XBMC Gets a Dedicated Remote 87
Malard writes "XBMC users can rejoice, developers from the team have partnered with Motorola to re-develop their previously announced Nyxboard remote with RF, programmable IR and full support on Windows, Mac, Linux and Original Apple TVs."
Motorola?! = Locked Bootloader (Score:2)
Without a doubt, I'm sure it will ship with a locked bootloader. How am I suppose to root and flash my remote with such nonsense? COM'ON!!11
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This. I'd love to replace that craptastic mceusb remote...
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I wish XBMC would get native TV Tuner support. :(
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The HDHomerun is supported. For more than that and particularly DVR support you'll need to run a Myth backend. No way are the devs going to reinvent THAT wheel! They have stated this more than once BTW.
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Does it work with the newer HomeRun Dual? [silicondust.com] At $129.00 it is very tempting.
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It should, I have the old Dual Tuner model that used two inputs and it worked - each tuner is addressed separately.
That said, I have not been using my tuner for awhile so before jumping in with both feet check out the forums and make sure folks aren't bitching. XBMC is still maturing for stuff like this so be sure that all features you want are there. The HDHomeruns are pretty cool devices no matter what - especially considering the price! I'd like to get a good Myth setup going and use one as a DVR backend
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You have an industrial grade HTPC? Cool.
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I would still consider something like this though. My keyboard can't control my TV or receiver so I still need another remote or two. I have an older harmony but the interface is a little laggy compared to the original remotes and I have yet to get an IR dongle for my ion-based XBMC box.
If this can do the basic TV functions (honestl
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Doing it wrong. A "TV" is akin to a "console stereo". All you need is a good monitor, a tuner, and a computer. And a wireless keyboard with trackball. And a good amp and speaker system. Okay, and you need (healthy) snacks too. And weed. Don't forget the weed!
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The ashtray, the paddle game, and the remote control, and that's all I need... And these matches.
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Yes, and they should be controlled by XBMC remotes.
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Excellent! (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been looking at the XBMC wiki for how to program a Logitech Harmony -- or any other universal remote -- and was thinking "they have to be kidding". Modify the keyboard.xml file by hand?
I've been using the Android app and my phone as a remote, but it is limited. This will save a bunch of headaches.
Re:Excellent! (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously?
Plex (XBMC fork) has had full support for Logitech Harmony for ages now.
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That was not my experience.
I purchased a WMC remote w/IR receiver and was using XBMC Live (Ubuntu-based) that was then loaded to the hard drive. LIRC is on there.
The WMC remote maybe has 6 keys that worked off the bat. Unfortunately, "back" wasn't one of them. Up, Down, Left, Right, Stop and Play yes but I can't navigate back out of a menu.
If the WMC worked right, then yes I could use it to teach the Harmony and all would be right with the world. But it was barely functional out of the box.
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That was not my experience.
I purchased a WMC remote w/IR receiver and was using XBMC Live (Ubuntu-based) that was then loaded to the hard drive. LIRC is on there.
The WMC remote maybe has 6 keys that worked off the bat. Unfortunately, "back" wasn't one of them. Up, Down, Left, Right, Stop and Play yes but I can't navigate back out of a menu.
If the WMC worked right, then yes I could use it to teach the Harmony and all would be right with the world. But it was barely functional out of the box.
I had the exact opposite results. I had XBMC running on WinXP and had to do a bunch of regedits to get a WMC remote to work. When I reinstalled with XBMC Live, the remote just worked.
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It depends on the IR receiver you are using, but I'm using a Windows MCE receiver and I have the Harmony setup as a standard MCE remote all of the mappings for the Live CD version worked correctly without modifying any of the configs.
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Then I have to try that again, because the WMC remote w/IR that I bought didn't work out of the box. Only a few buttons worked and "back" wasn't one of them.
I'll see about programming the Harmony as a Windows MCE and see what happens.
I am using the Live CD version, installed on HD.
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I've been looking at the XBMC wiki for how to program a Logitech Harmony -- or any other universal remote -- and was thinking "they have to be kidding". Modify the keyboard.xml file by hand?
I've been using the Android app and my phone as a remote, but it is limited. This will save a bunch of headaches.
It's a little work but well worth it.
I picked up the Sony Bluetooth Remote (PS3) on sale for ~$16 and a Bluetooth dongle for ~$7.
The result is awesome. Works no matter where I am in the house and the button layout on the remote is nice. I just modified "slow step" "forward/backward" to be the volume control.
The PS3 remote is unbeatable for the price!
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Except that with Bluetooth, the device never sleeps unless you configure it to sleep after x minutes to save battery life. I've had the PS3 remote with a Kensington USB Bluetooth dongle on Mac & Plex running for a while now and this is my biggest complaint. The batteries die seemingly within days. If I instruct it to sleep after x minutes to save battery life, then you need to mash keys on the remote to wake it up in Plex which is annoying as well. I've bought Remote Buddy for Mac to use the remote with Mac software.
