Linux Finally Getting XBMC 203
B47h0ry'5 CuR53 writes "XBMC is getting ported to Linux. A few developers of Team-XBMC have begun the porting of XBMC to Linux using OpenGL and the SDL toolkit. In this effort, they are recruiting developers. XBMC is, by far, one of the finest projects to come out of the open source community; and to think it is homebrew. XBMC is a massive project, with the current SVN branch weighing about 350M before compilation. Porting it will be a big effort and any hackers willing to contribute should check out the Linux port project."
What is XBMC? (Score:5, Informative)
For reference, for the 99% of us out here who have no frickin' clue what something like XBMC might stand for, it would be nice to spell out the whole abbreviation at least once in summaries. Since it wasn't mentioned, XBMC is the Xbox Media Center, an open source media center project to play images and videos of various formats and from various sources, such as streaming from your PC or even the Internet, on your Xbox 360. It will let you use your Xbox 360 kind of like a beefed-up and free Apple TV [apple.com]
Sounds pretty cool, but it does require that you mod your Xbox 360, and Microsoft has been banning modded Xboxes [slashdot.org] from their Xbox Live service. I'm not saying do it or don't do it, just that before you get too excited and start downloading stuff, you ought to know that as part of your decision.
Because, you know, allowing people to improve your product for free by adding a ton of useful functionality, customizing the thing they've laid out a not-insignificant amount of hard-earned cash for to better suit their needs must be stopped at all costs. After all, it might cost you a few bucks in not selling movies that people already own to them again.
Re:What is XBMC? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What is XBMC? (Score:5, Interesting)
From what I've heard part of the reason they're working on a Linux port is so that they can have this fine software running on the Xbox 360 (seeing as it's possible to run Linux on a limited number of Xbox 360 consoles) as well as the PS3 which can run Linux out of the box.
I've been using XBMC at home for years now and it really is fantastic and gets frequent and useful updates. Here's hoping that a Linux port will not only provide us with LEGAL binaries (being homebrew on the Xbox 1 means that the binaries are technically illegal) but support for some video capture devices and DVR/PVR functionality... which IMO was the only major feature missing from XBMC as it wasn't possible using the Xbox 1's too slow for video v1.1 USB ports.
Re:What is XBMC? (Score:4, Informative)
Anyone else notice that Sony this round is actually going with standards compliance? HDMI connector (not just some proprietary one), DLNA for A/V streaming, USB for connectors/devices, S-ATA user-replaceable hard drive, right down to their software development (OpenGL, GNU tools, etc.).
I'm impressed, although I'm sure some anti-Sony rant will follow this.
Re:What is XBMC? (Score:4, Insightful)
I really like that direction and the PS3 makes a great media device for those reason IMO. I'd own one except I don't need a media device and there's nothing on the console yet that excites me as a game machine.
The number of people looking for a media device and game machine wrapped into one at a price to reflect that I would suspect is much smaller then the number of people looking for just a media device or just a game machine and not wanting to pay for things they don't need.
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Writing software that runs from within Sony's XMB is another story; that requires a license (as with all game systems) but those who have such a license don't have to look up some strange new specification for their software at an API level -- that's what standards are for.
As for
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Re:What is XBMC? (Score:5, Informative)
Another possible motivation is departing from using the XDK. As you may or may not know the XDK (Xbox Development Kit) is not publicly available [xboxmediacenter.com] and thus the XBMC team does not distribute binaries, but only source code. Then various groups with illicit copies of the XDK compile this code into the XBMC that we know and love. You have to know where to go to get it, et cetera. In addition, to even run it you either need it to either be signed, which is only done by Microsoft, or to have a hacked Xbox. In order to run unsigned Xbox (XDK) programs on the Xbox, you need a hacked BIOS. And these are by definition modified copies of the original BIOS, which are in turn illegal to distribute, and possibly to create or possess (depending on how valid the Xbox EULA is.) Work proceeds on an Open XDK replacement [openxdk.org], but it's not up to most tasks yet.
