One Network to Rule Them All
Let’s talk about brilliant user Jon from Florida. Jon has two things going for him. First of all, he started using XBMC back in the glory days when “XBMC” wasn’t a recursive name for XBMC Media Center. Second, he doesn’t do things half way. When he decided to install XBMC into his home, he decided to install XBMC into his entire home. It is running through his walls. It has wrapped its adamantium tendrils around the thick bones of Jon’s Ft. Lauderdale house, and it is going to do its very best never to let go.
The Brains of the Operation
Less poetically, Jon has fully wired his home with Cat5 ethernet, installing four ethernet drops in every room in the house. All of this ethernet ends up attached to a switch in a tucked away closet, as you can see in the picture to the right.
On the other end of this switch is Jon’s server, a 5 drive Drobo, holding five 2 terabyte harddrives, for a total storage of about 9 terabytes of space. This Drobo provides all the storage Jon needs for the setup of his entire home. Speaking of which…
Whole Home Audio
As I said, Jon’s home is fully immersed in XBMC goodness. To accomplish this, Jon has installed ceiling speakers throughout the house. He’s also run wiring from every ceiling speaker and the surround sound systems in both the living room and the family room.
Bringing all of these speakers together is an HP Slate, running Windows 7 with a shell modification that’s allowed Jon to boot directly into XBMC. This slate has been installed directly into the wall of Jon’s hallway.
As you can see, Jon pulled out all the stops to make this Slate look slick. The Slate itself is affixed to the wall with two brackets. The custom brush metal frame mounts flush to the wall, just covering the the edge of the Slate. To make the Slate easily accessible, the frame is mounted using simple velcro.
The HP Slate is, once again, running Windows 7, and is, further, being powered by a custom touch skin; however, Jon and his family are much more likely to control the system using XBMC Commander on their iPhones.
All of the wires from the Slate run from the touch computer to the top of a kitchen cabinet, where a usb hub connects the Slate to a powerful soundcard, which then connects to all of the speaker systems around the house. An X-10 CM unit is also attached to provide computer control to Jon’s home automated lights and other power accessories.
A Lovely Living Room
From the hallway, we turn to the Living Room. This is a fairly simple affair. Comfy L shaped couch. 42″ Sony LCD TV. Sony surround system. And, for HTPC, the Lenovo Idea Center, running – once again – a modified Windows 7.
One of the key factors in Jon’s decision to go with Windows 7 (and a full HTPC, over something like the Apple TV 2) was its ability to perform other tasks. For example, as you may notice, there’s a webcam on the entertainment unit that Jon uses for Skype sessions.
Family Fun Room
Moving on from the Living room, we turn to the Family room. Here, once again, is a Lenovo Idea Center and 42″ Sony TV. However, this room greatly differs from the living room, in that it is intended for the use of Jon’s 4 year old and 8 year old. To that effect, Jon has limited XBMC in this room to kid-safe content only.
To make it easier for his kids to control this content (and also to provide his children with kid appropriate edu-tainment software), Jon has installed a HP TouchSmart PC in the corner of the room. That computer is running the XBMC Web Interface for easy movie browsing.
The Bedrooms
And, finally, we turn to the bedrooms. Each bedroom includes a 32″ Sony LCD with an Apple TV 2 attached via velcro. Naturally, all the wiring is hidden in the wall.
And there we have the home of Jon from Florida. The next time (i.e. the first time) somebody pays for me to go on a cruise, I think I’m going to have to stop by for a visit… a visit that may last several weeks. Be prepared Jon!
Thanks for reading everybody! Now, if you keep sending in your info and pics to natethomas AT xbmc DOT org, I’ll see if we can’t start pumping these out a little more regularly.









Absolutely incredible!! Love the HP Slate use. Great Article also
@Joel yeah, the device is superb! The devices have wired and wireless network and providing you go for the wired connection, you have no problem. They’re 100MB NICs so more than enough bandwidth to them, and given the Drobo has a GB connection is can serve multiple boxes without issue. I strongly recommend the Lenovo as a HTPC…
Cheers,
Jon
twitter: @b69ca
@Dave I does crash but not that often for me. When I try the nightly builds I find I get more functionality (e.g. MKV files work better) but I get less stability – that is however to be expected.
I guess with the ATV, I would expect the next release (in a few months) to be much more stable – that’s one of the problems with “hacking” hardware, you don’t have full access to the device…
@Mitch I haven’t, do you have any experience to share?
@Jon
Will you post the Windows 7 editing tutorial on the forum? (What’s your forum username so I can follow your posts)
@Michka i’m going to send it to Nate who will attach it to the main post here. I’m back from travels now so will pull this together this weekend…
@Jon — brilliant. I set up my system far less elegantly (Drobo FS – gave it a static IP – attached directly to Cisco/Linksys 610n router), put XBMC on my PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, and AppleTV, set them up as SMB:// connection directly.
(I’d fooled around with FUPPES installed on the Drobo, and Firefly for iTunes integration, but ended up going straight SMB for throughput)
Disclaimer / shameless pitch: I’m VP Marketing at Drobo… and would point out that there’s a mail-in rebate at most etailers like Amazon, or you can use coupon code DROBOXBMC at http://www.drobostore.com
Thanks to the XBMC community for making me a hero with my kids. Drobo + XMBC = happier family!
Any questions, I’m at kevin(underscore)epstein(at)drobo(dot)com
@Jon
I haven’t used it extensively but it the little bit I’ve used has been pretty successful.
@Jon
Any thoughts on my previous question at the end of page 1?
Again, stunning work.
Hello, what type of switch are you using?
Surely if it was One Network to Rule Them All, it would be…a ring network. Yeeeeaaaaahhhhh!
Hello,
How does high bitrate 1080p movies run across a, im guessing, 1gb lan network?
Hi all…
I’ve been crazy busy with work this week so haven’t had chance to complete the tutorial – will look to finish this by the end of the week.
Also – I will answer all of the questions that i’ve not answered later…
Thanks
Jon