yes it plays from usb, also plays from the network, but only from dlna servers..it has two usb ports, I have tried upto 500 gb hdd formatted in ntfs, works without any problem whatsoever. Haven't tried my 2 tb powered hdd, will try it and let you know..
now there are many ways to get great quality music in that 15-20k but it will need a bit of research and tweaking..
Option 1 - use any old laptop that is lying around and add a usb dac, there are many options, odac being one of the cheapest (6-7k) but still one of the best in my opinion...then install foobar/xbmc and use wasapi to play music..you can control it with your smartphone, there are great remote apps are available...for the blu ray, you buy any sub 10k player of your choice all of them are equally good...your total expense would not exceed 15k...downside of this option the PC will take time to boot, which maybe annoying to some people, also I dont know what is your comfort level in configuring the smartphone apps to connect to your pc and using them as remotes, everything works beautifully after you set it up, but till then needs tweaking..one way to deal with the boot issue is installing openelec and booting or add a ssd maybe..
option 2 - another way would be again get a sub 10k blu ray player from sony; just make sure it plays all formats like flac etc. and add an optical DAC...this option is redundant in my view, as this option will go up to 25k (at least) and the Oppo 93 is 500 USD anyway...i dont know of any decent optical DAC below 20k..
option 3 - Another way to get great music (hopefully) and I am going to do this little project for my bedroom, is using the raspberry pi+USB dac, the only issue seems to be the availability of the raspberry pi, I have ordered it, and it should reach in maybe in 3-4 weeks..it will boot fast, consumes very little power (about as much as a phone) and you can sit back and control your music through your smartphone again...no downsides...but i think people have reported some kinks in getting USB DACs to perfectly work with the Raspbrry Pi...I am sure it will get sorted, the platform is developing quite fast in the open source community..this in my opinion is one of the best solutions for getting music out... cost - 3k for the raspberry, 6k for the odac and whichever blu ray player you buy add to that...again as far as controlling this system goes you can use a smartphone, and you don't even have to turn on the TV for listening to music as you can see your collection in the smartphone and simply play from their...
I am personally sold on the raspberry Pi option as u can understand..
i have been using option 1 (old laptop) for some time in my bedroom, and frankly not very happy with the result, keeping the laptop always on means unnecessary power consumption and risk of ruining the laptop..starting is every time is annoying because of the boot time, i tried openelec for sometime but the overall experience wasn't as fluid as i wanted (u know opening the lid of the laptop, start it etc. etc....)...I am a very impatient guy...there are again ways to get around this with some tweaking...like openelec, wake-on-LAN for turning on the comp etc, but again too much hassle..
hope that helps!
If you can wait for a month or two, then Popcorn A-400 will be released. It's with the latest sigma chip. But more importantly, it has the VXP that they acquired from Gennum's video processing business. That itself will sets it apart from other media players.
As for Raspberri Pi, I am also looking at it. It has the ethernet and USB bus on shared path. All the media is stored either on ethernet or USB. So, you can forget about using USB dac's because of that. If you do want to use it, best way is to use HDMI out. It's a very nice little device with XBMC.
Thanks a Ton ! That's useful. I am pretty comfortable using the Smartphone as a remote device. If the USB ODAC outputs quality sound Opt1 one seems good but agree that using a Laptop can be tedious.
The 3rd option seems interesting. Do share you experience on implementing it.
BTW my samsung smart TV plays most video formats - upto mkv (no blue ray of course). The only thing which tempts me to go in for the likes of a media player is becos it does not play lossless audio files like FLAC which is extremely imp to me. Moreover navigation control is restricted. Wont using a smart phone may also limit that functionality as well?
If your samsung tv is already taking care of the video need, and if you have a budget of 30k and want solid audio quality you should look at some of the networked audio players from marantz, decent blu ray players nowadays are available very cheap, it is the decent all in one solutions (both great audio and video quality) that costs money...
As far as navigation goes, I find the smartphones to be far better for navigating music libraries..do try them out with your pc to see..even with video, the official xbmc remote for android is really good..on the iphone too they have are some great apps...plus with the raspberry pi a range of ir based remotes are already supported in many distros...
As I said before...needs a lot of tweaking...not everybody's cup of tea......i can give all this gyan because I am researching on this past 1 week...just waiting for rpi to try them out for real...
Cheers!
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Plenty of people are already using the raspberry pi with rasbian and usb dac manoj...can you please elaborate on your point?
As far as the a-400 goes, I am sure it will be great for video as all their previous ones, my problem remains with the audio quality..i don't think that's gonna change...finally the availability and pricing of popcorn hour products are obnoxious in india, plus no support....that's why I was swayed away from it when I bought my oppo...one has to go through the same set of problems when trying to get an oppo, but given the overall performance in both audio and video quality I think its worth it..
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Kaushik,
I don't have the raspberri Pi yet, so can't tell for sure. My understanding on this is totally based on various forums. But there are already lots of reports of issues with USB and network. AFAIK, the ethernet controller on Pi is connected to SoC through USB, its not dedicated. Moreover, the USB interface is from BroadComm and they are notorious for linux drivers. If you search for "raspberri Pi USB Ethernet issues", I am sure results will show up which discusses these in detail.
One thread that goes in detail is - Serious Problems With USB and Ethernet On the Raspberry Pi - Slashdot
About A400 and media players in general. These are single chip players and cater to the cheaper market. They do not focus on dac etc aspects. Best way is to get the digital/HDMI out from those and use external DAC or a receiver. It applies to all the players, including Raspberri Pi.
Look at Apple TV seriously. Available only in US and HK, but for US$99 only. Brilliant build quality to boot.
Yes manoj after your post I did find this thread also on looking, I guess a way to sidestep this problem is playing locally completely and using an powered usb hub. But I guess one has to try it out to be sure...mine is also on back order, will update in hfv when I receive mine
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Congrats, where did you order the Pi on elements14 site or some other site. As I am not able register as an Individual on the in.element14.com site.
thanks