INTERACT FORUM

Devices => JRiver Id -- Hardware by JRiver => Topic started by: MajorCyco on September 30, 2020, 09:05:06 am

Title: Id vs. Media Server
Post by: MajorCyco on September 30, 2020, 09:05:06 am
I am a Mac user.  When Catalina came out, I could no longer synch my iPhone to music collection.  Long story but it couldn't be fixed.  I began using iMazing to synch my music to my iPhone.  I then moved my music collection of about 30k files, to JRiver.  I have loved all that JRiver offers, but want to take more advantage of its capabilities.

Currently my music collection is on an external drive connected to my Mac.  My wife and I can access the music through JRemote across the WiFi when my Mac is turned on.  The two things I want to be able to do is to be able to access our collection when my Mac is offline and to be able to stream beyond the range of our WiFi.

I have been reading about the JRiver Id, and while it looks to solve my first goal, after reading the forum and Googling, it does not appear that it will meet the second.  I wanted to ask the community for their thoughts and recommendations.  Will an Id work for me or will I need to invest in a media server.  Thank you in advance.
Title: Re: Id vs. Media Server
Post by: astromo on October 08, 2020, 04:12:16 pm
In principle, there's no reason that I can think of that an Id or IdPi would not address your plan. What you describe is the sort of application that it was conceived for. I work in a Windows / Android world, so I can't vouch from personal experience.

Given that an IdPi is relatively cheap, you could try it out and see how it works.
Title: Re: Id vs. Media Server
Post by: syndromeofadown on October 08, 2020, 06:16:14 pm
I used to use an IdPi for my music server. Some notes here.
https://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php/topic,120622.msg833990.html#msg833990

It is best to use the pi with ethernet. I haven't tried my Pi4 as a server yet but I imagine it will be much better with its 4GB of ram. It runs stupid hot though. I would be hesitant to leave it running without active cooling. Mine is in an aluminum case on a block of aluminum in a tray of water. So it is water cooled.

I don't know what you mean by "be able to stream beyond the range of our WiFi" so I can't help with that.