A few questons before buying raspbarry pie3
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Also in the youtube how to install guide they use a usb drive to transfer the roms can i just put the roms on the sd card directly.
RemotePi work with retro pi?
Where can I find the program that formats any sd card to FAT32 im getting a 64gig prob. Is 32 gig enough for most of the non CD based systems with kodi? -
Anything that works with Raspbian should work with retropi right.
The add on I want is Plexar i hope it;'s to name it it doesn't really do anything but let you stream video's but it's needed for some other apps cuz it has acestreams -
I bought the Canakit Complete Starter Kit. The only extra I needed were a USB gamepad and a USB keyboard.
After assembling it and making sure it booted up okay, I then wiped the included 32GB SD card and reimaged it with the instruction here.
Took me all of 35 minutes before I was playing some games on it. -
the ultamite is just some comes with a hole lotta stuff I don't see using ever. Maybe.
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For kodi, at least for both my tvs, they support sending the remote signals straight down the hdmi wire to the pi. In other words, the remote that came with my tv also works perfect to control kodi. no extra hardware or setup required.
Try it first before you buy any extra hardware.
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Gosenbach that just blew my mind.
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check out the kodi wiki http://kodi.wiki/view/CEC
CEC (Consumer Electronics Control) allows for control of devices over the HDMI port.
All modern televisions and AV-receivers support HDMI-CEC, which is a technology that allows devices to talk with each other over the HDMI cable. Kodi comes with libCEC (CEC abstraction and interface library from Pulse-Eight) which allows control of the Kodi input over the standard TV remote that comes with your TV. As buttons are pressed the remote command is sent via the HDMI cable to your Kodi device.
Using this feature a Kodi compatible CEC controller/adapter will send and receive remote key presses to and from your television and AV-receiver via libCEC.
CEC allows you to do things such as:
Controlling Kodi from the TV's remote control
Automatically switch to the right TV input device
Letting the HTPC control what mode your audio receiver is on when the TV switches on
Turning all devices off with one remote
Set volume/mute of the receiver
And a lot more! -
I also have a QANBA Q4 arcade stick will that work?
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@Deltax5 Kodi 17 has built in game controller support. It supports hundreds of branded and generic game controllers now. You just need to set it up in the new easy to use on-screen interface. I haven't seen that particular one mentioned but it should work fine.
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The only thing the pi cannot handle with Kodi is h.265 (HEVC) video. I've tried, and it fails. But h.264 at full 1080p resolutions plays fine.
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@Lyle_JP isn't there a codec you can install to get it to play that?
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@Gosenbach You are thinking of MPEG2 and VLC1 codec licenses which can be purchased and installed. HEVC is hardware accelerated and the Pi will struggle with 1080p content. It might just play 720p HEVC, at a push.
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@Gosenbach You can load the codec (actually, you don't have to as it's built-in to Kodi now) but the pi will choke on decoding. It only does full HD h.264 thanks to acceleration in the GPU.
I understand that the GPU in the Odroid C2 can process HD h.265 with Kodi 16 and above.
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-There is no h265 hardware decoder in the Pi, but theres is some optimizations using neon instructions, gpu and qpu. The Pi 3 should play pretty much all 720p h265 content and some 1080p low bitrate h265. Theres is still development undergoing to improve this further. Tested this myself.
-Yes, Kodi can play acestreams with the right addon. Tested this myself.
-Allmost all gamepads should work in RetroPie and Kodi, although I am not familiar with the ones you mentioned.
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should i be worryed about this h265? Can I just put everything at H264 or change it to it when it acts up. How much of a difference is it really?
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Went to buy it then get this feeling that I shouldn't. I do have a PC hooked up to my tv that does everything I need. I need some convincing.
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@Deltax5 its under $100 and has less power draw. And you get the chance to learn something new. Why wouldn't you want a pi?
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It'll make your teeth whiter, your hair fuller and your friends and family will respect you for using it. It's basically exact opposite of crystal meth.
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@Deltax5 Well, if your goal is to watch some videos and play some games on your tv, sounds like you are already set.
The pi is a cool platform that will allow you lots of stuff to play around with and it is not limited to playing games and watching videos. However all those projects may not be your thing.
Although you can pretty easily take your pi over to your buddy's house :)
Really, it depends on what your end goals are and what you want to get out of it.
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I need some convincing
Why? Unless your desire for emulation goes beyond just "what works", it sounds like you have what you need.
The pi is very limited compared to a full-size computer; its only real benefits come from its size, cost, and low-power consumption, none of which seem like a plus to you. The pi is not for everyone. It's simple enough that it could be for everyone, but not everyone has a need for it.
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