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Media Servers Hit the Mainstream
Media servers offer ultimate flexibility for homeowners and opportunities to builders.



Kaleidescape manufactures servers to provide digital storage of media content rather than physical storage of the DVD or CD itself.
Lifemedia servers from Exceptional Innovation provide from 500GM to 4.5 TB of storage for digital music, movies, pictures and recorded TV. It also offers instant access to Lifeware’s complete home control via the user’s home network.
Niveus Media offers four servers for different price points. Ranier and Denali models are less expensive and resemble stereo components. The two Pro Series feature rack-mount designs and are HD DVD compatible.
The 1U server from Kaleidescape Inc. can hold up to 335 DVDs or more than 3,700 audio CDs. It can also serve up to 45 independent audio or video zones.
Kaleidescape Inc. offers its 3U server. This server holds up to 1,340 DVDs or 15,000 CDs. The 1U and 3U servers can be combined to provide up to 100 TB of storage.
Niveus Media is designing media servers based on Windows Vista capabilities. It offers its Ranier model that features 1.5 to 3 TB of storage.
Elan Home Systems offers its Via!dj II Series digital music servers. The line consists of three models: Via!dj II, Via!dj-s II single output and Via!dj-hc II high capacity. The Via!dj II and Via!dj-s II feature 160 GB hard drives. The Via!dj-hc II features a 400 GB hard drive.
For more info, please indicate #22 on e-Inquiry.
The Hewlitt-Packard MediaSmart Server, powered by Microsoft Windows Home Server, is designed for families with multiple PCs on a home network who want to enjoy their digital experiences anytime, anywhere. It allows remote access to files, auto PC backup, media streaming and sharing of photos, and capacity for up to four hard drives.
For more info, please indicate #23 on e-Inquiry.
SpeakerCraft announces its Mode DJ, a 160 GB hard drive music server with four outputs. Homeowners can burn entire CD collections to hard disk at 20 times speed from the front-panel CD drive and allow it to automatically connect to the Internet and retrieve song, artist, album and genre data.
For more info, please indicate #24 on e-Inquiry.
Xperinet’s new Trident MIRV server includes 4.5 TB of storage in a RAID 6 configuration. It can stream 1080p movies to 20 MIRV clients simultaneously. It can also store music.
For more info, please indicate #25 on e-Inquiry.

On the first day, electronics manufacturers created the VCR. The VCR begat the digital video recorder. The digital video recorder begat the TiVo. Now, the TiVo has given birth to the home media server. When are these guys ever going to rest?

For builders, home media servers offer both challenges and opportunities that simply did not exist with previous entertainment technologies. As long as there were enough electrical outlets and cable TV hookups, the builders’ bases were covered. Today, though, high-end homeowners are spending more than ever on entertainment systems and demanding new levels of home connectivity. Home media servers can address both these needs.

The good news for builders is there are a growing number of installation professionals available to do this work for them. In fact, most systems today are installed by professional integrators once the builder’s team has laid required wiring. But a basic understanding of how the systems work and what products are available is critical to ensuring any given installation will meet that homeowner’s specific needs.

Defining Terms

At their most basic level, media servers combine the functionalities of home media centers — packaged systems combining a DVD player with high-quality speakers to create a more theatrical home-viewing experience — with the media storage and search capability of a TiVo. These products also typically have an Internet connection, so users can access streaming media and get background information on the DVDs they’re viewing by using their remote control.

Initially, home media servers were single-room systems, and entry-level models still focus on home-theater applications. However, higher-end systems are becoming fully networked digital-media repositories, using structured-wiring systems to push digital media to any room in the house.

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