However, it is possible to run Linux [xbox-linux.org] on the Xbox using an alternative BIOS known as Cromwell [xbox-linux.org]. This is an entirely Free/free solution, and is completely legal. You can flash it to the system in the same way as you would any other BIOS, so if you have an early Xbox you can do the internal TSOP reflash [xbox-linux.org] and you don't even need a modchip.
(Pardon my linkage; might as well make some links for posterity, and they support my argument) :)
Anyway, HTPC, Xbox 360 (and Playstation 3!) compatibility were probably the primary goals. But it also has a dandy side-benefit.
There is however still no legal way to do DVD menus (at least in the USA.)
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Anyway, I'm fairly familiar with how they work. The XERC (and similar devices) essentially get their power from the PSU's standby line, they have an IR receiver and whe
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Re:What is XBMC? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yah it is: XNA [wikipedia.org]
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So your shot for "funny" didn't work, it seems neither m
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It's used as an over-glorified shower radio right now but at home for the summers (and coming up in my apartment) it gets used connected to the TV. This lets me watch TV shows and other computer video content on a TV from a device that has GREAT video output for a TV (way better than the s-video connection on my laptop).
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KnoppMyth backend, Xbox front ends, and I'm all set. Well, except for high resolution video. But you -- the Xbox upsamples reasonably well.
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It's been slashdotted, but from what I did read, it seems like the Linux version doesn't necessarily require an Xbox? Wouldn't this put it at odds with projects like MythTV?
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I'm not sure if XBMC provides recording and playback for live TV? Or you'd at least need the tuners/capture cards on a remote backend.
There is a thing called "Project Grayhem" [mythtvtalk.com] which lets you skin your Mythtv like the Project Mayhem skin on XBMC. If you're into that kind of thing....
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You can be kicked off live for a modded xbox just like an modded 360, but from what I've read the switch boxes work pretty well, and anyway plenty of people buy them as a cheep media box and never even attempt to hook them up for Live at all.
Re:What is XBMC? (Score:5, Funny)
What, you mean as a nerd you don't automatically know about every project on every platform everywhere? So you have no idea about the developments made by the TTMH team, or the ramifications of Project Windmill? What about your take on the social issues associated with the QRML?
You don't even follow the news enough to understand a project that only runs on a modified version of an outdated hardware platform and does the same job and dozens of other far more powerful systems and commercial products?!? Turn in you nerd card, sir!
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The modded xbox costs what now, maybe $150? With it (modded) you can play SNES, Genesis, N64 games. Not to mention xbox games. If that wasn't enough now comes XBMC. My roomates and I ALWAYS use XBMC to watch movies from our computers, we just leave the xbox plugged into the network
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All it ta
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What does it take to avoid looking like a dick? I'm probably asking the wrong person...
Of course hovering over the first link in an article and looking at the url in the bottom of the browser (which could have simply been "http://www.xbmc.com" but still only tells you "xboxmediacenter") is much simpler than reading a one-sentence description in the article. Heck, why even have sentence
Whatever (Score:3, Insightful)
And all it takes to keep people from having to jump through idiotic non-intuitive hoops that may or may not yield a modicum of an explanation of what the hell you're talking about is to spell out your obscure abbreviation at least once in the summary.
I'm glad that people like you, who blame problems with a user interface on those "idiot" end users, are becoming fewer and fewer. And next
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While I agree that this is good practice, and should be followed, Slashdot is theoretically News for Nerds. If you're a nerd, you should either a) already know what XBMC is, b) be able to figure it out without help, or c) both. Those of us who fall into the latter category spend a significant portion of our time on slashdot either laughing or rolling our eyes at those of you who fall into none of these groups.
What kind of nerd can't do some f
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If you're a nerd, you should either a) already know what XBMC is, b) be able to figure it out without help, or c) both.
a) is extremely arguable. I hate to burst your bubble, but most nerds I know do not own an Xbox, 1 or 360. The ones that do (I own one of each myself) don't keep up with the mod/homebrew scene, they just use them to unwind after their day at the office. (Which is why I had never heard of XBMC, and even mistakenly claimed that it was for the 360.) As such, it's unlikely that XBMC will mean anything to, well, I'm guessing around 99% of the nerds that read Slashdot.
