HP Exits Media Center Business 99
MCE writes "The first big adapter of Microsoft's Media Center Edition is quietly dropping MCE. HP is ceasing production of its Digital Entertainment Center, the only real success story for Media Center PCs in a living-room form factor. As the first company to embrace Microsoft's MCE, at a time when the platform was still half-baked, HP was simply spent by the time Vista rolled around. Now the company will put its resources into MediaSmart, a new line of TVs with a digital media adapter (not an MCE) built in. HP insists that its departure is not a statement about the viability of the Media Center platform."
I bought one of their first Media Center PCs (Score:2, Funny)
Which was nice.
Correct spelling.... (Score:1, Informative)
Spell check sure is wonderful!
Spelling be damned... (Score:1)
It's a fine thing, to be sure, too bee shore. Now that the spelling's right, all we have to do is find the right words!
not quite (Score:4, Interesting)
You're completely missing the point that MCE was a dry-run to get the xbox done right. The path of the XBOX + xbox marketplace is the real fruit of Microsoft's MCE endeavor.
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As it stands, I'm getting an HP MCE system at C
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Re:No it isnt. (Score:4, Funny)
You think the future of video programming involves something as archaic as TV tuners and DVR software? You might as well be asking where the buggy-whip-holder is in your new car.
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But of course! DVR Shmee-vee-rrr! Bah! They will pipe the TV directly to you via the two large bolts sticking out of your neck. You will pause the programming by hitting your forehead against a solid object (hit twice to resume). Pulling left ear rewinds, right ear to skip forward. Volume controlled by a finger up the left nostril
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I think it was just a matter of... (Score:3, Insightful)
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If it could play Gears of War and came with a wireless controller then it'd be totally bad ass!
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Problem is... (Score:2)
Now they're facing a bigger battle - Vista. MCE is included, but the Vista version is more expensive, and you need two cores, minimum because the OS takes so m
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Re:Problem is... Cable Cards! (Score:1)
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With MCE you can *easily* be recording 2-3 HD channels while watching a DVD (or another channel) on a 2Ghz P4. I'd venture a guess that anything down to about a 1Ghz P3 would be trouble-free for a single live channel or DVD playback.
That's 5 - 7 year old hardware - how on Earth is it "cutting edge" ?
hardware requirements (Score:2)
On my 2.66 GHz P4 laptop with 2GB of RAM, Windows Vista (Vista, because that's what all of the new HP DECs would have to be if they did keep making them) crawls, especially in the Media Center interface.
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What kind of raid array are you using to record 2-3 HD channels at the same time, or, alternatively, what kind of capture cards are you using that do realtime hardware h264 or better encoding?
A standard 1080i, compressed MPEG2 broadcast is ~2.5MB/sec. 720p is ~2MB/sec. That's covered 99% of TV broadcasts (heck, probably 100% - does anyone do 1080p anywhere ? They certainly don't here in Australia.) Even then, 1080p would only be ~5MB/sec and a modern, single drive should easily keep up with 3 - 4 such
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A combo box isn't the equivalent for a family.
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huh (Score:1)
There was a company called HP? (Score:3, Insightful)
My experiences in the last few years with HP have been so terrible there is not enough room to document them all. When Carly Fiorina destroys a company, it stays destroyed. Like many technically oriented companies, HP has
HP? Is that a company? (Score:3, Informative)
Means. (Score:2)
Works? HP MC got panned hard by Washington Post. (Score:1, Troll)
I own an HP Media Center and it works great.
Rob Pegoraro was much less than impressed by this line of machines, [slashdot.org]
under XP and Mepis does better than Vista [desktoplinux.com] on newer versions. Other than replacing the OS, I wonder what you did to get better results out of XP or Vista than the above cited articles.
That aside, this is just business.
Sure, it's bad business to sell things that don't work.
Strangest business decision ever... (Score:5, Funny)
(phone rings... whispers... "$150 per copy of Vista?!")
