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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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Most buyers <strong>of</strong> the Sonos also buy a local Network Attached Storage (NAS)<br />

hard drive because the Sonos itself doesn’t have one — a non-NAS system<br />

just plays music found elsewhere, such as on your PC. You can also have<br />

more than one Sonos zone player; the players talk to each other and the<br />

controller in a meshlike fashion, so if you have a really long house, you can<br />

still use the Sonos system. In such instances, the Sonos system synchronizes<br />

the music so that it all plays at the same time, avoiding any weird echo-type<br />

sounds around the house. Sonos uses 802.11g for its wireless protocol — and<br />

creates its own mesh network hopping from Sonos to Sonos throughout your<br />

home.<br />

If you want to connect your Sonos system to your existing wireless network<br />

(and to your Internet connection, for playing back Internet radio stations),<br />

you can add in the $99 Sonos Zonebridge, which plugs into an Ethernet port<br />

on your home router and automatically bridges your PC and Sonos wireless<br />

networks.<br />

Putting a Networked PC<br />

in Your <strong>Home</strong> Theater<br />

Chapter 12: <strong>Networking</strong> Your Entertainment Center<br />

When you talk about your home entertainment center, you <strong>of</strong>ten talk about<br />

sources: that is, devices such as tape decks, AM/FM receivers, phono players,<br />

CD units, DVD players, and other consumer electronics devices that provide<br />

the inputs <strong>of</strong> the content you listen to and watch through your entertainment<br />

system.<br />

When you think about adding your networked PC or PCs to your entertainment<br />

mix, the PC becomes just another high-quality source device attached<br />

to your A/V system — albeit wirelessly. To connect your PC to your entertainment<br />

system, you must have some special audio/video cards and corresponding<br />

s<strong>of</strong>tware to enable your PC to “speak stereo.” When the PC is configured<br />

like this, you effectively have a home theater PC (or HTPC, as the cool kids<br />

refer to them). In fact, if you do it right, you can create an HTPC that funnels<br />

audio and video into your system at a higher-quality level than many moderately<br />

priced, stand-alone source components. HTPC can be that good.<br />

You can either buy a ready-to-go HTPC right <strong>of</strong>f the shelf or build one yourself.<br />

We don’t recommend that you build an HTPC unless you have a fair amount<br />

<strong>of</strong> knowledge about PCs. If that’s the case, have at it. Another obvious point:<br />

It’s much easier to buy a ready-to-go version <strong>of</strong> an HTPC <strong>of</strong>f the shelf. You can<br />

find out more about HTPCs in <strong>Home</strong> Theater For Dummies (Pat and Danny<br />

wrote that one, too) by Wiley. What we include here is the short and sweet<br />

version <strong>of</strong> HTPC.<br />

235

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