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Originally Posted by SeedyR A couple of questions for you then Richard, as my housemate is currently looking into this. He has a TC and wants to play media files, but without having his Mac on. So what would be better for him to get for this? A PS3 or an Apple TV?
If he had a TC right next to a PS3, could he just connect it via ethernet and the PS3 would play the media files off it?
If he went the TC and Apple TV route, how easy is to set up this Samba server and put Boxee on the Apple TV?
I do what you do, and just connect an external harddrive to my PS3 to play media files, but my housemate has bought a TC and wants to ultilise it for media file playing but without having his Mac on, so any help much appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Craig |
Hi Craig
Not Richard but this may help you and answer some questions for you.
The TC is primarily a disk that is visible to MAC's so that they can run the Time Capsule software and not a media server, in fact not a server at all.
If you do not have a PS3 then the simplest solution is to go for an Apple TV unit connect to the web via the TC and plug the Apple TV unit into your TV.
The problem is, as Richard has pointed out, that the PS3 needs two things to connect to a media server, a UPnP server (which allows the PS3 and any networked device to ask for required services from the Universal Plug and Play server without you having to set each service up individually) and also a media server. Both of these can be applications that can be run on various devices but this is not what was intended of either the TC nor Apple TV.
If you do want to connect the PS3 to a media store you are possibly going to be better off using a NAS box or server to do this I would suggest one that is both MAC and PC friendly to offer the widest choice of options.
I the one I am using is the LaCie device "Ethernet Disc mini", which with the latest update, can stream to both MAC, PC and PS3 (Have not tried XBox 360 as yet and will probably not bother). My reason for choosing LaCie was precisely because of their MAC friendly systems which was also the reason for choosing the router too.
This or another (PS3 and MAC friendly) device should work fine enabling you to stream all your media to one of the three devices mentioned above. If you have your PS3 connected to your TV then you should be able to cut out the Apple TV depending on the files that you have everything stored in as again there are only some file types that the PS3 will read.
The issue is not down to proximity of the PS3 to the unit it is down to compatibility and what the PS3 requires and how the TC and Apple TV serve this information.
Finally you can stream data pretty well over a wireless system but you are reliant on a both the available real bandwidth and also the ability of the devices to serve the data cleanly, wired is always going to be better until faster systems are more prevalent.
Hope this helps.
Simon