @gadgetboy), Craig Calder (twitter: @ccalder), Chia-Lin Simmons (twitter: @zeropts), Steve Hatch (twitter:@shatch) and our guest, Rob Goldman, (twitter: @robjective) CEO of threadsy discuss: Rob will be attending the CrunchUp event next week in the valley Craig will attend the Glasshouse event in NYC on Monday, 11/16 John and Craig will attend Web 2.0 Expo NY Google Wave vs. Threadsy Mozilla releases plans, screenshots for its Raindrop universal inbox. Chia-Lin thinks it may have the potential of being vaporware. We’re waiting for mobile clients (especially on the iPhone) to support Twitter Lists. Threadsy is working on Twitter Lists support. Parse.ly is in private beta. Read Write Web calls it “The Pro Bloggers Feed Reader.” Lazyweb is a similar client. It’s going to be a tough job for some of these services to get people to switch from Google Reader. Chia-Lin is holding back on her Droid purchase. It’s only a CMDA phone that she can’t use internationally plus, she thinks that Verizon may get the iPhone. Will Verizon get the iPhone any time soon? We hash it out. John has started reading Kindle books on his iPhone…even after questioning why anyone would do that. Doh! The ODM crew wants to know if John has purchased any more Vooks. Yes, he decided to give Vooks another chance and bought Gary Vaynerchuk’s “Crush It” in Vook format. Amazon has just released Kindle software for Windows that’s decidedly for the netbook crowd. The class action lawsuits against the social gaming companies have arrived. Are Facebook and Myspace liable for the actions of these networks? We doubt it. A boxee box is coming! We want. Rob built his own MythTV box! Netflix may support the MPAA 30-day window on new releases! We’re not happy. Why not release James Cameron’s upcoming film “Avatar” across all platforms at once, just to see how the revenue streams unfold? Rupert Murdoch said that he’s going to block Google and remove all content from his properties from the search engine. Hah! “This is the media mogul equivalent of Jumping the Shark.” An interesting coup for Microsoft should Murdoch cut a deal with Bing to allow them to index his content. Hmmmm… Our music is Democracy from Alexander Blu. Send us email to comments AT odmcast DOT com or call our comment line and leave a message: 775-860-2263. Be sure to stop by http://www.odmcast.com to complete our listener survey - we’d really appreciate it. For partner or sponsor information, contact jaf AT newrules DOT com.

Geek Muse
Geek Muse - Episode 43

Geek Muse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2006 48:30


Frappr, Hak.5 USB Switchblade, Zune, iPods, Creative Vision W, 24k Gold iPod, Zune wireless, Zune Viral DRM, RIAA & CDRs, iTV, Media Center, MythTV, DVD recorders, Video Codecs, MythTV, mt-daapd Project - iTunes media server, IOData AvelLink Player2, K-Lite Codec Pack, Comparison of Display Technology

Geek Muse
Geek Muse - Episode 43

Geek Muse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2006 48:30


Frappr, Hak.5 USB Switchblade, Zune, iPods, Creative Vision W, 24k Gold iPod, Zune wireless, Zune Viral DRM, RIAA & CDRs, iTV, Media Center, MythTV, DVD recorders, Video Codecs, MythTV, mt-daapd Project - iTunes media server, IOData AvelLink Player2, K-Lite Codec Pack, Comparison of Display Technology

Subjects – Novell Open Audio
Tech Lab: The Magical MythTV Session

Subjects – Novell Open Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2006 0:01


Uber-geek Jeff Price delivered a wild breakout session that quickly rose to legendary status among BrainShare attendees. Jeff showed how to run MythTV, an open source Personal Video Recorder (PVR), on SUSE Linux. Jeff combined cool tech and hilarious showmanship to make one of those sessions that makes BrainShare the industry icon that it is.

Say Yum
Say Yum 2005-02-23 - Freeform Ravioli

Say Yum

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2005


Freeform Ravioli. Check out the slide show of the process. We apologize for the difficulty downloading this podcast when we first posted it...technical difficulties. We've fixed it now, so please check out the full show by clicking the link below: Listen to the Say Yum podcast! SayYum-2005-02-23.mp3 [17.9mb (37:44) 64kbps] Tonight we flew by the seat of our pants and made some raviolis with leftover egg roll wrappers and lots of other goodies lurking in our fridge from previous recipes. The use of egg roll wrappers for the ravioli dough was inspired by having seen Giada De Laurentiis, from the Food Network's "Everyday Italian" show, do the same. Using leftovers in a creative way was how Say Yum Freeform Ravioli was born. Although we made our own vegetarian filling using the ingredients we had on hand, you can fill them with any kind you like. I've seen lots of good filling recipes on the net. There was lots on tonight's discussion menu. One of the things we chatted about was using the Archos Gmini 400 to record soundseeing tours since a lot of people have been discussing it lately. Click on the icons below to see more detailed notes. Show notes:  Say Yum 2005-02-23  Menu  Raviolis  Tomato Sauce  Music  Black Mountain  Brown Baggin  Show notes  00:35 three-way microphone splitter  02:15 brown baggin is playing at the Boom Boom Room in SF tomorrow  04:30 kitchen sounds, the sound of running water  05:03 the origin of tonight's dish, Say Yum Freeform Ravioli, have egg roll wrappers to use  05:48 ravioli ingredients  07:08 tomato cream sauce  09:17 chris porter made me shoot guns  10:12 listener from the UK, paul nilsson, recommended listening to some Black Mountain.  11:47 doing hits off the broth  12:23 sauce ingredients  12:52 what's so special about madeira wine?  13:57 we're using marsala  14:28 recipe cheat: using store bought tomato marinara  15:02 recipe cheat: using egg role wrapper instead of making our own pasta  15:18 picture of the sauce simmering and burning off alcohol  17:00 flashing my G-mini hard drive mp3 player with recording capabilities, video, and games.  18:08 listen to the soundseeing tours we recorded on the G-mini on our Devan Wanders podcast at http://hybridite.blogspot.com  21:05 plugging Devan Wanders site again  22:58 some more brown baggin  24:00 buddy comes in on a boat every once in a while  24:54 downloaded tracks from Brown Baggin's website  27:50 that sauce smells so good  28:05 tomato cream sauce cooking instructions  28:30 used some leftover olive tapenade from our Greek Style Chicken show on 2005-02-11  29:14 a listener named chris zeeche wrote us a "Say Yum tune". we play a teaser now and the rest at the end  30:40 kris quotes an article, talks about the death of radio and the future of podcasting, as well as other media distribution  32:30 exerpt from secret tv revolution  34:42 the collapse of the modern advertising model and where is the profit model headed?  35:28 let us all be part of the podcasting revolution  35:38 we need to setup our MythTV, but that's a topic for another show  35:44 ravioli and sauce is read, time to eat  36:20 closing with our new Say Yum tune, begging for votes at podcast alley, and bragging about our site