Today's Show:
We've talked about DLNA, or Digital Living Network Alliance, several times before - on Episodes
264 and
161
both get into the nitty gritty on what it is and what it's for. Let's
just cut it short and say that it's a way for consumer electronic
devices to share media content. You've got DLNA servers that dish out
content and DLNA players that play it back. There are a ton of great
options out there for DLNA players, as well as a bunch of server
options. While many of the players are top notch, we're having trouble
tracking down a really good server.
Why aren't there any good DLNA servers?
As a side note, DLNA grew
out of the work done by the UPnP Forum (Universal Plug and Play), so
those two terms are often used interchangeably.
DLNA players
- PS3
- Buffalo LinkTheater products
- HP MediaSmart TVs
- Panasonic Blu-ray players (not all models)
- Hitachi, Philips, Pioneer, Samsung, Sharp and Sony all make TVs with DLNA built in
DLNA Servers
Here's a nice
table with a bunch of options.
What's missing?
So
if you've tried any of the DLNA servers out there, you've probably seen
how bare they are. With so many consumer electronics devices
supporting DLNA playback, it seems a really good DLNA server would sell
like hotcakes. Here's what we think the perfect DLNA server would do.
Support Transcoding.
Some DLNA Servers support transcoding, but not all of them.
Transcoding allows the server to change the format of the video your
watching or song you're listening to to something that the player can
actually play back. Otherwise you'll get a bunch of failures trying to
play back stuff like DivX and Xvid.
Support Cover Art.
Most DLNA servers will just grab a video frame out of a movie file and
display it as a thumbnail. Why not replace that with the actual cover
of the movie? They're easy to find online. It might take a little
more setup up front to get all the covers downloaded and in the right
place, but it would be worth it.
Categorize videos. A
few of the servers support a limited amount of categorization for video
files, but what you'd really like to do is tag a movie with a genre, a
year, rating, actors, director, producer, etc. and use any of those
pieces of information to find the right movie.
Built-in DVD backup.
Consumers want a way to backup their movies. DVDs don't last forever.
Allow a user to create a backup copy of their DVD on a hard drive. Of
course they'll also be able to watch it from any network connected DLNA
player, but that's just a slight benefit of the nifty backup feature.
Of course, if you could then provide the built-in...
Connection to IMDB.
Allow users to automatically populate cover art and meta data info by
selecting the correct movie from an online database like IMDB. This
would greatly simplify the chore of adding movies to a video library.
While this tends to be a one-time event (once per movie at least), it
can be painful and tends to wear on you after a while.
Support online sources.
Right now PlayOn is the only server we've found that supports online
video sources. It, however, doesn't support local sources. It looks
like that functionality will be coming soon, but the two ideas need to
merge for a really great product.
As DLNA becomes more popular
in players, the need for a really good DLNA server will just continue
to grow. Perhaps there's a DLNA server out there that already does all
of this, or maybe most of it. If so, we'd love to hear about it so we
can check it out. Send us an
email if you're using DLNA to serve video
content in your home media network. What server do you use?