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monsoco

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 5, 2007
17
0
It seems to me that Apple has had the 40/160 choices for quite some time. Is there anything out there suggesting that they'll up those sizes in the *near* future? Given that they're pushing more and more movies, and HD content, even 160 gb seems a little bit small to me... if I buy this I'd like it to last 4-5 years.
 

kolax

macrumors G3
Mar 20, 2007
9,181
115
You can stream to it too (which works flawlessly) so the overall capacity is endless.
 

Jeff Hall

macrumors regular
Apr 10, 2006
100
0
I've got a 1TB external RAID 1 serving up all my content via streaming to a 4oGB AppleTV. No need for anything bigger. You can't watch 40GB worth of movies or shows in one sitting.

For best results, just sync a couple movies you plan to watch if you experience an occasional pause when streaming. Usually I can get by just fine with my 802.11g, but I'll sync movies if I've got company coming over to watch some shows.
 

monsoco

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 5, 2007
17
0
Hmm can someone explain how this streaming feature works and when you do syncing, etc? I went to the Apple store the other day and asked a "genius" if I could just have all of my movies, etc. on a NAS and then stream it via the Apple TV to watch on my TV... he said no.
 

gazfocus

macrumors 68000
Jan 3, 2008
1,650
0
Liverpool, UK
Hmm can someone explain how this streaming feature works and when you do syncing, etc? I went to the Apple store the other day and asked a "genius" if I could just have all of my movies, etc. on a NAS and then stream it via the Apple TV to watch on my TV... he said no.

You can actually get a NAS with an iTunes server built in which actually does work with the Apple TV. ICY BOX do an enclosure called a NAS4220 which has this feature.
 

MikieMikie

macrumors 6502a
Aug 7, 2007
705
0
Newton, MA
Hmm can someone explain how this streaming feature works and when you do syncing, etc? I went to the Apple store the other day and asked a "genius" if I could just have all of my movies, etc. on a NAS and then stream it via the Apple TV to watch on my TV... he said no.

I sync all of my music so my computer, running iTunes, does not have to be on for me to play music.

I have all of my movies on an external HDD hooked up to my computer. As long as iTunes is running on my computer, the Apple TV can see all of the movies. I can then stream them (and TV shows, etc.) to the Apple TV via wireless.

Technically, you cannot have the movies on a NAS and stream from there UNLESS you tell iTunes that that's where your movies live. There are many simple ways to do this, but the Genius steered you wrong.

Some genius.
 

JonHimself

macrumors 68000
Nov 3, 2004
1,553
5
Toronto, Ontario
You can actually get a NAS with an iTunes server built in which actually does work with the Apple TV. ICY BOX do an enclosure called a NAS4220 which has this feature.

I think you still need to have that iTunes server running through a computer's iTunes (thus need a computer on) for it to work. I haven't read anything to the contrary.
 

monsoco

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 5, 2007
17
0
I sync all of my music so my computer, running iTunes, does not have to be on for me to play music.

I have all of my movies on an external HDD hooked up to my computer. As long as iTunes is running on my computer, the Apple TV can see all of the movies. I can then stream them (and TV shows, etc.) to the Apple TV via wireless.

Technically, you cannot have the movies on a NAS and stream from there UNLESS you tell iTunes that that's where your movies live. There are many simple ways to do this, but the Genius steered you wrong.

Some genius.

Thanks! That makes sense, so I really don't need anything more than the cheaper apple tv as long as I'm willing to have a computer w/ iTunes on that can see the content... does anyone have any experience streaming an HD movie over g? If so, does it work well enough?
 

Michael CM1

macrumors 603
Feb 4, 2008
5,681
276
Thanks! That makes sense, so I really don't need anything more than the cheaper apple tv as long as I'm willing to have a computer w/ iTunes on that can see the content... does anyone have any experience streaming an HD movie over g? If so, does it work well enough?

There's no frickin' way HD could work well over G. I mean regular stuff can at times (very infrequently) have a little snag over N. HD stuff would probably kill your system (OK, not really). If you want to do HD stuff, best to hook up a gigabit wired network.
 

monsoco

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 5, 2007
17
0
There's no frickin' way HD could work well over G. I mean regular stuff can at times (very infrequently) have a little snag over N. HD stuff would probably kill your system (OK, not really). If you want to do HD stuff, best to hook up a gigabit wired network.

Well, I guess in that case I should wait (who wants to run cables over the house), and small drives aren't a good long term option for HD storage...I've never understood why they opted for such small drives in something that's suppose to manage your media.
 

NightStorm

macrumors 68000
Jan 26, 2006
1,860
66
Whitehouse, OH
Well, I guess in that case I should wait (who wants to run cables over the house), and small drives aren't a good long term option for HD storage...I've never understood why they opted for such small drives in something that's suppose to manage your media.
Personally, I think they would be better off releasing a model that had a couple GB of flash for buffering/purchases, and relied on streaming all content to the device.

