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Build a Home Entertainment Center with Windows Home Server

 & Oliver Rist Contributing Editor

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Buying Guide: Build a Home Entertainment Center with Windows Home Server

Millions of homes have data networks, but few households refer to them that way. If you've got a broadband Internet connection and a firewall/router between it and your PC, then you have one too. Sharing the Internet, connecting with Wi-Fi, and watching kids mow down zombies at LAN parties are all good ways to use your home network. How about adding your TV and stereo to the mix?

Buy a few cables, add a Microsoft Windows Home Server (WHS) and a media extender to your network, and you can be watching recorded TV on any TV or PC in the house. You can share your playlists from the living room to the garage, and maybe even hook up your digital photo frames to your networked photo and music libraries.—Next: Tools & Components >

Tools and Components

  • HP MediaSmart (500GB)
    $599 list, www.hp.com


  • SageTV HD Media Extender
    $199.95 list, www.sagetv.com


  • SageTV Media Center 6.3
    with Placeshifter License Combo $99.95 list, www.sagetv.com


  • 1 Monster HDMI cable (6.6 feet)
    $99.99 street, www.monstercable.com


  • 2 10' Ethernet Cat 5e patch cables
    $6.30 street
  • Next: Steps 1-3 >

    Steps 1-3

    1. Select a Home Server1) Select a Home Server
    We chose to go with the new $599 HP MediaSmart as our WHS appliance for several reasons. First, it looks cool. Sticking a home-brewed PC next to our high-tech entertainment center simply wasn't good feng shui. Another reason is HD recording. The MediaSmart can go 1TB out of the box and expand further with upcoming HP internal drives or external USB drives. Unfortunately, the MediaSmart, like many of the Windows Home Server platforms you'll see coming out this year, is an appliance. This means that even though you're running a stripped-down version of Windows Server 2003, you can't just crack open these cases and add cards. To get the home server talking to the TV or cable box we're going to need some kind of TV cabling capability.

    2. Connecting the TV to the Server2) Connecting the TV to the Server
    In addition to our method, there are other ways to manage a MediaSmart-to-TV connection, including a dedicated Vista PC with an HDMI hook-up or a USB-based TV-to-PC cable that has a Windows Home Server driver. Neither seemed reliable at the time we started this project, so we chose a safer route. To connect the MediaSmart to the TV we decided to use a media extender, namely the SageTV Media Extender ($199, www.sagetv.com). This box will connect our TV and our home network, providing the audio and video feeds for every SageTV Media Server and Client installed on the home network. The HP MediaSmart will act as our central storage repository.

    3. Set Up Windows Home Server3) Set Up Windows Home Server
    If there's one thing that Microsoft has done right in the past year, it's making Windows Home Server easy to configure. Even with HP modifying the code a little, setup very quickly walks you through activating the server, setting up user accounts, and configuring permissions to various folders. There's a lot more to WHS, but for the purposes of acting as a media file repository, that's all we need to worry about.

    Next: Steps 4-7 >

    Steps 4-7

    4. Install the Media Server Software on a Windows PC4) Install the Media Server Software on a Windows PC
    At this point we need to install the SageTV Media Server package on a machine in your home network. That gives this system the ability to find the Media Extender on the network automatically, access all the TV content and all the Sage media content, schedule recordings, and manage playback.

    5 Install the Media Extender5) Install the Media Extender
    Once you have installed all the appropriate software, it's time to get the SageTV Media Extender up and running. Connect the Media Extender to your TV or home-theater equipment with the appropriate connectors (we used HDMI); also connect it to your home network with standard Ethernet cable. Run through the installation process, making sure that a SageTV Media Server is running on a Windows machine elsewhere on the network.

    6. Make Windows Home Server the Back-end of Choice6) Make Windows Home Server the Back-end of Choice
    Once your Media Extender and your Media Server machine are both on the network, they'll find each other automatically. There's some setup to go through in terms of available content, but it's all menu-driven. The last bit of configuration you'll need to do is to make the Windows Home Server the automatic repository of recorded TV. You can do this by changing the target directories in your Media Center software. Alternatively, you can leave your recordings on your media-server machine and have Windows Home Server automatically back them up. Then you can delete older files yourself to keep the Media Server's hard disks from filling up.

    7. Record and Play7) Record and Play
    You're good to go. Use your Media Server software to access content from any PC on the home network, or use any TV equipped with a Media Extender to access that content as well. In the future, you'll see more Windows Home Server appliances with Media Server software and TV tuner capability already built in, but for now, dropping a $199 media extender in the middle really isn't that nasty a chore.

    This article originally appeared on PCMag.com.

    About Our Expert

    Oliver Rist

    Oliver Rist

    Contributing Editor

    My Experience

    I've covered business technology for more than 25 years, and in that time I've reviewed hundreds of products and services and written a similar number of trend and analysis stories. My first job in journalism was with PC Magazine in the 1990s, but I've also written for other enterprise technology publications, including Computer ShopperInformationWeek, InfoWorld, and InternetWeek.

    Between stints as a journalist, I've worked as an IT consultant, software development manager, and marketing executive for several companies, including Microsoft, where I was a senior technical product manager for Windows Server. My focus is on business tech reviews at PCMag, but you can also find me co-hosting This Week in Enterprise Tech on the TWiT.tv network.

    My Areas of Expertise

    The Technology I Use

    My daily workhorse baby is a sleek Dell XPS 13 9310 ultraportable running Windows 11, a recent purchase that still gives me goosebumps when I look at it. When I'm at my desk, I connect it to two honking HP U28 4K displays using Dell's fancy WD19 docking station. When I'm doing personal work or something that's graphics intensive, those 4K displays get shared with my desktop machine, an iBuyPower Pro Gaming PC that uses Windows 10. And when I'm testing a network product, I use a slightly older Dell Precision Mobile Workstation that dual boots between Windows 10 and Ubuntu.

    Being a business tech reviewer, my home network is a little more involved than most. It's based on a business-class Verizon FiOS internet connection, but between that and the rest of the network sits a Ubiquiti UniFi Security Gateway (USG). My wired connections, including my wife's and my PCs, our smart TVs, and printers run off two UniFi Switch 8 boxes, while the Wi-Fi gets handled using three UniFi AP AC Pro access points. Data protection is a combination of my 32TB Western Digital My Cloud Pro P4100 home NAS, a 2TB Dropbox business account, and BackBlaze's backup software.

    The network is managed with UniFi's Cloud Key and Controller software, because I'm a sucker for colorful dashboards and heat maps. I sometimes back that up using a Wireshark instance I've got running on the Ubuntu machine. For work, I'm a Microsoft Office guy. I live in Outlook and use OneNote for practically everything aside from final draft writing. My days at Microsoft also made me Excel and PowerPoint proficient. The latter is where I do most of the work-related graphics chores, though for personal projects I like Adobe Photoshop and Wonderdraft.

    My Wi-Fi network handles all our tablets and phones, as well as all the home automation devices in our ADT Pulse home security system. That said, I've backed that up with a couple of Wyze Cams. My phone is a Samsung Galaxy S10, and my tablet library includes three Apple iPads, an Amazon Fire HD 10, and a Samsung Galaxy Book 13.

    In the misty days of yore, my first PC was a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 4, and my first mobile phone was a Nokia 8210.

    Read full bio