plenty

Free from NZ

This week I’m featuring freeware from a company called SubRosaSoft in New Zealand. While you’ll find plenty of quality free software on their site featured today, don’t forget they have some pretty nice commercial apps too.

Image Mounter

If you have encountered disk images that Apple’s Disk Copy is to finicky to mount, this tool is for you. This little app will mount problem images including those authored in applications other than Disk Copy.

Rebuild Desktop

The old cure-all from OS 9 is back, but don’t be fooled by the name. This is actually a cache cleaning utility. Use this to reclaim disk space and speed up your system by deleting temporary cache files.

ScreenBoard

This free utility takes periodic screenshots of you desktop and allows you to share them via http. Frequency settings can be adjusted from every minute to every second. ScreenBoard creates and updates the HTML itself. This one comes in OS 9, X and even Windows versions.

It’s good to be back. As always, I hope this week’s freeware finds a special place on your hard drive. If nothing tickled your fancy this week, tune in next week for more great free software.

Brian

Build a Mac mini Media Server

When Steve unveiled the Mac mini, most people thought they were looking at the most inexpensive Mac Apple had ever turned out. For those of us used to beating the most out of our machines the Mac mini represents a whole new application for the best OS.

This week I’m featuring freeware that will help you in your quest to turn your Mac mini into a home media server.

First, there’s plenty of freeware that will allow your mini to interface with your video recorder of choice.

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerDreamStream – For your Dreambox

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerEyeTV Remote and eyetv RPM – For your EyeTV

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerTiVo Desktop and TiVoFerkey – For your TiVo

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerDVArchive – For Replay TV

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerEarphoria

Remotely control iTunes via Rendezvous. Perfect for running a music server from another Mac on the network.

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerRomeo

Use this Bluetooth app to turn your phone into a remote for your media mini.

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerQT XList and ClipLinkViewer X

These solutions are different, but both will play a series of QuickTime files in a playlist fashion. Perfect for queuing up video clips.

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerVLC Media Player

This Open Source media player will play just about anything, and is a must for your media server.

If you’ve read Apple’s documentation on the mini you should know that the mini will interface directly or via adapter with most new TV’s. Have fun!

Brian

mu Build a Mac mini Media ServerDownloads provided by MacUpdate

HDHomeRun Network PVR

The iPod with video and Apple TV have shown us that television at last has a home on your Mac. Although Apple wold be fine with you buying that programming from them, there is another way.

Mac PVRs are nothing new. Elgato’s EyeTV has made a name for itself as the most powerful and easiest software solution. The hardware side is a little more open.

The Hardware

The key to picking our the right EyeTV compatible PVR is understanding your television setup. Users with an coaxial interface to digital programming (digital cable, broadcast digital) will find a home for the HDHomeRun. If you have satellite, you’ll want to check out Elgato’s Hybrid.

The ability to tune digital programming is just the start of this PVR. The HomeRun is unique in that it has two tuners that can be accessed by two computers at the same time, via a wired network connection. This means that rather than moving your computer to your cable or antenna, you can place the HDHomeRun there and wire it back to your network with cheaper CAT5.

Wireless? Sadly no. While its possible it is not recommended due to the bandwidth needed to stream raw HDTV. Also, your network must be controlled by a router with a DHCP server for the HomeRun to work. With all that, though, I found the setup a breeze.

User Experience

The HDHomeRun works with other capture applications on Linux and Windows, so you can share the device across platforms. On the Mac, you’ll enjoy a bundled copy of EyeTV 2 (available together only from Elgato’s website). EyeTV provides a brilliant interface for accessing the HomeRun. Version 2 includes an integrated program guide and one-button export to iPod and Apple TV.

hdhomerun2 HDHomeRun Network PVR

By far the biggest reason to pick one of these up is the experience of digital TV on your Mac. HD and SD programming comes in crisp and clean and looks great. And even if you don’t have digital cable, there’s plenty to watch. Most analog/basic cable contains basic programming in digital (usually network TV) and a $9 antenna can provide you with a dozen or more over-the-air digital channels. Among these will be HD channels too.

A completely unscientific comparison of video recorded from an analog channel versus a digital one:

hdhomerun3 HDHomeRun Network PVR
hdhomerun4 HDHomeRun Network PVR

Performance

I tested the HDHomeRun on a G4 1GHz+ Mac running Tiger (required for EyeTV 2). The performance watching and recording SD programming was perfect. HD programming stuttered, though both viewing and recording. In previous experience with analog EyeTV tuners (connected via USB) live TV would stutter a bit, but recordings wouldn’t. I don’t know if the processor (well above the system requirements) or the network interface were to blame, but if I were making recordings to be archived or burned, the quality would be sub par. That said, given the amount of data required to stream HD, I’m not shocked. Not even the Apple TV tries that.

With the exception of the choppy HD, the unit performed very well. Its small (about the size of a VHS tape) although not particularly stylish. Export to iPod wasn’t quick, but that’s to be expected. There are faster ways of getting this done. Because the video is coming in MPEG-2 in the digital signal, it requires a minimal amount of processing. You won’t see your Mac strain until you open more than one live TV window.

Conclusion

The HDHomeRun is a solid performer. Its unique network interface makes is a great network-based media solution. HD on your Mac will be a truly memorable experience, and digital quality will make your recordings look good even on an Apple TV.

If you have a slower Mac, expect choppy HD. If you have satellite TV, then you won’t be able to do much with this. If you have a 1 GHz or better Mac, you’ll have plenty of fun with the excellent EyeTV 2 and the HomeRun’s digital quality.