Putting together a home theater is harder than I thought. I figured the  hard part was getting all the right equipment installed and working. But  it turns out, for me, that's the easy part. Deciding what the room  should look like is proving to be a real chore. We talked to a cabinet  maker. He measured the room and we discussed ideas. About a week later  I drafted up (by hand) some plans for what I want the cabinets to look  like. I sent him copies of the plans and dimensions of the things that  need to fit in the cabinets (screen and speakers, primarily). And I have  heard nothing. Meanwhile we had to decide on chairs and wall  treatments, while continuing to discuss (in other words, repeatedly  change our minds about) the appearance of the cabinets. We were kinda  hoping that we could walk in to a home theater store, look at the  theaters that they have in the showroom, perhaps look at a book of  photos, and say "we want one that looks like that." But things aren't  that simple.
We have been making progress, however. We finally  ordered the chairs (which take 6 to 8 weeks to be delivered). They are  Berkline "Matinee" chairs. We had to hunt around a bit but we ended up  getting a good deal on the chairs. The projector arrived and we have  already used it to watch a few movies (projected on the wall). I ordered  the speakers, which should arrive this week. I also have the receiver  (more on that later). I ordered an APC equipment rack that I just  finished assembling tonight. It sits in the unfinished basement space  behind the theater room and is waiting for shelves, power strip, and  cable management stuff.
For future plans, I have located a  surplus computer store in Atlanta and I will be visiting it (very soon I  hope) to pick up whatever equipment I can. I need a computer to run the  automation system, and I need an ethernet switch to put in the rack. I  hope to pick up a rack-mounted keyboard and monitor as well. I have  finally decided on a Blu-ray player: the Oppo BDP-83. The reviewers all  rave about it and it appears to be well supported. I also want to try to  pick up a used Sony 400-disc DVD changer from eBay. That will be enough  to hold our DVDs and will provide the basis for hands-off movie  selection.
After much debate and research on a suitable receiver  I finally settled on the Integra 8.9. Although the amp is more powerful  than I need (140 watts per channel for 7 channels) the deciding factor  was the unit's ability to "upconvert" video to the full resolution used  by the projector. Face it, when you project an image to be over 100"  wide any little defect becomes pretty glaring. DVD resolution is fine  for 40" or 50" TVs, but when you go to something this large it starts to  suffer. All the movies we own are on DVD and I don't have plans to  convert the whole library to Blu-ray. So it is important that we be able  to play DVDs and have them look good. The Integra will convert the  lower resolution (480 lines) of a DVD to the higher resolution (1080  lines) of the projector, and it does this using one of the best video  processing chips in the industry -- the Silicon Optix Reon. And of  course the receiver does an excellent job with the audio too.
The  final piece to the puzzle is the automation system itself. There are  several manufacturers for these "high end" automation systems, such as  Control 4 and Crestron. But they are all very expensive, completely  custom, and completely controlled by the vendor. The end-user can't make  any changes to the system without paying someone to come out and  "reprogram" the system. I think I would rather have a Pronto remote than  be hamstrung like that. So I am still looking at a software solution  call Cinemar. It is fully programmable by the end-user which gives me  enough room to tweak and play to my heart's content. I still have  concerns about it, however. There are no custom remotes for it, so the  best "remote" ends up being a touch-screen tablet PC. That's a tad on  the large & expensive side just for a remote (I'm investigating its  support for the iTouch, which would be ideal).  Also, Cinemar doesn't  seem to have solid support for some of the components that I will be  using, so I will have to do a lot of interface work. In that regard it  is kind of the Linux of home automation. Except you have to pay for it.
Our  goal is to have the theater done by Christmas. If we can come to a  conclusion on how to decorate the room we have a good chance of hitting  that goal.
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