With a little encouragement from Babgvant, below are the big reasons I decided to move to Sage. I
didn't share this in the beginning because I didn't want it to sound like I was Microsoft bashing. I loved my MCE system, it was an awesome
application that got me hooked on this whole HTPC movement, and
I give Microsoft a lot of credit for that. However, Babgvant has convinced me that I need to share this with the community.
1) The biggest reason I moved to Sage was the extenders. In my home I use 5 extenders (which was the
max for MCE, but in Sage you can have more) so this is important for my
setup. I was very disappointed in the
price point, and capabilities of the Microsoft V2 extenders. Adding Divx support was nice, but in my
opinion didn't go far enough (plus based on all the posts on the Green Button
it looks like their Divx support is pretty limited). The Sage extender is quiet (no fans at all),
it is priced at $199, and it supports all the codecs and containers (Video:
MPEG1, MPEG2, MPEG4/Divx/Xvid, H.264, WMV9/VC-1 - all video codecs supported up
to 1080p Sound:MP2, MP3, WMA,
AAC/multichannel AAC, Vorbis, AC3, FLAC, DTS(pass-through) Containers: MPG, DVR-MS, MP4, TS, WMV, VOB,
AVI, MKV, and others). This is what I
thought Microsoft's V2 extender should have been.
2) Being able to display compressed shows in
"Recorded TV". In Sage you can
choose the shows you would like to convert to another format (Xvid/MP3 for
example), they will convert and replace the original MPG file. Not only can you select which shows convert
automatically, but you can manually select a show in Recorded TV and tell it to
convert it now. I love this feature
because it not only means that all those kids shows I'm storing are taking up
less space, but they show up in "Recorded TV" so only I know they are
watching the converted show and not the original (they don't have to go hunting
through My Videos, or use another GUI to access them). Also, this is nice for my shows that I
convert for my portable player. I have
them converted to Xvid/MP3 and I only have the one copy. With MCE I would convert my shows and store
them in a XVID directory, keeping the DVR-MS file as well, just in case I
decided to watch the show at home. Of
course, this meant that I had to have two copies of my shows on the system and
I had a script to keep the lists in sync.
One other big advantage that I'm not using yet, but plan to start
playing with, is in Sage you can record directly to formats other than MPEG-2
(like Xvid or H/264). Right now you can
purchase cards that will use hardware to encode directly to Xvid, or with Sage
you can use software to encode directly to Xvid or H.264 if you really want to
tax your CPU (I haven't played with this yet, but it may take less CPU
resources just to encode it directly to Xvid instead of recording it in MPEG-2
and converting it to Xvid). However,
Sage has said they are working with Hauppague on the new Component Input card
to support HD encoding in H.264 with Multichannel AAC (all using Hardware to
encode). Wow, if this really happens
(they said April, but we'll see), then this will be almost perfect for me.
3) Linking into item #2 above, no DRM with Sage. The Microsoft/DirectTV tuner card sounds
great for me (I have Directv). However,
I realized that there is no way Microsoft is going to implement this without
DRM. This is a big deal to me. I'm not trying to do anything illegal, I
don't even want to share my shows with family and friends. I just want to be able to convert the show
into some compressed format, watch a recorded show on another PC or portable
device I have, and scan the show to mark the commercials and automatically skip
them. DRM just doesn't give me the
freedom to do what I want with the show (again, just for my own personal
viewing purposes). Because of the DRM,
and the fact that I really want to start getting more HD content, I think the
"promised" Hauppague Component Card is going to be a better option
for me than the "promised" Directv card (and I know it will be a
while before the Hauppague Component Card will work with MCE because of the
H.264 stream).
4) Multiple guide sources in Sage. In MCE I had Directv and a ATSC card. Of course, I couldn't get guide data for all
my ATSC channels because Directv didn't carry all my local sub-channels. I played around with the Schedules Direct
hack in MCE, but it is "clunky" at best (you loose things like telling MCE to only record "first run" shows, and it records all episodes even episodes that just recorded). With Sage I just tell it the source I have
for each capture card and it downloads the guide data for each source and
presents me a "unified" guide for all the sources. I even threw in a spare analog capture card I
had laying around and pointed it to my cable company (my Internet access is
supplied by my cable company so I get about 20 analog cable channels from them
for the price of my Internet connection).
So, now with Sage I have Directv, ATSC, and my analog cable channels all
in one complete guide.
5) No software limit to the number of tuner cards. I was starting to have a few issues where I
really needed more tuners for my Directv receivers because of conflicts. I know with MCE you can hack it to add more
tuners, but this doesn't work with Directv because you can still only have two
IR blasters. In Sage you can have any
number of tuners and IR blasters you want.
Also, you don't have to have the blasters because the Serial/USB control
is built into Sage (in MCE you don't have the option of USB control, there is only an
add-in for Serial Control, however, all the new Directv receivers require the
new USB control). Plus with Sage you can
link the Sage servers. I haven't done
this yet, but I can see its potential.
When I have too many tuners I could put some in another server and
offload some of the recording, ShowAnalyzer, and conversion process to an old
spare machine I have lying around, but the "User" never knows they
are watching something from the second server - this is an interesting concept.
6) Sage has the client software (the softsled solution
that every MCE user wanted). It's really
nice to finally be able to have the full UI extender experience from my desktop.
7) Sage supports Babgvant's bookmark feature standard. So, for My Movies it remembers where I left
off when I move to a different room, or come back and watch it another day.
8) It's my hobby...
I know this one sounds weird, however, I like Sage better because the
Media Center is my hobby and I like to "mess" with it. Sage has many more ways to "hook"
into the base application and enhance it.
As a result, there are many, many, add-ins that people have developed for
it. As well as many options in the base
product. Honestly I'm still a little
overwhelmed by the number of options and what combinations I like best, but
again, this is part of the fun. Also,
they don't develop in a vacuum. You can
participate in their beta releases so you can always see the new things they
are working on and provide feedback. Plus, they have new
releases very regularly, so you don't have to wait two years for a release only
to have it be Vista. Sorry, but I didn't
see anything that Microsoft did in Vista other than give us a pretty User
Interface. I'm a functionality guy, so
features are more important to me than how it looks (besides this is a Media
Center, the only thing the needs to look good is the Video - the Video is what
you should spend most of your time looking at).
Also, if you want something in Sage that looks good check out
SageMC (the default Sage GUI is pretty ugly). This is an add-in that is really
nice and powerful. The default install
of SageMC basically copied MCE. However,
the real power comes in the easy way you can customize the entire GUI. Some really creative guys are creating really
nice looking GUI's and posting them for people to use. Check out these forum threads below and you
can see them.
http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/showthread.php?t=29331
http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/showthread.php?t=30279
http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/showthread.php?t=30285
http://forums.sagetv.com/forums/showthread.php?t=30313
So to summarize, I loved my MCE setup and I really
appreciate what Microsoft has done (and what Babgvant added to MCE). If you look at the Sage forums there are
plenty of complaints about Sage, and I've found plenty of things I don't like,
so Sage isn't a perfect product.
However, my personal view is that MCE is a great setup for someone that
wants the basic "setup and forget it" system. However I love Sage's "hobbyist
friendly" vision.
Babgvant thanks again for everything you did over the years.
I absolutely loved your product and it was
really the thing that got me hooked on HTPC being a hobby.
Jon