Quick start guide

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Revision as of 01:31, 1 January 2010 by >Natethomas (an XBMC Quick Start guide explaining how to add videos to XBMC and then to the library)
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Quick Start Guide

Introduction

Congratulations new users, and welcome to XBMC!

XBMC is software designed with the Home Theater in mind. This means it is best viewed on a TV while you still on your couch, rather than on a monitor while you sit at your desk. And, because it's all about the home theater, the best way to interact with it is with a remote control, rather than a mouse. If it helps, you can think of XBMC as the ultimate DVD Player, rather than just another program on your computer, and NO ONE uses a mouse with a DVD Player.

Two Main Features

XBMC does two things really well. It can play your music and videos, and it can display all of your music and videos in something we call the Library. In fact, if you've ever read about XBMC, you've probably seen pictures of the Library in action.

Getting ready to play music and videos

To play music, a tv show, or a movie, you first have to show XBMC where that media is. Showing XBMC where to find your videos and music is very simple. First, open XBMC. Then, click up or down until either Videos or Music is highlighted. For the rest of this explanation, we'll use Videos (and, specifically, Movies) as the example, but it works the same way in Music (and TV shows).

Adding a Video Source

Click Videos.

On the next page, click Add Source. Now browse to where you keep your videos. If you keep them shared on a network drive, read http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=Configuring_PC_Shares for more information.

Once you've found the folder you keep your videos in, click OK.

NOTE: When you start to deal with the library, you will find that it's a good idea to keep your Movie folder and your Television folder separate. Keep that in mind.

Now name this Video Source. If it's a movie folder, you could name it Movies. If it's a tv show folder, you could name it TV Shows. The name is up to you. For this example, since we're dealing with movies, just name it Movies.

Next, somewhere on the dialog box, you should have the option to Set Content. Select that option.

Setting Content

This section is why keeping your TV Shows and Movies separate is important. When you click set content, you can set your video content as Music Videos, Movies, or TV Shows. Scroll through the options until you get to the correct one. Since in our example we're doing Movies, we'll scroll to Movies and go through the Movie settings.

Setting Movie Content Options

If you keep each of your movies in its own folder with the movie name in it, like:

C:\Movies\Big Buck Bunny\Big Buck Bunny.avi

Then you'll want to check off "Use folder names for lookups."

If you keep all your movies in one big folder, like:

C:\Movies\Big Buck Bunny.avi C:\Movies\Big Buck Bunny II: Rise of the Lycan.avi

Then leave everything unchecked.

If your movies are ripped DVDs using a Video_TS folder structure, then you'll probably want to tick "Scan Recursively."

Finally, since this is your first time through we may as well take care of everything right now, so let's go ahead create that pretty Library.

To do so, tick "Run automated Scan."

Now, click OK. And OK again. Depending on how many movies you have, this scan could take a long time.

Turning On the Library

Assuming you are using the default skin Confluence, from the videos screen, to turn on the Library, just click left once to pull up the Side Menu. Then scroll down and click "Library Mode."

Voila, you're done. You now have a beautiful Library full of all your great movies, complete with titles, fanart, and tons of information.

Final Note

You should be able to figure out how to put your TV Shows and Music into the Library following this guide (but, of course, dealing with different choices). As you read the wiki and experiment on your own, you should learn about using the Menu when watching a video and clicking the Info button to pull up info about the video or song you have highlighted.

The one additional thing that's useful to mention here is the context menu. http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=Videos_Navigation_and_Control#The_Context_Menu On the keyboard, you pull it up by typing C, while highlighting an item. If you are using a mouse, you can right click while hovering over an item. With remote controls, the option differs based on the remote.

The important point is that the Context Menu is how you really control XBMC. With it you can queue an item, play it, set its content, update the library, scan for new media, etc., etc.

Conclusion

Thanks for reading this Quick Start guide. Below you will find additional suggested reading that may be useful for getting started. We have done our best to answer every question, but if you can't find your answer after extensively searching, feel free to ask.

Additional suggested reading:

- http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=Video_Library
- http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=Set_Contents_(Video_Library)
- http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=TV_Shows
- http://wiki.xbmc.org/?title=IMDb