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20 hours and 3 minutes ago
pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/ps3_video.jpg" width="800"
height="494" style="display:block;float:none;" /If you're here reading Gizmodo, there's a good
chance you have a hard drive full of video somewhere. And you also probably have a PS3, Xbox 360 or
Wii. If those two things aren't working together for you in beautiful symbiosis, allowing you to
watch all of your downloaded or ripped video on your TV instead of hunched over a laptop screen,
well, this is the guide for you./p pNow there are two general strategies you can take: physically
copying your files to a USB drive, memory card or CD/DVD, which is pretty straightforward, or
streaming your video over the network, which is where things get more fun and interesting. So let's
dive in./p pFirst things first, codecs. Now that you're all learn-ed on the ways of video encoding
thanks to a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5093670/giz-explains-every-video-format-you-need-to-know"Matt's Giz
Explains from this week/a, the issue of codecs will make a lot more sense. Thankfully, it's not
something you have to worry too much about here, because all three consoles can handle a large
number of the codecs you will find commonly: AVI, MPEG (1, 2 and 4), H.264, DivX/XviD, and
WMV—and if a particular format you want to play isn't supported, it's often
possible to convert it to work on the fly. The PS3 also supports AVCHD, a format used by many HD
camcorders. Not all formats are supported with every streaming method though, especially in the
360's case, which we'll get to in a second. Now, for getting all those files on the TV./p pNote: if
you need to re-encode a video in a different format because it won't play, nothing beats VLC's
transcoding wizard. a href="http://www.videolan.org/doc/streaming-howto/en/ch02.html"Here's a
guide./a/p pstrongXbox 360: Streaming (PC)/strongbr img
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297019303_tversity_01.png"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="403" style="display:block;" /In typical
Microsoft fashion, there are tons of different ways to pull of streaming your video to the Xbox
360—and the only one that's truly comprehensive, in our opinion, comes from a
third party. a href="http://tversity.com/"TVersity/a is a free UPnP media server that can manage
your video and music files anywhere on your PC and stream them out to your 360 over the network. It
will also kindly transcode just about any video you can throw at it into a codec your console can
definitely read. You might have to install some additional codec packs here and there for Windows
but for the most part, you can forget about worrying about codecs with TVersity. This also allows
TVersity to handle files not officially supported by the 360, like MKV containers./p p1. Grab a
href="http://tversity.com/"TVersity here/a and install it.br 2. Click the giant plus sign in the
top left corner to "Add Your Media Source" - namely, the folder on your PC with all of your
videos.br 3. Under advanced options, set your transcoding preferences: "When Needed" will make sure
most all of your files play.br 4. In the main TVersity menu, select "Start Sharing"br 5. On the
Xbox 360, TVersity will now appear as a source in the Media blade or under My Xbox -gt; Video
Library in NXE./p pThe other three options via Microsoft's own various software solutions all have
their own drawbacks, which we'll cover here briefly. Our advice? Use them only if you already use
the Zune software, Windows Media Player or Windows Media Center to manage all of your video./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297041777_windowsmediaplayer_01.png"
width="494" height="432" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Player 11/strong: WMP 11 can
stream out to the Xbox 360 pretty easily. Here is an a
href="http://paininthetech.com/2008/01/03/stream-video-to-xbox-360-with-windows-media-player-or-winamp-remote"in-depth
guide/a. strongDrawbacks?/strong Somewhat clunky format support. In our tests we could not stream
Quicktime video at all, and had inconsistent experiences with MP4 files. MPEG-4 and H.264 support
are technically supported via third-party WMP codec add-ons, but even with those, we still had
trouble—MP4 files tended to play fine on the WMP 11 end, but not show up as
browsable on the 360. Somewhat unbelievably, the Xbox 360 team actually recommends you a
href="http://blogs.msdn.com/xboxteam/archive/2007/11/30/december-2007-video-playback-faq.aspx"manually
rename your unsupported MPEG-4 and H.264 files/a, adding the ".avi" container extension to fool WMP
into playing them. This worked occasionally, but not for every file and was generally
inconsistent.br clear="all"/p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297025800_zune_01.png" align="left"
hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="338" style="display:block;" /strongZune Software
3.0/strong: Zune offers a much nicer interface than WMP (Settings -gt; Sharing -gt; Add is the
extent of the setup), and thankfully supports MPEG4 and H.264 much more consistently.
