Personally, I think that media centres are the way to go. I'm amazed more people don't make the switch to them. They are far better than a plethora of set top boxes and the rest. I've recently been toying with Plex and Front Row on one of my Hackintoshes, using an old MS IR receiver, Apple remote and Remote Buddy. It all works pretty well, but the dearth of decent TV options for Mac is a killer for me when it comes to anything other than dipping into it for its novelty value. I keep hoping that Apple might get serious with Apple TV/Front Row, but I suspect I'll be waiting a long time before they release anything quite as flexible as my WIndows7 based media centre.
Using the Windows box I can do everything the Mac OS based option does and watch and/or record any combination of Freeview and Freesat programming, including BBC HD (the box has a dual terrestrial and an S2 satellite card). I'm currently awaiting the arrival of DVB-T2 cards that'll give me Freeview HD to add to the mix. As it stands I can watch an AVI or whatever while recording three TV channels at the same time. Technically, I could record even more at once if I bought more cards. Of course, I can also pause live TV and the like as well. The whole ensemble has now replaced everything bar my Blu Ray player and it could replace that if I bought a Blu Ray drive for it. You can even get a selection of Sky channels over the internet on it if you sign up and pay a subscription.
If you want a recommendation for a new AV amp, I recently bought a Sony STR-DR800 from Richer Sounds. It's a great bit of kit for the money (Richer are currently selling it for under £250).
Des
The original 32 bit junkie now snorting pure 64. BT Yeehaw! 8 Mbit BT Homehub2, Wired, Wireless, VoIP, 2 Macs, 2.5 Hackintoshes, 3.5 PCs, OS X, Win XP, MCE, Vista, Ubuntu.
Rehab is for quitters