CMonster said:I have a last generation Squeezebox Classic that I no longer use (replaced by AppleTVs) that I'd give you a good price on if you decide to try that route...
yromj said:I skimmed this thread so forgive me if I missed this. But have you considered a NAS for storing the music (and ultimately a lot of other stuff once you start using it)? I use a QNAP NAS to store my media and as a DLNA server. This way, you don't need a true PC to be on to stream the media and playback devices, such as a Squeezebox, a Sonos, or even a network capable receiver, can be used to listen to the media.
John
yromj said:BrianZ, I'm 100% with you on keeping things wired. (For me wireless is reserved for portable devices such as laptops, phone, and tablets. My desktops, server, and media devices are wired and shall be so.)
Haywood has a thread about his recent NAS purchase. His is the NAS equivalent of an SVS PB-13Ultra, so keep that in mind. Mine is also a QNap (brand) but is a single bay. The O/S is very good, the support, both through the online community and from QNap, are top notch. Mine is 3 years old or so and still receiving fairly regular firmware updates and new apps are also available regularly.
My NAS is about 6" tall, 2" wide, and 8" deep. It's dead quiet, and I have a 7200RPM drive in it. Once you have the media stored someplace like this, you can use whatever device(s) you want to access it. For example, I access mine w/ local devices such as PCs, laptops, and tablets for general files such as Word documents or Excel spreadsheets (mine is also my household file server). I also access it locally with my blu-ray players, TVs, and receivers for music, video, and picture playback. Finally, I access it remotely using my phones, tablets (both via a fairly well done app), and PCs for work files, and for music and pictures playback.
Thanks,
John
Haywood said:Most of the smaller NAS devices only have one Ethernet port. You would just connect it, the Squeezebox and the Fire TV to the same Ethernet switch. There should be one built into your router or you can pick up a 5-Port model for under $20.
Some of these NAS devices will run Plex directly. Mine does. The only downside is that they tend to cost a little more. I actually use Plex for my music library as well as my movies, audio books, photos, etc. The only drawback is that Plex cannot currently transcode WMA Lossless. I can serve it up to compatible clients, but it cannot transcode it on the fly to something else for use on devices like the Fire or a Roku box. That had a lot to do with my decision to switch over to 320k MP3 a few years ago.
Logitech Media Server has no such problem, so you will be fine using WMA Lossless with a Squeezebox. It will simply transcode to FLAC on the fly. It is lossless to lossless, so there is no loss of fidelity. The only drawback is that you cannot navigate within a single track. If that bothers you, there is software out there that will allow you to transcode your entire library from WMAL to FLAC.
Haywood said:Yeah, definitely use a bulk converter. It makes life MUCH easier. The nice thing is that once you rip everything to a lossless format, you can bulk convert to any other format without worries.
PaulyT said:Once you have a lossless rip, then you can simply use a batch converter (like dbPowerAmp) to reformat the entire library; you won't ever have to rip again from scratch.
I'm in Baltimore, not too far away. (Actually my work office is in Bethesda, though I mostly work at home.) If you're ever up my way, please stop by! I have lots of audio toys to play with - speakers, headphones...
Heck! Pick up Bats and keep driving for only 8 more hours north and you're in Ottawa! My door's always open to Forum members.Batman said:If you head upto Baltimore, why not just make a weekend of it and hop in the car with Pauly and hit up the Batcave too....it's only another hr away, just sayin'