LAST UPDATED: October 14 - changes in RED.
The only change from the last revision is a recommended 30 gig OS partition. The last build of vista needed a lot of free space to upgrade with and 20 total is not enough. 30 may not be enough also if you install a lot of other software on your machine. you really want to end up with about 15 gigs free if you plan to UPGRADE to vista. If you plan to new install vista then you need about 15 gig minimum on the drive but for programs, settings, temp saves to desktop 20-30 for your partition is about right. Of course vista is not released yet so this really means nothing but vista can also resize a partition after its installed so you can resize it down if your choice is too high.
Check down a few posts for some I can't make my mce work right install recommendations.
Having a reliable MCE isn't very hard to achieve. Theres an art to initally installing it and several tricks to help you get it right the first time. This is not meant to be a planning guide, consider buying the TGB book if you want more indepth planning and usage of your media center. This guide is meant for someone ready to install media center for the first time or reformat and start over.
Please help support TGB and click on the link to amazon from the home page. A small portion of that purchase will go to TGB and help fund the setup.
Some warnings for the user about to reformat:
Before you reformat you need to know that some of your content will not be playable after your format. Any protected television that is saved can only be played from that specific media center install. Reformating is really starting completely over. Make sure you have watched all your protected content.
Also, don't forget to save your series tv recordings as well as backing up your drm licenses for paid content/music. This is documented elsewhere and I'll put the links in here at a later date. also don't forget you may have software other than windows products like itunes that might also have licenses to backup seperately.
If your currently running a large drive with 1 drive letter. Consider making partitions on your reinstall. I would make a 30 gig partition for C and then format a second partition for your tv/storage needs. This way in the future if you need to format again, you do not have to delete all your existing files and can just format c: and reinstall.
*** If this is your first computer or your media center is no longer bootable or you do not have a cd/dvd burner, jump to the end of this post for additional instructions or changes to the master install list for your situation (several are given)
I strongly recommend everyone keep a notebook of all changes you make, settings, programs, dates, times. Theres nothing worse than having a problem that took you months to solve and no notes on what you did to have to put the setting back in a year later. It also makes it easy to say "dvd last worked monday, what did i change since then thats caused it to break".
Installing Media Center, Accident's way.
After 24-48 hours of using mce working perfect
ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS:
First computer:
Instead of making floppies and a cd, use the ones included in the motherboard box. after getting the chipset drivers installed, before updating windows download and install newer versions.
Name computer without rebuild cd:
Your computer came with instructions on how to create the cds or reset your system. Follow them to create your restore cd. If not an option, follow the instructions to reset your machine to factory new and then read below for additional steps.
Name computer with rebuild cd:
SOME RECOMMENDED SETTINGS:
Uncle Fester's recommendations:
I'm going to make a modification later when I"m more awake for a variation of the install for a user trying to locate a possible driver conflict. Its just minor where you get windows up to date, then backup before putting in hardware drivers. This way if the problem is the hardware drivers, then you can quickly get to the point before them to try it without hardware or different hardware and no go though the long and boring process of the windows update that requires activation (and you only get so many before your calling microsoft to allow you to activate again).
Outage is over so I can finally get to putting in my little revision. I'm going to add it above but I wanted to list it here also.
If your media center is completely out of wack, crashing, freezing, not sure what it just wont work right you should take a different approach on your rebuild.
First off, never assume all your hardware is functioning correctly. Theres also this little annoyance that every part in your machine might be media center certified, but that doesn't mean every certified part is compatible with other certified parts. I have a stack of 15 tuners on the shelf to prove this and theres a reason so many high end vendors are using the same parts as each other.
If you've tried raid in the past, maybe its the raid. If you have a lot of different brand tunners, its probably this. But it could be incompatible memory, aging/dying power supply. Anything really.
So for the frustrated user looking to try this one more time. My recommendation is reduce the hardware in your mce machien to bare minimum. You may even want to remove the tuners. I personally would remove all but 1 analog tuner but it depends on whats broken. if everything seemed broken, remove all the tuners and get mce working with dvds first.