I use XBMC over Windows along with "PS3 Application" to control the remote. At one point I do remember a bug where the program didn't sleep the remote. It works now, just a programming issue.
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Duh, program it to use MCE keycodes, no XML required. I have programmed two Harmony using an old MCE remote and they work well.
That said, 2x of these new remotes will likely follow me home soon :-)
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THIS THIS THIS..
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I've been using Harmony remotes (550s) with my 2 XMBC installs (one Mac, one Windows) for about 2 years and have yet to touch a keyboard.xml file. If you select a Windows Media Center setup for the Windows one it just works. The only thing that doesn't seem to work is "page up"/"page down" (which does work on the Mac, but I don't remember what I have that setup as).
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I didn't have to modify the keyboard config file by hand to use my Harmony... But I did have to spend a long time f'ing around with EventGhost. (My Harmony-compatible IR receiver is a USB-IRT, which I bought ages ago to use with SageTV.)
Last I looked the xbmc wiki was way out of date or simply silent on some topics. The forums were the best source of info, but also the most newb-hostile forums I had ever seen. Newcomers were often referred to sticky threads that were out of date. Development moved quickly a
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No, not serious.
I use my Harmony with XBMC and have ZERO issues and programming was a breeze.
Just tell the Harmony it's using a MCE keyboard. Then, in the Harmony SW you can modify the buttons to your liking.
It couldn't be simpler. Start here http://forum.xbmc.org/showthread.php?t=77519 [xbmc.org]
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To maximize what you can do with the Harmony, without digging into the keymap.xml file and keeping everything simple and easy, just set up both "MCE Remote" and "MCE Keyboard" as devices in the Harmony software.
(Computer > Media Center PC > Microsoft > Then Enter "MCE Remote" or "MCE Keyboard" as the model in the Harmony Soft
Re:XMBC? (Score:5, Informative)
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As I understand it, XBMC is pretty much a misnomer these days. Unless I'm thinking of a different project, I believe it runs on HTPCs as well, sort of as a less convoluted MythTV alternative without Live Tuner support.
Been considering ditching LinHES since Comscat keeps moving all the good channels to digital-only...
Finally... (Score:2, Insightful)
Meh (Score:2, Interesting)
And another remote that tries to confine a computer UI into the classic TV remote. Granted, adding the keyboard is a nice touch, but it's still too limited.
I've been using a mediacenter computer for a few years now. The remote control solution I use:
- keyboard
- mouse
- Griffin Powermate
1. a mouse makes for a much better pointing device than a four-way button
2. the keyboard and VLC's configurability gives me dedicated buttons for VLC's functions, like very short jump/short jump/medium jump/long jump; crop/asp
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VLC's functions, like very short jump/short jump/medium jump/long jump
Luckily XBMC doesn't have these features so a simple remote is fine.
It had those features 8 years ago and still has them today. FUD.
Re:Meh (Score:4, Informative)
Very nice (Score:2)
It's interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only real complication would be dealing with the assorted wacky IR codes used by random consumer electronics. Even there, though, an IR receiver for 'learning' or a small abuse of the HID spec for allowing a utility program to download premade device control sets would be neither difficult nor expensive.
And yet, we still have just a few classes of remote: the 'free in the box, impossible to obtain a replacement' device specific ones, the dollar-store 'universal' ones(universality may vary), the MCE-yes-the-computer-is-MCE-enabled-out-of-the-box-but-it-still-comes-with-this-ghastly-USB-dongle ones(all of which seem to have hit every branch while falling out of the ugly tree), or the extremely expensive basically-an-entire-PDA fully programmable universal ones.
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My point was that BT HID peripherals are cheap. Way, way, cheaper than the full-featured PDA-with-volume-control ones(which are justifiably expensive, given their spec). The BOM to implement IR output is also quite small(as is the one for input)
My surprise is that, as best I can tell, there isn't a class of remotes that puts these facts together, along with the low cost of microcontrollers with just a few extra GPIO pins. You can get BT HID peripherals for cheap, w
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Does this work for Netflix when XBMC launches IE to play the movie? I've yet to get any remote to work in IE/Netflix in XBMC.
"Info" button? (Score:2)
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FFS if you bothered to look at the pictures in TFA, don't read it obviously, you'd have seen a nicely placed info button...
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All of the MCE remotes I have support an Info button as I recall. They're cheap but often contain buttons you don't need. The best ones give you direct access to Movies and Music with dedicated buttons. I'll be ordering a pair of these myself though as I'd prefer RF, we'll see how they work out...
awesome (Score:2)
IR v WiFi? (Score:1)
wouldn't work for me (Score:2)
I understand that people use devices differently and that for a lot of people this will be great, so I'm not trying to threadcrap here or anything. However, this remote wouldn't work for me for a couple of reasons.