Ahem... on second thought, I respectfully withdraw that last statement.
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Rumor has it... (Score:5, Funny)
I Have an XP MCE PC (Score:5, Interesting)
I can not imagine any of my family, friends, or acquaintances buying one. They're expensive when done right, and they're really only useful for a very small portion of the population. In essence, MCE PCs have two big draws: a nice interface for music/movie/picture viewing and DVR functions. For a smaller group, upconversion and scaling is a selling point, but I doubt they register in the grand scheme of MCE owners.
If people want DVR, they get it from their cable company (just ask TiVO). If they want HD DVR, they get it from their cable company. It is only a very small subset who genuinely benefit from the HD DVR features in XP MCE. It works very well with over-the-air recording, and can be hacked to enable QAM recording with certain hardware. My cable company happens to send some cable channels plus all local channels via unencrypted QAM along with my cable internet service, so I end up getting "free" HDTV service.
I have a 1080p HDTV. Most people don't have an HDTV, and thus, don't care about HD DVR features. See above about what they do when they want to record TV.
I have a nice home theater system set up; it is nice for me to be able to listen to my audio via that system. For many people that isn't particularly necessary. I also value the fact that what would be a digital cable box, a CD changer, and a DVD player are all bundled into one 3U-sized box, but for many people, the space occupied by a couple of additional boxes isn't a big deal. Even with that, I still hate the music playback interface for MCE, and usually exit out to iTunes for my audio.
In essence: the current version of XP MCE (I can't speak to Vista) is well-done, well-featured, and user-friendly enough for my wife to sit down, watch and record HDTV and listen to music. If you have an HDTV and an extra $1,500 for a nicely-done MCE computer, XP MCE is a good solution. But it's really expensive to have a dedicated PC in a living room, and it's only relevant for a small section of the population. When the MCE PCs started shipping, most of the HP models were just higher-end desktops anyway - they were merely the next model up in the line. I highly doubt that many people were actually using them as a dedicated media center. For the gadgety few who truly care about having the proper, dedicated MCE box, I'd guess they're just as likely to order from one of the many niche white-box builders (or roll their own).
IF (Huge IF) AppleTV gets some sort of official TV recording device, especially one with cable-card functionality, I could see it succeeding in this market. As it is, though, I imagine that there just aren't enough takers to justify the market for anyone other than niche builders and the occasional MCE laptop.
Succeeding without recording (Score:2)
For live stuff I honestly think OTA HD is all most people wil need, and for that solution people can jus
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$80/month even faster (Score:2)
That means that any series you watch is going to be at most $8 a month to buy outright.
That's ten series a month. People watch a lot of TV - but then, that is a lot of TV.
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How I enjoy TV. (Score:1)
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My cable company (COX) sends all the HD channels over basic cable, and we don't get much over the air, so a card that can use cable seems perfect.
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In XP or Vista MCE, their drivers create a virtual "card" that does the same thing, only within the MCE interface. It's the only product I know of that enables
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If you have an HDTV and an extra $1,500 for a nicely-done MCE computer, XP MCE is a good solution.
$1500 ? A bog-standard Mac Mini with a couple of USB tuners (plus a bigger/external hard disk if you record a lot) makes an _excellent_ HTPC, and comes in a hell of a lot cheaper than $1500.
If you're happy to use a whitebox PC and hide it behind the TV cabinet, you could do it even cheaper.
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The Nice Thing About MCE (Score:2)
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It's now 1 year old, and I've had zero problems (after disabling all the XP eye-candy & spyware crap possible).
The only real problem is that the PVR functions only get used whe
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With a dual processor CPU you'll never want to use XP Home
Why not? (Granted, I prefer XP Pro, but for other reasons) XP Home is perfectly capable of supporting processors with 2 cores and has support for hyperthreading for those two cores. Theoretically, you can have two cores each doing hyperthreading and thus showing up as four CPUs in the task manager, and all of this on Windows XP Home. See the next-to last question on Multicore Processor Licensing [microsoft.com].
