Not sure a good discussion place to post this. I just want some brainstorming.
Looking for ideas on how to set up a faux-TV in the living room using a computer. I want to put an entertainment center across from the couch and have a place to watch media. But I have no interest in paying for cable/satellite/public broadcasts. (Why pay to be advertised to?)
I have a good collection of shows and movies on external hard drives. I figure I could buy a big monitor and plop it up there with a laptop attached. I could do a makeshift mouse using a game pad and Steam.
I just wanted to check if anyone had alternatives in mind. The mouse situation is suboptimal. Having to get another laptop is also suboptimal. The “TV” would also be about 200cm (6.5ish ft) away from the seating area, so I wonder how expensive an appropriately sized monitor would be. But I can’t think of any other way! Any ideas or have I pretty much figured it out?
I have a projector hooked to a Win10 computer in my living room. I also have another computer on the network stuffed full of music and videos. I’ve shared these media folders as read only on the network. I use a small wireless keyboard and trackpad to drive it (Logitech K400). I play the video files in VLC. The music I usually just use winamp. Super simple.
In the past I’d tried using the media center servers like MediaPortal, Plex, etc. They’re pretty, but I found them to be more problematic than just browsing files in directory. I also watch youtube stuff from time to time so I just open a browser on the WIn10 computer.
The girlfriend sometimes gets a Netflix account for a few months at a time and we watch via a browser instead of using a smartTV app.
I’ve been doing this for years and it works well for us.
That sounds ideal! The projector would be hard to set up for how my house is organized, but that’s the general idea I’m talking about.
Also, a little shy to admit this, but I’ve never had any luck sharing files through the home network. Dunno why, never cared much to look into it. You’d think the best way to get files onto a laptop connected to wifi from a desktop connected to ethernet would be to just share them over the router but it wasn’t that easy and I wasn’t that determined for a solution. Maybe I should look into that… it’s probably as simple as checking the right boxes somewhere.
Sharing files isn’t that hard. I’m using Win10 pro so it’s as simple as right clicking a folder, selecting properties, selecting the Sharing tab, clicking the share button. Then select the user and the rights they have. Since it’s just media files over a local network I usually select “everyone” but only give them read only permissions.
I use to give read/write permissions but I’ve accidentally deleted files using the trackpad on the wireless (fat fingers). I figured read only is fine.
The added plus side to this method is I also have a monitor and computer in the bedroom (I’m an insomniac). From there I can access the same shared files on the “media server” computer.
To find the files on the network, open Run and put \name-of-computer and hit enter. A list of the shared directories will open and you can map these (right click and you’ll see the menu option) so they show up in “my computer”.
The only other thing you might have to deal with is the firewall in Windows. But there is a pretty easy option to allow file sharing in the local network.
And yeah, you need the right space for a projector. Start with an appropriate size monitor and upgrade as needed.
Also, the Win10 computer I’m using in the living room and bedroom are just really basic computers. They don’t need much power since they’re only playing movie and music files and sometimes a browser. You can find Lenovo ThinkCentre computers for dirt cheap and they’re tiny. These work really well.
My media server computer is actually one of my older desktop PCs with a hardware raid card and a bunch of drives in RAID1 array. RAID 1 is two drives mirrored so if one fails you don’t lose anything. I’ve been collecting moving and music files for 20+ years so I figured it was nice to have a little redundancy on my collection. But you could use anything and upgrade over time.