Hi there, On Sun, 6 Apr 2014, Brian Wall wrote: > From what I remember, the stock capture driver worked pretty well with > the card out of the box. That's why I shelled out for that specific > card, it had a "works everywhere" chipset. "Works out of the box" is one thing - I have a hauppauge tuner, too (though a USB one). It works but MythTV's setup was weirder than all hell. Again, it worked, but it's like Configure Capture Card, then Configure an Input Method, then Configure Channels, and I think a few more steps. Totally a Myth thing... they've been making it more and more complex for no apparently reason. Oh, and you need to run a dedicated backend for capture for some reason. Even though my capture card is on my media center PC, not my media server... > One of these years I'll pick myself up one of them new-fangled Blu-ray > players with a DLNA client. Hehe, I'm sure one of the Roku boxes or equivalent (which are like $50 I think?) can do DLNA. At least you'd think so! I have a PS3 which picks up my MythTV "shares" - but it refuses to play any of the media. No video, no audio, nothing. I have no idea what kind of weird formats it wants (it didn't even like my MP3 files). > I would like to be able to rip DVDs (that I own, yes) and CDs (yes) Do NOT apologise for that! I own hundreds of CDs (I may have passed 500, I stopped counting when I was at 300+ and that was several years ago). CDs are still the primary, almost exclusive way I get music. When you have that many CDs the only way to possibly navigate it is to rip them all to a server and play through there. Every CD I get is automatically ripped (in FLAC) to the media server, and then put in a box in the attic (: I've been going through my DVDs and Blu-Ray collection and doing the same, now that I have the disc space... honestly with a lot of the TV shows I have on discs it's easier to, uh, get the versions where someone else did the ripping. Saves times. But yeah, having all my media on a server is incredibly convenient... except that making backups of 10+ terabytes is kinda hard.