Ativa 5.1 Speaker Deal at Office Depot (20$ in store only) & Setting Windows 7 to use 5.1 Sound.

Posted by | Posted in 7, Deals, Hardware, Home Theater PC, Hot Bargins, Peripheral, Windows | Posted on 18-12-2009

I went into Office Depot today and they had Ativa 5.1 speakers for 20$. The set was marked down from 119.99 and the deal was available in store only (online they are 40$). For the average user or somone who doesnt want to invest a lot of money into a set of speakers for a computer or home audio this isnt a bad deal at all. If you intend on using the set for a computer with 5.1 sound you will need a card capable of 5.1, also the card will need to have the 3 inputs required. The inputs for 5.1 are usually identified by  color. Green is for your fronts, black is for your rears, orange is for your center and sub.

You will also need 3 RCA to 3.5mm stereo mini plug cables to connect from the ports on your sound card to the amp built into the sub. I had enough cables lying around to splice together to make 3 RCA to 3.5 minis, but they took some time to make. I would suggest getting them from Monoprice.com (.59 Cents) if you dont have the tools or the time to make the cables. After getting everything hooked up I did have some issues in windows 7 getting the sound to come out it 5.1. After about 20 mins of fooling around with drivers and the IDT Sound Control program, I found a post showing how to enable 5.1 through the windows control pannel. You have to go to Control Panel -> Hardware and Sound -> Sound -> Speakers (make sure these are your default audio device). Click on the speakers entry once so they are blue and then click configure on the lower left corner of the window. In the next window click 5.1 as your configuration and then click test. you should now hear all your speakers chime one at a time. Watch the indication on the screen to make sure you have your RCAs in correctly. I had to switch a couple of mine so the rights and the lefts matched up.

Harmony One – what a great remote

Posted by | Posted in Hardware, Home PC, Home Theater PC, Peripheral, Windows | Posted on 17-12-2009

Logitech Harmony OneSo, I decided to snag a deal on the Harmony One by Logitech. Wow, am I impressed buy the simplicity of setup. The software that comes with the remote is very smart and it was configured in a matter of minutes. It helps to know the exact model numbers of your devices but those are easy to find. So far I have a TV, HTPC, DVR, Receiver,Roku box, and DVD player all configured. I was just sick and tired of having 5 remotes laying by me at all times. This little bad boy even controls my HP Pavilion laptop and its Windows Media Center functions. I have to say this is by far the best universal remote I have ever used. It retails for about $180.00 but it can be found for about $140.00.

Highlights:
Easy setup
Rechargeable
Backlit buttons
Custom activity macros
Tons of advanced features
Ability to basically control anything

If you already own the remote, here is a nice resource for favorite channel icons you can upload to the remote via the software: Logitech remote icons

Map Apple Keyboard Fn keys in Windows 7

Posted by | Posted in Apple, Hardware, Peripheral, Windows | Posted on 01-12-2009

Do you think Apples new style aluminum keyboard is right up your alley but you’re a PC user? No problem.
Go check out David Vielmetter’s blog on how to get an Apple Keyboard working in Windows.

USB 3.0 devices trickle out

Posted by | Posted in Hardware, Peripheral | Posted on 24-11-2009

Buffalo’s HD-HXU3 is now availalbe and shipping in 1TB($200), 1.5TB ($250), and 2TB ($400) capacities. The external drive is backwards compatable (USB 2.0) but what fun is that ;) I can’t wait to test that bad boy out, I just need to get my hands on a USB 3.0 PCI card.

Click read more for full press release.

Read the rest of this entry »

USB-to-VGA / HDMI adapter

Posted by | Posted in Hardware, Home PC, Home Theater PC, Peripheral | Posted on 23-11-2009

Engadget just posted some info on the Atlona’s HDAiR wireless USB-to-VGA / HDMI adapter. I get questions from customers all the time about getting their PC video out to a HD monitor. This could be a viable solution and the device is wireless.

Atlona’s HDAiR wireless

HDAiR wireless

HDAiR wireless