1) Gyroscope that makes only one side active at a time, depending on orientation. This wouldn't work for me because I use my remotes in all sorts of orientations depending on how I happen to be sitting/laying. Often instead of pointing it at the TV, I have it in my hand, upside down (ie: my hand o
Open (Score:1)
most people who setup xbmc... (Score:1)
Also, from a hardware design perspective that receiver looks rather small. I think you would want to build this to have a very wide IR receiving angle. I would be interested in seeing this thing get tested in the real world.
Even with this remote, you may or may not be able to turn off/on your xbmc system from it. That depends on your motherboard/BIOS/processor.
I think,
XKCD?.. I'm confused.... (Score:2)
I read the the headline and thought... what the fark does an internet comic need a remote for?
Love tequila! Just love it.
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Gyroscope? (Score:2)
FTA:
The feature with the coolest potential is a gyroscope, which tells the remote which side is facing upright. That means you can hammer away at the miniature keyboard without triggering an unintended volume change from the buttons on the other side.
Except when I'm laying in bed watching TV and I want to use the remote upside-down. I think I'll keep my AVS Gear [newegg.com] infrared remote for now, kthx.
That's nice for the multi-remote people... (Score:4, Interesting)
I really prefer my Crestron remote and system. I talk to the XBMC dedicated box via tcp/ip and get two way info so that my Touchscreen remote displays elapsed time, show info, etc....
Glad to see that a XBMC specific remote is coming out with a keyboard on back to make IR remote users life's easier for searching or entering info.
and no, I'm not filthy rich.. I am using outdated Crestron gear that I bought for near nothing on ebay. you can have rapper and sports legend level home integration if you simply put the effort out there to find what is affordable and not have a "it's used, thats ooky" response to used gear.
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This sounds great. Can you give some more details about your setup? Like, what hardware, how you're doing the TCP/IP stuff, etc?
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search google for crestron. or go to crestron.com
also search google for XBMC tcp-IP control. both are incredibly documented.
finally search for crestron XBMC module and you will find a great module that someone wrote and open sourced to make it super easy.
Bah! (Score:2)
Home Theater Master MX-500 Universal remote (Score:2)
Does it control anything besides XBMC/media pl (Score:2)
For a while I've been looking forward to getting this http://www.amazon.com/Portable-Wireless-Keyboard-Rechargeable-Notebooks/dp/B003UE52ME/ref=sr_1_2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1298676916&sr=1-2 [amazon.com]
For half of the price, you get a keyboard+touchpad combo in a very compact package, and it has a backlight which I admit to needing most of the time. It's even more stylish, so while I agree that a dedicated remote layout is a good idea, the price, and the availability of very good alternatives make me do
Yes, it works as a universal IR remote (Score:2)
Does it control anything besides XBMC/media pl
From one of the articles:
"The Nyxboard Hybrid supports IR to function as a universal remote for your TV and includes an RF adapter for operating your home theater device without line-of-sight."
For a while I've been looking forward to getting this http://www.amazon.com/Portable-Wireless-Keyboard-Rechargeable-Notebooks/dp/B003UE52ME/ref=sr_1_2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1298676916&sr=1-2 [amazon.com]
For half of the price,
When it launched just over a year ago, it was going for $90 ...
you get a keyboard+touchpad combo in a very compact package, and it has a backlight which I admit to needing most of the time. It's even more stylish, so while I agree that a dedicated remote layout is a good idea, the price, and the availability of very good alternatives make me doubt it will have that much success.
You weren't clear on the subject of your last sentence, but I currently have a cheap (15 GBP) RF remote for XBMC, and 4 other IR remotes (amp, TV, DVD/HDD player/recorder, Satellite receiver). While I can use the amplifier's remote for most of the function
Xbox support? (Score:2)
I hope they ship a IR dongle for the Xbox with it or how else is this supposed to work?
btw, it's a shame that they still call it XBMC. They should have dropped that name when they ceased to make it work on the Xbox, so the few guys who continue the development for the Xbox wouldn't have had to use the rather stupid name XBMC4Xbox.
Is it backlit? (Score:1)
The thing I hate about most remotes that come with devices (except strangely my DVR remote) is that they aren't really handy
in the dark. Yeah I'm looking at you Logitech, Seriously? Google TV keyboard, awesome, Not Backlit? WHY?
I think maybe it would be nice if everything was just wifi, With bi-directional communications your remote could actually maybe
know that the device powered down or the output was changed to another device. With IR mostly you get the "ok I tried doing what you
told me to do but I have
XBMC best media room app (Score:1)
Great to hear that they'll have their own dedicated remote - a necessary tool for a media PC, IMO. The tactile feel of the buttons is important and a dedicated remote should make setup a breeze.
What I love is the flexibility: I setup lircd from scratch, using my stereo receiver's remote. It took a few hours to configure since I had to teach it my remote's buttons, but the results are fantastic. One remote for the stereo, TV, and XBMC. That's all that's needed.