The smart services on my Samsung TV have always been crappy so I picked up a NVIDA SHIELD PRO - very impressed - there are a couple of services (nowTV, All 4) you need to chromecast but otherwise very good - amazing quick and a great plex media service - yes you can get cheap chinese media boxes but off previous history they will sort this for a while yet...
I looked at PLEX but unfortunately my TV and synology Ds213+ NAS are too old run it via my nvida pro. I may have to revisit this as I've a lot of movies and TV shows.
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A re-post of my techy-nerdy post verification recently on SC:
Fair enough thanks. Can see might be nice to have but personally not a great movie fan and happy to do w/o all that and just open and watch something. Never watch any 'extra content' on DVDs/Blu-rays either.
Having said this might install to see what all the fuss is about...
Definitely makes the whole thing more wife friendly. In the end I got a Plex pass as it gets used so much so my Synology can do hardware transcoding, people can play from their iPads etc. There also seems to be a lot of free films on there now via their own channel. I dunno if we can use the Tivo type features in the UK but that looks neat too.
Built my own supergun for playing JAMMA compatible arcade boards. Only got a couple of boards at the moment but it's quite good fun having my own arcade machine without a huge cabinet (which I don't have room for!).
Insomnia hit again last night so having got up at 03:30 I wanted something quiet to do to keep me occupied. Two hours later and I had pulled together a Raspberry Pi and a HyperPixel 4" square screen to display Album Art for the Living Room Sonos setup. Quite useless but that's not the point. Now need a 90 degree micro-USB adapter.
No, not at all. Like all things with software commands and instructions you just have to check, double check and check again that the commands you're entering are correct. I found it remarkably satisfying as it's a bit Heath Robinson but works well. I have a friend with a 3-D printer and I've asked him to make a secure stand for it.
ETA. If you do build this then buy one of THESE 90 degrees micro USB adapters. It allows the unit to stand on a flat surface.
Last edited by Skier; 4th October 2020 at 18:24.
so I upgraded my mouse to an Logitech Mx3 - it's fantastic. If you don't want to spend nearly £100 on a mouse the older MX model seems similar and quite a bit cheaper...
Depressingly, looking back through my amazon purchases, I see I have bought a new keyboard pretty much every year. I suppose they get heavy use...
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If you spend as many of us do - eight hours a day at a keyboard I find it to be a good investment for the cost. Occasionally I'll be somewhere and have to use a basic office keyboard and it's like trying to type on a sponge cake...
Also I do a little bit of video editing so the MX 3 mouse is fantastic for that because of the side scroll wheel.
Upgraded to the MX Keys, it is much better. Not convinced by the stability of the Bluetooth connection, but can't figure out how to switch to the unifying receiver.
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Dell 27" here, looks great for home office use. I'm planning on using the MX Keys and matching mouse. My laptop is work issue so quite locked down, need IT to approve everything -- can I configure it on my Mac and then just use on my Windows work machine? Or does it not really need configuring for most people? All I use is MS Office and Chrome. Most of my day is spent between Outlook, Salesforce and Excel.
Thanks, Bluetooth will work fine as I'll plug in the USB like I did the old more basic Logitech which my wife stole. Just wondering if the software is useful. If it is could I configure it on my personal laptop and the mouse would remember when I use it on my work laptop? I never ever use my work laptop.
Would definitely recommend the MX Keys keyboard and the Logitech MX Master mouse. Yes, they are expensive but they are quality items and the battery life is really good. Only annoying thing is that you need the dongle but if you have both it'll recognise them as one so you only need one USB dongle.
Ordered the Logitech M720 Triathlon for £35 on Amazon. Going to use that and see how I get on until I buy a new desk on the weekend. The table I'm using at the minute doesn't have the depth for the monitor, laptop and keyboard so I'll give it a week or two using the keyboard on the laptop with the mouse. If the new desk has a decent depth I'll give my wife the M720 as an upgrade.
I put Retropie on an old pi I had lying about.
Then I downloaded and tested all the games I used to play on my Spectrum.
Next, the same for all my old Amiga games.
Now I've discovered that it runs MAME, & having learnt what that is, I'm currently rebuilding the full 58GB ROM set to work on the pi.
I've spent a week of playing around setting it up and other than checking they work, I haven't actually played a single game yet.
Hi, quick question for the users of Pi-hole: looking to buy a Pi3B+ because of the Gigabit LAN, wondering if I need a fan-cooled case? I was hoping not as the Pi-hole should be underutilising the Pi3B+ capabilities?
In regards to the power supply, I understand a standard mobile phone charger is not recommended, does it have to be an original Pi plug or will a Aukru plug for a third of the price do?
I have Pi Model B (not 3B, the original B), pi3 and pi4 in use. The pi-hole servers are running on the model Bs. They do not stress the machines and are fanless. The pi3 runs pi-aware ADS-B and I ran it 24x7 fanless for over 3 years without any trouble. It had good ventilation though.
The pi4 has "real" gigabit (the others are limited by the USB bus, not that it matters for a home DNS really though) and runs much hotter than the others. I use mine with a Pimoroni aluminium heatsink case. It seems okay. The ARM-based chips in the pi are similar to those used in mobile phones and are thus designed to be okay at high temperatures, but as always, think about the surroundings and where that heat will go if intending to run 24x7.
As for power supply, the pi3 and pi4 benefit from a decent power supply. A 10W Apple ipad (not iphone) charger works for the pi3 including powering the ADS-B stick. I use the official pi4 power supply for the pi4, as the pi4 revision I have has the USBC issue. Hope this helps. Pi-hole will be a revelation...
Can a Pi expert on here tell me what I need to make a DAC pro+ with XLR output, the case, and power supply?
I've read as much as I can but I'm still confused about the different cases and power supplies.
I just want to see how well it compares to my other DACs. I want to play it through my Teac amp with XLR inputs.
It would seem you need this case:
https://thepihut.com/products/hifibe...eel-case-black
Plus a Pi4 (available from the same site), the DAC+ XLR board, and this power supply:
https://thepihut.com/products/raspberry-pi-psu-uk
Note that you play or stream files from the Pi, you don't use it as an "external DAC" that attaches to (say) a CD player. My older build was here .