<div dir="ltr"><div>Hi all, just thought i'd share my results from an upgrade this weekend.<br><br></div><div>Hardware: old machine: slow AMD 64-bit single core cpu, 1GB RAM, nVidia GT220, HVR-2200, 5.5TB disk.</div>
<div>Software: Mythbuntu 10.10, MythTv 0.23 using VDPAU with 2x deinterlacer<br></div><div>Issues: not much. mostly seemed to work fine. Wife+kids were pretty happy with it. 5.1 audio out (s/pdif) was a bit iffy. After power-cycle I would generally have to play for 15 mins or so to get sound working again. Audio sync was out by 50ms when i first installed, and this value got larger and larger over time. Is now about 350ms. Means that EVERY SINGLE time i watch a show, i have to adjust the audio sync. Otherwise, all good. Never lost shows<br>
<br><br></div><div>So this weekend I decided to do a clean upgrade to Mythbuntu 12.04 LTS with MythTv 0.27. Things I discovered:<br><ol><li>behaviour of 'sudo halt' has changed. No longer actually powers machine off!? Need to do 'sudo poweroff' instead.</li>
<li>Don't use the GUI 'update mananger'. Some apps (samba) are trying to get some user input from the console, and this freezes the update. Do all updates from command line with 'sudo apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade'</li>
<li>5.1 audio output works perfectly! updated frontend audio config screen with new 'test' button makes things very easy.</li><li>the 'irw' command is very useful to see what is going on with lirc remote commands.<br>
</li><li>My favourite ArcLight theme doesn't appear to be officially supported.</li><li>I seem to be getting a few 'system error detected' pop-ups. This never happened previously...</li><li>MythFrontend | Setup | Appearance - I can see the first few screens, however after the LCD config screen, i get booted back out to the main menu. something not right here...</li>
<li>I suspect that i'm running very low on memory. MythFrontend has been forcibly restarted a couple of times, with an error box mentioning that there was not enough memory to create an incident report (or something to that effect). I'll try and find some old DDR1 mem to put into this machine.</li>
<li>Almost all of my first few test recordings were perfect, however a couple ended up unwatchable due to extremely bad MPEG artifacts. these artifacts are in the recording itself (i.e. not a playback issue). This could have been due to a hanging frontend that was going on at the time - will keep an eye on it.</li>
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