As far as I understood, a 16-core processor
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That's weird, my wifes XP Home machine (bought about 4 years ago, methinks) is most certainly a P-IV 2.4 HT and both the real CPUs and the virtual CPU are detected correctly. Gotta explain this to me...
Besides, didn't you read the linked FAQ? A processor is not a core in Microsofts eyes. This means that HT or dual-core, both implemented in one processor seated in one socket on the motherboard, will work on Home. It's right there in the FAQ that I linked to! Now, my SMP machine, with one procesessor
Killing off that line for home server's debut? (Score:2)
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Windows Home Server has zero TV and DVR features (see the link you provided). It is designed to not even have a screen (it doesn't even need a video card to run).
How is it going to replace MCE again?
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As was announced as CES this year, HP is launching a new product in conjunction with Microsoft called Windows Home Server [wikipedia.org]. The device would logically replace their existing media center line of products, and is currently only in a beta stage with a release planned for sometime soon.
Please explain to me how Home Server is going to replace Media Center? Home Server is not even close to the same thing...
The Windows Home Server (Score:2)
The PC as a out-sized home theater component was probably miscast.
Some success story! (Score:2)
"Media Centers" without any format support. (Score:1)
this is hardly worthy of the term "media center", and would best be called "PVR-enabled" instead.
media center implies you can feed it anything from wmvHD encoded with wma 7.1 ch pro audio to h.264 encoded matroska with multiple video streams, 5.1 ch aac audio streams,
jeez, what a surprise (Score:2)
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Perhaps they're dropping this because MCE downright sucks?
Some information on WHY they're doing this (Score:2, Interesting)
* Be your set top box (read: DCAS) - this is the most critical piece because it's from this that all of the media sharing frameworks like DLNA and SVP take place.
* Be your Slingbox - using DLNA- and SVP- compatible mobile devices, PCs and secondary TVs within the home plus standard Ethernet/WiFi
opportunity (Score:2)
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Size and form factor matter... (Score:2)
Seriously, if they expect people to put a full size computer will fans, power requirements and all right next to their TV and surround system (which can be pretty small) no wonder they couldn't sell any.
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However, I have seen a computer that was in the form factor you speak of. Was at a friend's house. Can't remember the manufacturer of it though....unfortunately. It looked pretty nifty.
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It's a niche market (Score:2)
...Drops DEC line (Score:3, Funny)
Timeing a conincedence? (Score:2)
If you want simplicity over everything else, you Tivo. Otherwise, on the Windows side, Vista has ALL the media center stuff including the simplified on-tv interface just like the media center "version" of Windows had... It's not a seperate product that requires a seperate machine any more.
There is simply no place for the product that HP was selling, so of course they stopped making it, simple as that.
Form factor? (Score:2)
A living-room form factor? I can see why it failed - how many people would have the room for it?
More interesting is what isn't said. (Score:2)
Um... Vista Home Premium and Ultimate... (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure HP will still be selling those, regardless of whether they'll look good under your TV. If anything, over the next few years, HP will be shifting more units of MCE-grade machines...
MCE = Vista Home Premium (Score:1)
There have been a few interesting developments in the past few years.
1) Vista Premium and XBox 360
The MCE 2005 has a toy "Media Center Extender" which works with the original XBox to deliver video to the XBox from the XP Media Center. The XBox 360 has native support for exten
Hard to argue for buggy, but also... (Score:2)
That said, once you do make the leap there is no going back. I dread the howl that will come up from
It "Adopter", not Adapter (Score:1)
Are you from New York?
I wonder if they'll go back to Linux (Score:2)
But hey, I'd be happy if more HD TVs shipped without speakers let along have a MCPC embedded.
BTW, HP had a Linux and Java based handheld Jornada which met the same fate. Microsoft marketing dollars would be threatened if they shipped a Linux based handheld and