As for b), being a nerd myself, the f
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Reprieve:
I just noticed that you're not the parent of my other post, so you're not still needlessly arguing, only needlessly arguing. Stop that!
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Don't get me wrong, if there were two versions of the submission on the firehose, and one explained what XBMC was and one didn't, the one that did would be likely to be the one I voted up. But if there weren't, I wouldn't have voted the one down, but instead up.
For the record, some marks of a good summary (as opposed to "acceptable") include an expansion of every acronym, proper link e
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Though in this case, if you just mouse over the first link in the summary, you see that it leads to xboxmediacenter.com. There's no need to even follow the link to see what it stands for.
No, I didn't know what it meant until then.
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I used to tell myself this is a geek site, if I don't know what an acronym stands for I should look it up myself yada yada etc etc. Then I see this [slashdot.org] story yesterday about "altruism," and the submitter bothered to give us a definition of that word (I'm pretty sure it was the submitter; I didn't see the definition in the lin
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XBOX 360: $299
Apple TV: $299
Where is this "free" you speak of? If I could a 360 for free, I might actually get one.
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Free, as in no incremental cost if you already own an Xbox for gaming that you're willing to mod. ;-)
(Unlike the Apple TV, which you very unlikely own unless you're using it for this specific purpose.)
And I accidentally misidentified the project as being for the 360 instead of the original Xbox, which you can actually get pretty dirt cheap these days.
Damn (Score:2)
Finaly? (Score:2)
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This just in! (Score:3, Funny)
Unfamiliar to XBMC? Checkout the Wikipedia article (Score:4, Informative)
The article then goes on into more feature/function details, it is recommended reading
Re:Unfamiliar to XBMC? Checkout the Wikipedia arti (Score:2)
I read it. 99% of it is talking about what it can play, which really has nothing to do with XBMC and everything to do with MPlayer, which XBMC uses.
As far as the Wiki or XBMC's page says, only thing "special" about XBMC over any other MPlayer GUI seems to be that it displays weather and uses IMDB to show info about your movies...
I'm not getting a warm fuzzy feeling. Certainly doesn't sound like the "best project of al
About damn time... (Score:5, Informative)
The killer feature of this program is *not* what it does. It's a very powerful and robust media player, certainly, but the true power comes from the user interface, which is simple, effective, straightforward and very pretty to look at (and fully skinnable). Anyone who has used a TiVo or similar television media interface should have no problems using XBMC. Now that it is no longer tied to the Xbox, it will be possible to create small form factor media center systems running linux and give them a truly excellent user interface.
The interface supports running external programs (in particular, games and game emulators), python scripting to handle writing widgets to interface with popular media sites like YouTube, file management, and streaming from nearly any source. It also works as an FTP/Samba/HTTP server to serve out whatever media is stored on the disk to other sources. There is a web interface for remote management. It'll work with USB joysticks and remote control as well as keyboards. There is a web browser but it's a bit hinky - I'm sure that someone will merge it with Firefox after it is ported.
If you're wondering why anyone would give a damn about the original Xbox or this program, the upshot is this... for $129 you could buy a P3 system (xbox), hack it with software exploits (fairly easily), install a hard disk up to 1TB in side to replace the original, and have a portable media player box that could hold hundreds of hours of content and play it back in 480p/720p/1080i and DTS. The price to do that with any computer was far higher at the time (and frankly still is, especially in setup time). I've been carting mine around for years and have had a great many friends request that I make one for them. I think I've done around thirty of them by now.
I think Microsoft/Sony completely missed the boat by overlooking this application for their gaming consoles. Either they just didn't see it or they don't like this behavior and see it as a liability of some kind. Either way, we won't be needing them much longer. A clever company could probably turn this into a killer set-top app with some business savvy. All it needs is a bit-torrent backend for sharing content with other users and connectivity to media sites, and you've got a TV channel killer on your hands and a new distribution network (if it ever gets big).
