Telnet in and type in
Code: Select all
wget http://dl.dropbox.com/u/77534245/installupnpv2.sh
sh ./installupnpv2.sh
rm installupnpv2.sh
Code: Select all
wget http://dl.dropbox.com/u/77534245/installupnpv2.sh
sh ./installupnpv2.sh
rm installupnpv2.sh
There aren't any files to edit. You need to telnet in (either via Windows Telnet command or using something like Putty) and type in the 3 lines show in the box. You shouldn't need WinSCP or to be fiddling with files.danjog2 wrote:Please forgive my slowness, for some reason this is a steep learning curve for me. Which file needs editing? This looks like a one off download and install rather than code that should permanently change a file?
Works; seeing all my UPNP players. Tried PlayOn TV for videos; checking right now.login as: root
root@192.168.244.142's password:
#
# wget http://dl.dropbox.com/u/77534245/installupnpv2.sh
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (107.22.161.187:80)
installupnpv2.sh 100% |*******************************| 948 0:00:00 ETA
# sh ./installupnpv2.sh
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (107.22.161.187:80)
wget: can't open 'libUPnP.so': File exists
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (23.21.215.124:80)
op_upnp.tar 100% |*******************************| 191k 0:00:00 ETA
op_upnp/
op_upnp/icon.swf
op_upnp/language.xml
op_upnp/main.swf
op_upnp/upnp.cookie
#
# rm installupnpv2.sh
#
Why are you using WinSCP?danjog2 wrote:Hi, I'm far from the best person to try this, but I gave it a go - connected with WINSCP and went to /bin and opened a command window - I pasted in the first line of code, but got a Network is unreachable message.
Note for others: The can't open libUPnP.so was just in case people haven't installed the required library on an OpenPeak'ed Jogglerpete_c wrote:Will give it a try on the master bedroom Joggler offbeatdave. I was having on and off issues with UPNP connected to TVersity and PlayonTV and XBMC; so I quit using it.
Works; seeing all my UPNP players. Tried PlayOn TV for videos; checking right now.login as: root
root@192.168.244.142's password:
#
# wget http://dl.dropbox.com/u/77534245/installupnpv2.sh
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (107.22.161.187:80)
installupnpv2.sh 100% |*******************************| 948 0:00:00 ETA
# sh ./installupnpv2.sh
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (107.22.161.187:80)
wget: can't open 'libUPnP.so': File exists
Connecting to dl.dropbox.com (23.21.215.124:80)
op_upnp.tar 100% |*******************************| 191k 0:00:00 ETA
op_upnp/
op_upnp/icon.swf
op_upnp/language.xml
op_upnp/main.swf
op_upnp/upnp.cookie
#
# rm installupnpv2.sh
#
Thanks for the feedback - I've never actually used the Connect and Play function so couldn't test it (other than it seeing Logitech Media Servers on all my Jogglers).gegs wrote:I've just installed this and given it a spin. It looks quite like the old O2 Connect and Play but it found my devices quicker and loaded large collections much quicker too. I like the "does what it says on the tin" purple logo too.
Thanks used telnet and installed perfectly first time, works on audio, video and photos - finds upnp servers a lot more quickly and generally removes the whole "is it really working" aspect of trying to find servers using the old connect & play.gegs wrote:Why are you using WinSCP?danjog2 wrote:Hi, I'm far from the best person to try this, but I gave it a go - connected with WINSCP and went to /bin and opened a command window - I pasted in the first line of code, but got a Network is unreachable message.
You'd be better to use PuTTY. Connect to your Joggler; once logged in, paste each line in individually followed by the return key. The "network unreachable" error may have been a valid one if the file couldn't be picked up from Dropbox. I'd give it another go.
Thanks for this. It really is a great little method for accessing media from a NAS or shared folder.offbeatdave wrote:Thanks for the feedback - I've never actually used the Connect and Play function so couldn't test it (other than it seeing Logitech Media Servers on all my Jogglers).
Yeah, really must make the effort to do this!gegs wrote:
Why couldn't you test it? If you've got a Windows machine, choose a folder with photos/video/music and make it shared to the network. I'm not sure how to do it on other Windows versions but on XP you right-click on a folder, choose "Properties", click the "Sharing" tab on the Properties dialogue and tick the box to make the folder shared. Easy peasy! The uPnP program should then be able to scan and find your content.