strongDrawbacks?/strong No DivX or Xvid support, which means a huge chunk of your Torrented video
probably won't work.br clear="all"/p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297876080_360_MCE.jpg" width="494"
height="308" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Center Extender/strong: If you already
have a Media Center setup honking on your network, there's a good chance you won't need this guide,
but the Xbox 360 can of course stream your MCE content to your TV seamlessly (a a
href="http://features.teamxbox.com/xbox/1392/Xbox-360-Windows-Media-Center-Setup-Guide/p1/"complete
guide is here/a). The interface is really fantastic. strongDrawbacks?/strong The gimpiest codec
support of the bunch: only MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and WMV are supported. So unless you're converting
everything you have into those formats, you'll still need something like TVersity to play most
files you'll find up for download.br clear="all"/p pSo, in the end, TVersity wins hands down as the
easiest and most elegant streaming setup for the 360. But do keep in mind—if
you're playing a format that your Xbox can't handle (MKV being the most common of these you'll
find), TVersity will have to transcode, which means you will lose a bit of quality./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297010629_connect360_01.png"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="378" style="display:block;" /strongXbox 360:
Streaming (Mac)/strong: UPnP support—the networking standard used by both the
Xbox 360 and the PS3 in various flavors to play network-streamed video, music and
photos—is not natively supported by OS X yet. And unfortunately, there isn't a
stellar all-in-one free package like Windows' TVersity.br clear="all"/p pNullriver, however, makes
an incredibly slick piece of software called a
href="http://www.nullriver.com/products/connect360"Connect360/a, which easily streams all of your
iLife libraries or any folder full of video on your Mac to the 360. Unfortunately, it'll cost you
$20. There is a free trial version that supposedly shuts off after 30 minutes of sharing, but
sometimes it seems to forget and lets you play longer. But even so, $20 isn't bad for the
convenience factor here. No transcoding, but it will handle every codec the console itself can play
back./p p1. Download and install the Connect360 preference pane.br 2. In System Preferences, start
up Connect360 sharing. Here you can also add folders for more sharing.br 3. Access the Connect360
source on your Xbox in the usual way. Done./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227301048351_xbox_video.jpg" width="494"
height="329" style="display:block;" /strongXbox 360: Physical Media/strongbr 1. If streaming isn't
for you, and you don't mind hauling a storage device back and forth between your computer and Xbox,
then this is super easy: Insert Flash disk/USB/CD/DVD and browse it with the Media blade or the
Video Library section of NXE (under "My Xbox"). Enjoy.br clear="all"/p pstrongPlaystation 3:
Streaming (PC)/strongbr strongTVersity/strong: Again, Tversity is your friend. It works just as
well for the PS3 as it does for Xbox 360 (see above for setup)./p p1. With Tversity set up and
sharing turned on, just browse to COMPUTERNAME: TVersity in the XMB and you'll see a listing of all
your shared files./p pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/ps3_wmp11.png"
width="500" height="371" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Player 11/strong: Just like
for Xbox 360, you can use WMP11's built-in DLNA/UPnP serving capabilities to stream to the PS3,
too—but with the same codec funkiness as noted above.br clear="all"/p p1. In
the Media Sharing preference box with your PS3 powered on and connected to the network, select
"Unknown Device"—that's your PS3.br 2. Your library should now show up in
XMB./p pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297942918_Picture_26.png"
width="494" height="405" style="display:block;" /strongPlaystation 3: Streaming (MAC)/strongbr Mac:
Nullriver didn't just hook up 360 owners—Media Link is the version especially
for PS3. It costs 20 bucks, but will give you totally seamless and painless streaming of all of
your iLife libraries (photos and music too) as well as files in any folder you can access with your
Mac, whether it's on a network or local.br clear="all"/p p1. Operation is just like
Connect360—with sharing enabled in the Media Link preference pane, just browse
through all your files under the "Media Link" source in XMB./p pstrongPlaystation 3: Physical
Media/strongbr 1. Easy as pie. If you're using a USB flash or hard disc or an SD or CF card, just
dump all of your videos into a folder named VIDEO on the root of the drive and they'll show up
automatically in the XMB.br 2. You can also browse the entire drive or disc by pressing triangle
and choosing "Display All" to find videos that aren't in the VIDEO folder./p pstrongWii: Physical
Media/strongbr img src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/10/wiihomebrew6.jpg"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" style="display:block;" /For playing video on your Wii, physical
media is the way to go, which is easy to pull off with some a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"homebrew
hacking/a. There are lots of services that will transcode your video and ouput it in a Flash player
that you can view through the Wii's Opera browser (like a href="http://orb.com"Orb/a), but you'll
take a hit quality-wise and it's not as easy as just playing the source files directly with
Mplayer.br clear="all"/p p1. Install the Homebrew Channel and Mplayer on your Wii. We've got you
covered here with our a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"complete
Wii homebrew guide/a—but hopefully you haven't installed the latest System Menu
update. In that case, you'll have to wait for a workaround, but it probably won't be long./p p2.
Install Mplayer via the Homebrew Browser (also a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"covered
in our guide/a)./p p3. Now, you can use Mplayer to play files off or even an attached USB drive (as
long as its formatted in FAT16 or FAT32, which most are). The interface is not nearly as nice, but
it gets the job done./p p4. Mplayer for the Wii covers a ton of codecs, but sadly, the Wii's
processor chokes on HD content. If you've got HD files, you'll need to transcode them into a lower
resolution with VLC./p pAnd that's about it. Now, no more huddling around your laptop screen or
fiddling with TV and audio-out cables. Welcome to the good life./p pemAdditional reporting and
testing by Seung Lee. See more a href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/how_to"Giz how-to guides here/a. And
as always, if you have anything to add to our findings, please let us know in the comments./em/p br
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