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Options for good Player for TV?

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gowen

Serviio newbie

Posts: 3

Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2014 10:42 pm

Post Mon Feb 16, 2015 12:03 am

Options for good Player for TV?

Short version:
1. I have Serviio Pro on a server in the basement
2. I can use my Xbox 360 as a Player, but media support isn't great
3. I can use my Vizio TV as a Player, but it lacks ff/rew and is buggy
4. What's can I do for a Player that doesn't suck?

Long version:
With Serviio running on a server in my basement, I can and do view video anywhere in my house on multiple devices. I use MediaHouse Pro on my Android and MediaBrowser or VLC on my laptop. These all support random access and/or fast forward/rewind.

On my TV, however, I'm having trouble finding a client that doesn't suck.

The Xbox 360 can play video with the "Video Player" builtin app. It will ff/rew and allow me to skip forward in sections, but its support for different media types isn't as great - it will refuse to play things, and it's not like I can upgrade the codecs on or anything.

I just bought a Vizio e600i-b3 which has Smart TV apps including a DLNA player ("multimedia"). It supports more media types than the Xbox, but it's ff/rew doesn't work - it simply says "Feature not available" when I try. And pausing is problematic at best (after pausing, when you resume it, it will go for several seconds, then pause itself again for a number of seconds before resuming, like it's got to rebuffer) and catastrophic at worst (crashes on resume).

An example - I was watching a movie this morning, got maybe 1/4 of the way through it, when I paused to go to the kitchen. When I came back and resumed, it crashed (the multimedia app exited abruptly). And my only option was to restart and watch the first 1/4 of the movie again, because I can't fast forward.

I have a spare PC with an HDMI video output, so I downloaded KodiBuntu and booted into that. That seems nice, very snazzy interface, a good TV UI - but it doesn't appear to support playing video from a DLNA server like Serviio. (Yes, it can act as a media server itself, but I'm trying to leverage the server in the rack downstairs, not start piling disks under the TV table).

What options do I have? I've got a PC I can put software on; I can just throw Ubuntu on there to run MediaBrowser, although for some reason that feels like I'm limiting myself. Do I need to look into specialized boxes to do this right, and if so, how do I figure which ones are going to do what I need and not be yet another set of compromises and limitations?

Any help appreciated - specific suggestions, pointers to articles, background reading, etc. etc.
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atc98092

User avatar

DLNA master

Posts: 5436

Joined: Fri Aug 17, 2012 10:22 pm

Location: Washington (the state)

Post Mon Feb 16, 2015 1:05 am

Re: Options for good Player for TV?

Welcome!

I have a small Vizio in my den, and it doesn't support much of anything other than MP4. If the file is being transcoded (as almost all of mine are) then FF/Rewind won't be available.

The absolute best DLNA support I've had has been with Sony. However, the last BD player I purchased started having problems with freezing up during playback I could hit stop and play, and the movie would continue where it left off. However, that gets old fast... :lol: That's not to say a new box may be just fine. However, use caution when looking at Sony devices, as I've heard that not everything they now sell supports DLNA.

My Samsung devices are pretty good. The newest players support almost everything, but I notice that DTS Master Audio isn't sent though. I only get the base DTS audio. Dolby TrueHD does come through the BD player, but of course the TVs don't support any HD audio.

I tried a Toshiba BD player about 6 months ago, and returned it within a few days. The user interface was terrible.

Roku has limited support (H.264 or MP4 video codec, but they will play from MKV containers) without transcoding. That said, even my older ones (Roku 2 XS) play everything I have (after transcoding), and the user interface (using the Roku Media Player "channel") is really nice. The Roku does not pass HD audio through, but it has been requested in their forums.
Dan

LG NANO85 4K TV, Samsung JU7100 4K TV, Sony BDP-S3500, Sharp 4K Roku TV, Insignia Roku TV, Roku Ultra, Premiere and Stick, Nvidia Shield, Yamaha RX-V583 AVR.
Primary server: AMD Ryzen 5 5600GT, 32 gig ram, Windows 11 Pro, 22 TB hard drive space | Test server: Intel i5-6400, 16 gig ram, Windows 10 Pro

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