GigaOM Network: GigaOM | WebWorkerDaily | NewTeeVee | Earth2Tech | OStatic | jkOnTheRun | TheAppleBlog | NewTeeVee Live | Jobs | About | Advertise | Contact

Stream Music, Movies, and iPhotos to Xbox 360 (from a Mac!)

Written on May 21, 2008 by Jenny Kortina and 16 people have commented

I have a fairly large music and movie collection, and a fairly nice TV/stereo setup in the family room. To watch my movies and listen to my music on the good TV and stereo I could hook my Macbook Air up to the TV each time, but who wants to do that? Fortunately, we have an Xbox 360 in the living room that we can use to stream everything to.

I have found several different pieces of software for OS X that allow the Xbox 360 find OS X based computer’s media, but hands down the best one is Connect360.

Things I like:

  • Can stream divx - this is a new feature and it totally rocks!
  • Can point to a specific movie folder - instead of simply streaming iTunes content
  • Can view all of your iTunes playlists
  • Can adjust how often it scans your libraries - that way everytime you add media you don’t have to restart the software

Additionally, Connect360 can pretty much handle any format you throw at it:

  • AAC, Apple Lossless, WMA
  • MP3, WAV, AIFF
  • H.264, DIVX, XVID
  • MOV, AVI, WMV, ASF
  • JPEG, PNG, GIF, TIFF, BMP
  • RAW

So if you want to stream your media from your mac to your living room and have an Xbox 360 then definitely make the $20 investment into Connect360. I absolutely love it!

Share This

Trackbacks/Pingbacks (Trackback URL)

  1. Pingback by Project HTPC » Blog Archive » links for 2008-05-21
  2. Pingback by iApp’s to 360 « Ladgeful


Comments RSSComments

  1. #1 Faisca says:

    Do you know how well Connect360 works with a wireless connection? My 360 is wired directly to a router, but my MacBook connects wirelessly. Does that cause any connection problems or slowdowns?

  2. #2 Jenny Kortina says:

    My setup is as follows: My Macbook Air has the software on it, and connects to the router wirelessly, all of my media is on a time capsule, which is wired to the router, and the xbox is wired to the router. So, the Xbox is definately streaming through a wired connection, but I can stream video wirelessly from the time capsule to my Macbook air no problem. I would suggest downloading the trial version and giving it whril!

  3. #3 Doug Scott says:

    I love this product. Has been updated regularly to include new features and adapt to changes in OS X. The only limitation that I still find annoying is that DRM protected files can’t be played.

  4. #4 Faisca says:

    I just downloaded it and tried it out, and it works like a charm!

    The only thing holding me back from buying it right now… is that I wonder if it can play movies that you’ve bought or rented from iTunes??

    If it can do that, I’m sold.

  5. #5 Twist says:

    I am a user of Connect360 and first off yes it does work wirelessly. My Xbox 360 is connected to a LinkSys WRT54G (an older one at that) via ethernet, but I serve files to it off of a wireless iBook G4. It works pretty good most of the time and tends to work better than the Windows Vista MCE setup a friend of mine uses.

    But I have to say that I think Rivet is a better product. From what I have seen it is just as easy to setup and works just as well as Connect360. Rivet has the added benefit of preserving your file structure in the Xbox 360’s interface while Connect360 just sends it as a big flat list. Also Rivet can serve files stored in multiple locations for videos and picture (plus your iPhoto library and videos in your iTunes library) and you can just define a location on your hard drive to serve images from while Connect360 requires iPhoto.

    Both applications do tend to have issues with large music collections (10,000+ songs) in iTunes. This may not be as noticeable on a faster machine though.

  6. #6 Ben says:

    Yeah, I like Rivet better. Sorts out all my TV Shows into folders based on season and show name.

    And Brad at Cynical Peak Software is MUCH better at getting back to you with support issues than the guys at Nullriver. As far as my experiences have gone, anyway.

  7. #7 Nawaz says:

    Anyone worked out how to convert mkv’s into something Connect360 can use, without having to transcode? Been tearing my hair out over this one for a while now, bought visualhub but just cant seem to get anything mac based to do the job.

  8. #8 Scott says:

    I think Rivet is a better choice too, and I agree with Twist on his list of better options available with Rivet.

  9. #9 Andy says:

    Too bad it doesn’t yet support subtitles.

  10. #10 Jamie Nathan says:

    You should try Rivet. I have only just discovered it but it is far better.

  11. #11 Faisca says:

    I tried the demo of Rivet, and while it seems like it would be better, it kept crashing on me after being up for like 2 minutes. I assume you all don’t have the same problem…

    Can Rivet play iTunes movie rentals? Can Connect360?

  12. #12 Michael says:

    I tried both Connect360 and Rivet. I have my videos organized on an external drive by show and then by season folders. Connect360 would break up some of the folder hierarchy (not all of them) and it wouldn’t display all the folders. Rivet keeps the hierarchy as well as displaying all the videos. Unfortunately it sucks because I paid for Connect360 before Rivet only to find out it doesn’t work like I expected it to.

  13. #13 Ryan Stone says:

    Rivet is better. I’ve used both, but rivet is much better @ sorting items and updating the content listing on my xbox.

  14. #14 Jens says:

    Connect360 is great, it works so much better than using a PC with Windows Media Player (which is quite funny) :). I am also using MediaLink from Nullriver to stream audio, video and photos from my powerbook to my PS3, works like a charm! :)

Leave a reply

Avatars
If you'd like an avatar to appear next to your comment, simply signup for a Gravatar. It's free and takes all of about 2 minutes to setup.

Subscribe without commenting

Close
E-mail It