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Why bother? With the exception of a couple of console emulators, every XBMC application I've tried has had flawless support for Samba file sharing. I'd rather stick that 1TB drive in a desktop PC or network file server, and mount my video/game/music directories so they're accessible to any machine on the network, including the Xbox.
play it back in 480p/720p/1080i
Upscaled to 720p/1080i, it should be noted. The Xbox's CPU isn't quite powerful eno
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The reason you'd do the 1TB thing is because it's portable and all you need is a TV to enjoy your entire DVD library (XBMC will play raw IS
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Actually, you were being deliberately obtuse, which is horribly annoying. I don't think I can be faulted for not understanding the truth...
Regardless, the benefit of XBMC on Linux over MythTV on Linux is supposedly the interface, but again, I haven't used Myth. I have an Xbox, but I don't have a HTPC. And the benefit of XBMC on a faster system as opposed to XBMC on the Xbox is that it could support full-HD video.
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Can I make the XBMC in my living room start playing MP3s based on what I type in my bed room?
Every "Media Center" I've ever seen wants me to "Share" the files, walk 50 feet, pick up the remote control, squint at my television to read what songs are there, select them, play them, and walk back to my bedroom. Frankly, it's annoying.
My current hack is a homebrew wsh script on an XP pro box, I dump MP3s over the network, it picks 'em up, plays 'em, and deletes 'em.
The only problem is wh
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And if you're seriously set on using Windows for this, why not enable file sharing and let the network transfer your MP3s on the fly?
Anyway, to answer your question, you can do this with FTP Si [xboxmediacenter.com]
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Windows was there... I have a Windows PC hooked up in the living room so I can play Wolfenstein. Yeah, I know, that's kind of lame. LOL.
Going with a non-Windows solution would mean buying new hardware, though, since there aren't Linux drivers for almost everything on the [free] BookPC I'm using. Which means considering XBox makes sense, too.
MythTV -- not sure what this gets me? I thought it was your basic PVR? I have
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More likely they just haven't figured out how to monetize it yet. Since Microsoft sold both Xbox's at a loss, and Sony is selling the PS3 at a substantial loss, I doubt either is jumping up and down to find a way to let people use them in a way that won't make them any additional revenue.
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Secondly, interfaces are getting complex enough to need their own IDE (yes, I know there's one floatin
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Fine you can also get all the old emulators (They're working on a ps1 emu right now but everything prior to that) All Xbox games, several PC ports....
My Xbox also rips DVDs which is nice (Pop it in it copies and encodes overnight.
If it had line in it would be the sickest media centre ever. It's still Big heavy and ugly and needs a physical mod (though there are soft mods I haven't seen anyone who has used one) and doesn't support HD-DVD (gasp) or DVD burning.
I actually
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My worst one was formatting my 750GB model as one huge 750GB F drive. The partition table starts looping back on itself at the 256GB mark, so I overwrote everything on the system by copying in new media. I broke the 1TB model up into C/E/F/G at 256GB each and the problem hasn't reappeared. That would be a pain to
I am confused (Score:2, Interesting)
So they're porting a Linux based Linux media player to Linux?
Would anyone like to correct me or alternatively join me in a severe case of WTF?
Re:I am confused (Score:5, Informative)
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Well, I've got MythTv, gqview, and mplayer and it's several years since I had any trouble playing a media file on my Linux box, so why don't you tell us, since you're here, why I would want something else, let alone download and install 350Ms? What's the point of this xbmc thing outside of the console environment?
TWW
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A typical XBMC installation package (which is general
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That is not a problem, because it is an OS problem, not an application problem. Remember, they're porting it to Linux and SDL, not to some bare hardware. To them, SDL is the driver layer. This is excellent because SDL is available for a number of other platforms, so this is also a firs
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Also, I'm not a coder, but SDL doesn't appear to grant any interface to IR Remotes, which is one of the main reasons I still haven't ditched my xbox in favor of streaming video to my PS3. I still can't believe they didn't put an IR receiver in that thing.
