Quote:
Originally Posted by scooby_doo How would two different rooms watch the same DVD but with one room 10 minutes behind the other? Would you have to have two DVD players and two copies of the same film? How would you choose a DVD from the TV? What about music?
I very quickly dismissed the "traditional" route but perhaps I was a bit hasty. |
The important wording was "much the same". I don't have matrix switches etc. (far too pikey for that) but my understanding is that yes if you wanted two people watching the same film at slightly different times you're looking at two copies and two DVD players (or some other wizzy proprietary tech).
OTOH if you wanted the same film playing at exactly the same time and pausable on either TV (so you can wander between the kitchen and living room for example whilst watching something) that is
AFAIK pretty hard to do with server/client type set ups.
Music I think used to be done with CD changers and I'm sure you can get massive DVD jukeboxes with on-screen controls these days.
The more interesting question is if you're considering more direct hybrid approaches, so rather than having a separate client for each room hook up two or three in a central rack to a matrix switch and then people have the choice of either starting something new off one of the unused clients or just tapping directly into one thats already running. It could end up cheaper and has other benefits like taking the noise, heat and objects out of the individual rooms. So a family of four with TVs in all the bedrooms, lounge and kitchen might have just three client computers rather than 6 and would be able to synchronise stuff much more easily. You also more easily get wall controls and things for music so rather than faffing with remotes to get your squeezebox/sonos working when you walk into a different room you just have a wall plate and flick to "Channel 2" to carry on listening to what you had been playing on channel 2 in the other room.
Unhelpfully to the OP I've got not much idea on practicalities and costs of any of this, its just something I'm aware of and thought worth highlighting in what was otherwise looking a fairly one sided debate in favour of pure networked solutions.
You can get HDMI over CAT5 baluns, but some of them are very pricey and no idea how well the cheap ones work (although I have a pair I keep meaning to test). No idea what wires people are pulling either, advice always used to be millions of coax runs (3 for component, 1 for TV and 2 for audio I think, at least) but thats almost certainly overkill and out of date in these days of SKY HD boxes without component outputs. So you need to get signals to the loft (so an "up" run from wherever your sky/virgin etc. box is) and then I think 1 or 2 CT100 down to each room is fine (one for the TV/magic eye signal and 1 for digital audio in case you wanted that).
I'd be tempted to run 6 CAT5e cables to each point though and just leave two unconnected. I basically did 4 CAT5 + 1 or 2 CT100 and if you then start thinking it might be nice to distribute a HDMI signal out of a room (2 CAT5 gone) bring another HDMI signal in (2 CAT5 gone) and suddenly you realise you can't have a network in there anymore...
Not saying you will want to do that, just that 4 CAT5 starts looking a bit anaemic when you start using pairs for HDMI and you'd be annoyed if you decided in 6 months you did want to and couldn't.