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Dummies, Wireless

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236<br />

Part IV: Using a <strong>Wireless</strong> Network<br />

What you expect from your home theater PC is quite different from what<br />

David Bowie might expect from his HTPC. Regardless of your needs, however,<br />

a home theater PC should be able to store music and video files, play CDs<br />

and DVDs, let you play video games on the big screen, and tune in to online<br />

music and video content. Thus, it needs ample hard drive space and the<br />

appropriate software (see the following section). Also, your HTPC acts as a<br />

DVR (see the nearby sidebar, “Checking out PC DVRs,” for the lowdown on<br />

PC-based DVRs). In addition, an HTPC can<br />

� Store audio (music) files: Now you can easily play your MP3s anywhere<br />

on your wireless network.<br />

� Store video clips: Keeping your digital home video tapes handy is quite<br />

the crowd pleaser — you can have your own America’s Funniest Home<br />

Videos show.<br />

� Play CDs and DVDs: The ability to play DVDs is essential in a home<br />

theater environment.<br />

� Act as a DVR (digital video recorder): This optional (but almost essential,<br />

we think) function uses the HTPC’s hard drive to record television<br />

shows like a TiVo (www.tivo.com).<br />

� Let you play video games on the big screen: With the right hardware,<br />

PCs are sometimes even better than gaming consoles (which we cover<br />

in Chapter 11).<br />

� Tune in to online music and video content: Grab the good stuff off the<br />

Internet (yes, and pay for it), and then enjoy it on the big screen with<br />

good audio equipment.<br />

� Provide a high-quality, progressive video signal to your TV video display:<br />

This is behind-the-curtain stuff. Simply, an HTPC uses special hardware<br />

to display your PC’s video content on a TV. Sure, PCs have built-in<br />

video systems, but most are designed to be displayed only on PC monitors,<br />

not on TVs. To get the highest possible video quality on your bigscreen<br />

HDTV, you need a special video card that can produce a highdefinition,<br />

progressive-scan video signal. (This investment also gives<br />

you better performance on your PC’s monitor, which is never bad.)<br />

� Decode and send HDTV content to your high-definition TV display:<br />

HTPCs can provide a cheap way to decode over-the-air HDTV signals<br />

and send them to your home entertainment center’s display. You just<br />

need the right hardware (an HDTV-capable video card and a TV tuner<br />

card). If you have HDTV, this is a cool optional feature of HTPC.<br />

For example, the HP z560 Digital Entertainment Center (www.hp.com, $1,799)<br />

is a full-fledged digital media center PC with onboard 802.11g functionality<br />

and includes Microsoft’s Windows XP Media Center Edition or Windows Vista

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