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You don't need SDL for that, support for IR is provided by the Linux kernel as well.
Linux also supports all the Xbox hardware (but with poor video support thanks to nVidia - The OpenXDK guys are making some headway though) already, including the IR dongle
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XBMC is idiot proof. They turn it on and it works. I use ccxstream instead of Samba because I have no reason to use Samba on my debian server.
It's hard to explain if you've never seen it in action. If I go over to a friend's house and we want to watch some movies I can ftp them to the hard drive, toss the XBOX in my backpack and go. Almost all TVs on the market have RCA inputs. If I lose my remote I can pull up http://xbox/ [xbox] on my l
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But I am curious as well now, I know it's main player is mplayer, but regarding the gui and everything else, I thought it was all written with a modified version of linux? I guess not, but a better expl
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No, XBMC runs on top of MS's standard Xbox kernel (well, standard except for being patched to support binaries not signed by Microsoft, and often a few other features such as hard disks larger than 137GB), using MS's standard Xbox libraries for IO, the same as an Xbox game d
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No, it runs on the xbox os. The same one that all the games use. It was coded with the xbox development kit the same as any game. The port to linux requires writing sdl and opengl implementations of all the libraries that microsoft provided in the xbox sdk.
AppleTV will be the primary platform (Score:3, Interesting)
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This made my year. I'm ecstatic.
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The USB port is working now, isn't it? Yeah, not integrated but you can hook up a DVD writer.
IIRC, the decoder chip can only handle 720p - are hackers finding hidden capabilities?
I was going to try running MythFrontEnd on one under OSX, but this project sounds interesting as well.
Since I'm here - is anybody else running MythFrontEnd on AppleTV/OSX yet?
duplication of effort... (Score:2)
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Infact it is un-installable (unless they fixxed it last night, and I have not checked). How many other FOSS project offer 'support' via Skype and YIM? Yes it is a nifty idea, but only if the devs actually log-in to those accounts. IRC remains barren. IRC is ideal because many people get to see/share the info that is posted. The official forums seem to be devoid of any dev interaction, and the bug-report might be falli
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Ubuntu Media Center (Score:2)
Why bother with humility ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Clearly, it is in the same league as Apache, Firefox, gcc and the Linux kernel.
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XBMC is FAR more important than all of these things - it gives me a full media extender that my wife can not only use, but loves for around 90 quid. It brings peace and harmony to my home. It replaced my VCR and DVD recorder.
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Why Bother? Mythtv Rules! (Score:2)
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Yeah, that should be just fine. I recently read that the CPU in a Tivo Series 2 is 50MHz.
Apparently just about everything is offloaded to ASIC's.
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I don't buy that; Some themes and effects would possibly require it, or to do it at high r
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Some might say that Dell selling Linux machines caused it but no it was.....
XBMC!
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However I don't think porting it is a good idea, it simply isn't that special, the reason it is good is becasue it runs on the xbox, not anything else
I disagree. In combination with the Xbox remote, XBMC is hands down the best media player I've used on any platform. It has a better UI than TiVo! Thanks to XBMC I was able to retire my CD player and my DVD player. Most of my TV watching is now AVIs streaming off the net.
XBMC is the most reliable video player I have -- it plays pretty much anything, including stuff that Windows Media Player and Quicktime (both on Mac and PC) choke on. Obviously, I could run MPlayer on my PC, but with XBMC I get Mplayer rea
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If are are competent with C/C++ programming-language then all you need to start with developing XBMC for Linux (to help in the porting project) is a x86-based computer running Linux, (Ubuntu 7.04 is recommended). The software development tool used to develop XBMC under Linux is called Kdevelop, which is
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I don't have a PVR nor do I don't have a small form factor media PC. Neither do I want any of these things. This is a lot cheaper and a lot less hassle.
The reason having this ported is a good idea is because at the moment it's tied to the Xbox, a platform which is rapidly becoming phased out, and also a platform which is somewhat limited in