As you reinstall, your going to take very small baby steps. You definately want to purchase a real backup software package if you do not have one. I recommend acronis (www.acronis.com). What this will let you do is make a dvd copy of your hard drive so if you find a problem, your not going to uninstall it, your going to use acronis and restore to the last good backup you made. on a new mce install, it will take you about 10-15 minutes to burn a dvd copy of your whole drive. You want to avoid system restore like its the plague. the reason is system restore and even uninstall may not remove everything that your trying to remove. the only way to really remove it is to restore (aka format and start over). But thats annoying to do and windows activation only works so many times. When you work from an image of your drive, you can format and restore much like system restore but its a much safer way to move forward when you want a reliable pc setup.
Just before you make any change, you want to backup then make the change and test. If it breaks, you want to restore and either try it again or skip to the next piece of hardware. So if you run 4 tuners, your going to spend awhile shutting down and inserting each card, then setup tv and test. once your happy its working, your going to shutdown and put in the next tuner. I would setup external tuners last unless your external is your only analog tuner and oyu need it for atsc to work.
So with that. We are going to change the first post order for you. The general theory on this is to get mce and windows up to date before moving on.
Moving forward:
I strongly recommend never using system restore. Whats best is to make a new backup (doesn't need to be dvd, could be an image on your drive if you have the space). then make the change, no matter how small. If it doesn't work, restore using the backup and not system restore. I generally backup just before installing any software. restore doesnt' take much longer than system restore if your only backing up your C: drive with media center on it.
Wife Happiness reminder:
While your doing this, your family isn't watching tv. Set the tv back up for live tv and work on mce on the side. I personally prefer to use the exact tv, but this is why you made that first backup. When you get it working using a monitor in the other room (and antenna to test tv instead of your cable line) you can then take your notes (you made notes right??) and restore to either the just after activation or just after windows updates and quickly put in all the correct versions of everything. When you get it perfect. remember to make a reinstall cd thats all the drivers you used and put them into the box so you can rebuild in the future.
Why did we make so many backups?
Theres many reasons why you might want to restore back to various states of drivers. Remember, when you format your drive, content becomes unplayable. Well when you restore a drive, its still the same install your working on. So if you change a lot of the comptuer one day. You can restore to the just afer activation, then go in on safe mode to install different chipset drivers, and then install your machine from scratch. If you want to save some time, you can jump to the end of hte windows updates. But you have those options in the future now. you never know when you'll need one of those backups and you'll be really happy you have them if you do and you only wasted 15 minutes of your time if you don't.
accident:Wife Happiness reminder: While your doing this, your family isn't watching tv. Set the tv back up for live tv and work on mce on the side. <snip>
While your doing this, your family isn't watching tv. Set the tv back up for live tv and work on mce on the side. <snip>
Accident- a great guide and fantastic resource.
A few extra points to add which may be useful...
- Set a password for the primary user (most likely Administrator) when setting up Windows. Now it will be possible to Remote Desktop the computer from another PC or laptop at a later time, which is much easier than tweaking it directly infront of the TV in the lounge! [note: you can only use Remote Desktop on an account with a password set]
To enable auto-logon without prompting for password, select Start | Run, type "control userpasswords2" | Untick "Users must enter a username and password to use this computer". Then enter a username and password for auto logon.
- Switch off Drive Indexing on the c: drive (Properties of the drive in Explorer/My Computer)
- Switch on Drive Indexing on the d: drive (the partition with all of the media on it)
- Defrag the c: drive when everything is installed. And set defrag up as a scheduled task to run overnight once a week (at a time when you're unlikely to be recording anything). If the PC is set to sleep automatically you could wake it by setting another scheduled task to restart Windows just beforehand. A weekly restart and defrag does wonders for keeping MCE quick and responsive.
- Also, install the Sonic encoders to allow recording of Recorded TV to DVD. These two programs are normally on the 3rd MCE install disk (if you have it) or can be downloaded for free.
Hope this helps.
its a flaw in their support site. its not a free program but it is included if your using an hp machine and hp does make updates available to their customers. they just happen to make updates available to the entire world at the same time but its still not free software and I'm not adding that information to a guide on how to setup your media center machine.