I've been using SageTV for the past few years to integrate OTA, DN, FTA and recently SD throughout our house. For those unfamiliar with this approach, a Sage server controls all the tuners as a pool and uses them to play live to networked Sage clients and record requested programs from an integrated guide, available to all clients. Recordings and imported media are also accessible to the clients. This makes the management of thousands of channels and recordings imminently possible, although there is some effort to getting it all set up. The nicest part is the operation is intuitive, even for non-rocket scientists.
One can use properly configured HTPCs to perform as Sage clients. This has been the traditional Sage method and is only limited by the amount of effort and money one wants to invest into a PCs and codecs for each room/screen. A few years back Sage started selling a STB called the HD100 which was a low-power, networked device that easily integrated into home theater system. Being hardware decoders, the quality was good and they were able to decode almost all audio and video formats one could throw at them, at a much lower price than any HTPC. However 4:2:2 video playback was limited to standard definition.
Recently we decided to add a couple of Sage clients, and I looked at the newer Sage HD200 STB. When I discovered the video decoder in this unit was the same as used in the AZBox, I wrote to Sage to ask whether the HD200 could decode HD 4:2:2. They didn't seem particularly aware of this format, but gamely asked for sample video. I was all too happy to oblige with very high rate cuts from FTA. A week or so later, Sage reported they had been able to get the HD200 to work with HD 4:2:2 and this would be released in their next version of firmware.
I picked up a couple of HD200s and noticed yesterday that a new firmware version had been posted. Today I finally got around to testing it, and it worked beautifully. That pretty much checks the boxes for me, except for Dolby E I realize this is not a solution for most people, but for die hard addicts this is a very complete and affordable alternative for a whole house implementation.
One can use properly configured HTPCs to perform as Sage clients. This has been the traditional Sage method and is only limited by the amount of effort and money one wants to invest into a PCs and codecs for each room/screen. A few years back Sage started selling a STB called the HD100 which was a low-power, networked device that easily integrated into home theater system. Being hardware decoders, the quality was good and they were able to decode almost all audio and video formats one could throw at them, at a much lower price than any HTPC. However 4:2:2 video playback was limited to standard definition.
Recently we decided to add a couple of Sage clients, and I looked at the newer Sage HD200 STB. When I discovered the video decoder in this unit was the same as used in the AZBox, I wrote to Sage to ask whether the HD200 could decode HD 4:2:2. They didn't seem particularly aware of this format, but gamely asked for sample video. I was all too happy to oblige with very high rate cuts from FTA. A week or so later, Sage reported they had been able to get the HD200 to work with HD 4:2:2 and this would be released in their next version of firmware.
I picked up a couple of HD200s and noticed yesterday that a new firmware version had been posted. Today I finally got around to testing it, and it worked beautifully. That pretty much checks the boxes for me, except for Dolby E I realize this is not a solution for most people, but for die hard addicts this is a very complete and affordable alternative for a whole house implementation.