But that's just my opinion...
 

ingenious

macrumors 68000
Jan 13, 2004
1,508
1
Washington, D.C.
Technically, you cannot have the movies on a NAS and stream from there UNLESS you tell iTunes that that's where your movies live. There are many simple ways to do this, but the Genius steered you wrong.

Some genius.

If the NAS has a built-in iTunes server (some do), then the NAS appears as an iTunes-running computer to the :apple:tv. It doesn't know the difference.
 

mhall

macrumors newbie
Jan 8, 2008
26
0
Of course you can hack it so it can stream files from attached network drives without having to run Itunes on a computer. That's how I have mine set up, it fetches my movies off my attached Time Capsule with no Itunes server running anywhere.
It was pretty easy to do as well...
 

ingenious

macrumors 68000
Jan 13, 2004
1,508
1
Washington, D.C.
Of course you can hack it so it can stream files from attached network drives without having to run Itunes on a computer. That's how I have mine set up, it fetches my movies off my attached Time Capsule with no Itunes server running anywhere.
It was pretty easy to do as well...

No, it's not a hack, really. The NAS really does run iTunes server.
 

mhall

macrumors newbie
Jan 8, 2008
26
0
Sorry - I wasn't disagreeing with you, I was just saying you can install NitoTV & ATVFiles to stream files from shares any storage device on the network without having an Itunes server running, should you so wish
 

JonHimself

macrumors 68000
Nov 3, 2004
1,553
5
Toronto, Ontario
If the NAS has a built-in iTunes server (some do), then the NAS appears as an iTunes-running computer to the :apple:tv. It doesn't know the difference.

Do you know for sure that this works? Like I said above, I don't think the AppleTV can connect directly to an iTunes server-based NAS. I think you need iTunes open on a computer to connect to the iTunes server and then you can stream the content to the AppleTV.
Please let us know if you can confirm this or if it's just what you've read.
 

JonHimself

macrumors 68000
Nov 3, 2004
1,553
5
Toronto, Ontario
I probably just could have edited my last message but I hit reply by accident... I think the reason that iTunes server doesn't work has to do with the passcode. When you connect an iTunes library to the AppleTV you need to enter in a passcode in iTunes. How can you enter in that passcode if your iTunes library is running on the NAS?
 

NightStorm

macrumors 68000
Jan 26, 2006
1,860
66
Whitehouse, OH
I probably just could have edited my last message but I hit reply by accident... I think the reason that iTunes server doesn't work has to do with the passcode. When you connect an iTunes library to the AppleTV you need to enter in a passcode in iTunes. How can you enter in that passcode if your iTunes library is running on the NAS?
As far as I know, there isn't a NAS on the market today that has this functionality... you have to have iTunes running on a computer and associate the library with the AppleTV from there.
 

ingenious

macrumors 68000
Jan 13, 2004
1,508
1
Washington, D.C.
Do you know for sure that this works? Like I said above, I don't think the AppleTV can connect directly to an iTunes server-based NAS. I think you need iTunes open on a computer to connect to the iTunes server and then you can stream the content to the AppleTV.
Please let us know if you can confirm this or if it's just what you've read.

Ah, you're right. My bad... :(
 

theBB

macrumors 68020
Jan 3, 2006
2,453
3
Thanks! That makes sense, so I really don't need anything more than the cheaper apple tv as long as I'm willing to have a computer w/ iTunes on that can see the content... does anyone have any experience streaming an HD movie over g? If so, does it work well enough?
I streamed HD over a g network. It worked fine. Actually, I should qualify it a bit. I told iTunes to copy the movie over, but I started watching before the movie finished transfering. However, if the link is intermittent because of your neighbor's base station or your microwave oven, the movie will stutter even if it is standard def.
 

aksmax

macrumors member
Nov 26, 2002
55
1
I got my 160 ATV a couple weeks ago. I wondered too about soon-to-increase capacity. But remember that your Apple TV volume can't effectively exceed your iTunes plus iPhoto libraries. The only exception would be if you NEVER sync and just buy/rent directly on the Apple TV. I don't know how realistic that path is.

If you do have hundreds of gigs of iTunes library, you'd just have to do a little selective syncing. And really the next size update likely won't solve a capacity issue for very long anyway.

For what it's worth, my experience has been great. Synced with 100 gigs worth from my MBP and effortlessly streaming from a MB. (no HD content) I'm very happy, given the current limitations.
 

tom1971

macrumors 6502a
May 15, 2007
670
0
There is a lot of info available about how to hack it.
I hacked mine and I am perfectly fine with 160 GB.
 
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