Since this item was posted in hackaday(January) a lot have been done. There is at least one[0] dedicated distro for running XBMC on the Pi.
When I tested it(about a month and a half ago, not with the latest version), it's wasn't a pleasant experience. Video did run smoothly, but menus where painfully slow.
(I've used a slow SD card which might caused some of the problems - I ought to try again with a better one)
Try OpenELEC and XBian. They're much much smoother at the menu (over 60fps at 1080p when you disable the RSS ticker on OpenELEC). It helps if you overclock the already overclocked Xbian too. I have mine set on around 920MHz (no change in voltage though) and have it running all day for about half a month now. Seems to be working fine.
"... This is well known. This "news" is very old ..."
Old? How long has RaspberryPi been released, this year? It's one thing to have a chip that will do this, quite another to have the chip on a usable system that you can program for $35 setup.
Either way, it's not old news for me. That's why I posted it.
FWIW, I'm running Raspbmc RC5 and am able to watch 1080i MPEG2 (recorded HDTV streams) and 1080p H264 streamed over my local network. Sometimes audio decoding causes issues (I don't have it hooked up to a receiver) like strange audio glitches.
CPU usage does stay high while using XBMC menus, but it seems responsive enough.
It does have some problems with decoding DTS content (I don't have a receiver) though. I've tried a couple of things already like overclocks and re encoding the audio but I'm still trying to find the sweet spot. This is all on RC5 raspbmc, still have to try openelec.
What is the Pi's Flash performance like? For my uses, 1080p video is all well and good, but most of the internet TV I watch uses a flash player backend, which is something I ran into quite hard when trying to build a low powered Atom media center box.. it can barely keep up and desyncs like crazy.
Flash is pretty much non existent on the Pi. The XBMC based distros can supposedly do some flash but it's pretty wonky and the other distros like Arch Linux and Raspbian don't have it at all.
You may be victim of the "usb fuse" issue. I soldered some 1ohm resisters across the usb fuses that are present and my lockups went away (except when I try to do 2 things at once, hit swap and thrash)
[+] [-] SoapSeller|13 years ago|reply
When I tested it(about a month and a half ago, not with the latest version), it's wasn't a pleasant experience. Video did run smoothly, but menus where painfully slow. (I've used a slow SD card which might caused some of the problems - I ought to try again with a better one)
[0] http://www.raspbmc.com/
[+] [-] coolnow|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] program|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bootload|13 years ago|reply
Old? How long has RaspberryPi been released, this year? It's one thing to have a chip that will do this, quite another to have the chip on a usable system that you can program for $35 setup.
Either way, it's not old news for me. That's why I posted it.
[+] [-] brechin|13 years ago|reply
the MPEG-2 license - http://www.raspberrypi.com/mpeg-2-license-key/
or the VC-1 license - http://www.raspberrypi.com/vc-1-license-key/
[+] [-] brechin|13 years ago|reply
CPU usage does stay high while using XBMC menus, but it seems responsive enough.
[+] [-] aw3c2|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sp332|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] robinduckett|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mochizuki|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Karunamon|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bittersweet|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] thehodge|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Karunamon|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] olympus|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jrockway|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] knodi|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gravitronic|13 years ago|reply