In your setup Patric, do you only use Twonky or both servers? If both how do you control the type of content? My Twonky doesnt seem to serve up video, but they both get data from the Media Library. I am very close to setting up XBMC on the Nas and moving the NAS to the media room. I wonder why would xbox and Media house see things so differently? It looks like Xbox supports Mp4's so one should at least work. Ill also query over in the xbox forum as you suggest. I will check the xbox forums, I started here since I was hoping Id find someone who used both QNAP media Server and XBox as I suspect the issue is a combination of factors as they usually are. While the mutually exclusive behavior of twonky app versus CP server is odd, I guess we can say that the DLNA functions fine foe Mdia house so there is something particular about the Xbox. When twonky is on (from Control Panel/Apps/DLNA server or from App Center v7.2.80.0) both DLNA servers show up in MediaHouse and both can see and play the videos, however xbox still cannot. Have you considered asking XBox 360 questions in the XBox Forums? Why are you asking Microsoft XBox 360 operational questions in a QNAP NAS Forum? Wouldn't or the XBox Forums be a better place for XBox 360 questions? Have you reviewed article: Play To overview for Xbox 360. Which version of Twonky Server did you install on your NAS from the QNAP App Center? (The App Center is providing Twonky Server v7.2.80 at the time I wrote this reply) The fact that even MediaHouse isn't listing Twonky Server for you, suggests TwonkyServer isn't actually running. Please note that MediaHouse lists all my DLNA Servers, including Twonky Server, QNAP DLNA Server (listed as Windows Media Player Sharing 3.0), and XBMC (on my NAS). What does your MediaHouse " Devices" screen look like? (See Forum FAQ: Can I post images?). Thanks in advance for any answers and I will update if I can get anything to work. Oddly I have tried Twonky as well, but I can never see the app at port 9000, always comes up webpage not available? Also it does not show Videos when I access Twonky from MediaHouse on my android (probably because the Qnap DLNA server is doing this?) Perhaps more oddly, or perhaps it makes obvious sense, just not to me, when I turn on the Twonky Application from the Appcenter (as opposed to control panel, applications) it turns off the server in control panel/applications. Twonky is secondary but here are twonky issues I have been having: Probably not a factor here, but the projector hooked up by DVI is not ACHP compliant, I dont think this is an issue because netflix works fine. I would much prefer Upnp but I dont believe there is an option (without an active server and a cost) to use with xbox? So what am I missing to get Xbox to see the flicks? I can see and stream videos in Media House and Qvideo (but qvideo does not like guest it seems) on my computer and on my android. Xbox sees the DLNA server but tells me there are no movies. All movies are in shared root.īased on my understanding this should do it. The Media Library is enabled, and shows three movies, one of MP$, one of MKV and an AVI for testing. On Qnap, DLNA media Server is enabled with service name: Qnap8Movies, default user is guest. The 360 doesnt see any movies and I am wondering if anyone here has any ideas on how to do this? I have checked other posts and used many ideas but have not figured it out just yet. The only Microsoft product around here is Skype, which is installed on all my Linux PCs/Android devices.I am trying to stream movies from my QNAP TS869L, v4.1.1 to my XBOX 360 S. Note: I am not an XBox One user, so you might get better advice from other community members. This should permit you to select your NAS ( Twonkymedia) as the input device, and your XBox One as the output device. Here is a screenshot from my Android Tablet: I personally like MediaHouse for this type of thing. You should be able to use any decent DLNA App on an Android/iOS device that permit streaming from one device to another. Sounds like XBox One is substandard as a DLNA device, to even it's XBox 360 grandfather which can access Twonky directly, unlike the XBox One apparently. That means Xbox One won't go out and find content on your network, so it can't retrieve those files on your DLNA-compatible media server, for example, that all your other connected devices enjoy. The Xbox One will let you stream content to the console using DLNA, although on day one there's no native support to initiate those streams, so the console acts as a receiver only. PocketLint article: Xbox One: How to stream content using DLNA wrote: Xbox One: How to stream content using DLNA
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