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archiving HDTV programs http://forums.linhes.org/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=5059 |
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Author: | ajh [ Sun Jun 26, 2005 2:55 pm ] |
Post subject: | archiving HDTV programs |
I built a MythTV box in March follwing the "Cooking with EFF" instructions and it works wonderfully. (pcHDTV 3000, in a 3GHz P4 Shuttle XPC with an nVidia 5200). I live about half-way between San Francisco and San Jose and get great DTV reception of all the local stations with our old rooftop TV antenna. I was wondering what folks are doing to archive HDTV programs. I've accumulated a number of programs in the 6 to 20 GB range that I'd like to save. I tried burning some of the smaller ones to DVD+R DL (8.5GB capacity), but mkisofs cannot handle files larger than 2 GB. (It "ignores" the file, resulting in a $7 coaster). I tried writing them to a USB2 drive, but FAT32 cannot handle files over 4GB. I know I can reformat the USB drive to ext3 (or jfs, or xfs, or reiserfs), but then I cannot mount the drive on a Windows or MacOS machine to watch the programs with VideoLan. NTFS will handle the larger files, but Linux mounts an NTFS read-only. Any ideas? Thanks. |
Author: | tjc [ Sun Jun 26, 2005 5:35 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I don't think that there is a good answer for this at the moment. The thing is that the per Gb price of HD space is getting close to the cost of backup media Like DVDs. A year ago or so ago I was pricing 200Gb HDs at $0.50/Gb and DVD+Rs or DVD-Rs at ~$1 each or ~$0.22/Gb (not counting coasters). Both per Gb prices have seesawed downward with the best value point for HDs now at 250Gb and moving to 300-320Gb drives with $0.40/Gb prices or better appearing semi-regularly. (For example see: http://www.hotdealsclub.com/) It's really starting to make sense to just throw more hard drive space at the problem... |
Author: | brendan [ Fri Jul 01, 2005 1:05 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: archiving HDTV programs |
1. Buy a high-capacity NAS device that can do SMB at a minimum, and preferably also NFS. RAID-5 is also a necessity. There are several on the market, the one I've got my eyes on is the Infrant ReadyNAS 600 (I plan to post about that on a separate topic). 2. You could stick with the USB 2.0 drive as there are several read-only and read/write ext2 drivers out there for Win2K/XP/2K3 machines, some GPL'd, some 'free', some commercial. Some are of dubious quality in that they served the author's needs but development stalled after that. ![]() -brendan |
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