hey everybody it's Lon's Seidman and welcome
to part three of my Network DVR project
for 2017 what I have been doing over
probably the last four years or so now
is reducing my television viewing cost
substantially by using my own equipment
to record TV as well as get broadcasts
from my cable system out to all my
televisions in the house I save about
sixty dollars a month at least doing
this which is pretty substantial versus
renting comcast equipment that makes me
of course a cord shaver and not
necessarily a cord cutter but I am
saving a lot of money nonetheless
however everything you're about to see
in this video and the prior two portions
that I posted up a few weeks ago is
something you can also do with
over-the-air broadcast so if you're able
to pick up a lot of things over-the-air
you can get rid of the cable
subscription completely and all the
equipment and software that we've been
demonstrating in this series is going to
work also for over-the-air broadcast
it's very flexible like that which is
why I like using the HD homerun tuners
that you're going to be hearing about
during the course of this review now one
of the things that people were
mentioning to me in the prior videos is
that I had some pretty expensive stuff
running everything so the ROI might take
a while to reach and I definitely agree
with that sentiment so what I wanted to
do in this video will show you how you
can bring the cost down for your initial
setup and entry into this process for
about four hundred dollars and I've been
looking at a lot of low cost devices
that can work at cable boxes on my
network and the best one I found is the
one that I found a couple of years ago -
which is the Raspberry Pi this is a $35
computer that is widely available and it
works exceptionally well believe it or
not for what we're going to be doing in
this project so if you want to bring
down costs dramatically I've got some
great ideas for you in this video and
looking forward to sharing those with
all of you now I do want to mention in
the interest of full disclosure that
Silicon Dust who makes the HD homerun
tuner is an occasional sponsor here on
the channel however they found me
through the first video I did about
their product years ago in fact the
one I bought is still the one I am using
here several years later so I was a
client of theirs before they became a
client of mine I just really liked the
product and that is why I talk about it
so much but all the opinions you're
about to hear
are my own nobody is paying for this
review this is not a sponsored review
and no one is reviewing this content
before it is posted so let's jump into
it I'm first going though to give you a
overview of how all of this works
because I did get a bunch of questions
on my part two video and I think it's
important for us to revisit how all of
these things work together and what kind
of components you need let's do a quick
PowerPoint here and run through how all
of this stuff works again it will work
with over-the-air broadcast or cable TV
broadcast and if you really want to get
crazy you can do both at the same time
too so you've got plenty of options here
for how all these things might work
together now in my case because I am a
cord shaver
I have my cable jack hooked up to my HD
homerun prime tuner which is the one
designed for cable systems they have
three tuners total in their product
line at the time that I'm shooting this
review each does different things but
the one on the far left there the HD
homerun prime is the one designed for
cable so it takes a cable card that you
have to get from your TV provider you
snap it in to the back of it you call
them up to get it configured for their
network and in my case I get a credit
for using it I get two dollars and 50
cents back a month from Comcast because
I'm not using their box anymore I
swapped out my cable box for a cable
card popped it in the back of that thing
and off I went now you connect the other
end of this to your Ethernet network so
what I would suggest is maybe putting it
close to where your router is so you've
got everything centrally located that's
what I did and then once it's plugged
into your network you can grab TV from
any supported device in the house now
there's one gotcha on this which is
something called DRM and some
channels on my lineup are currently
protected with DRM specifically HBO
so right now I cannot use HBO on this
roll-your-own DVR system because it is
encrypted silicon dust and makers of all
this stuff are working on bringing DRM
support to windows 10 into Android but
at the moment it is not yet working for
DVR recordings if you do though have an
Xbox one or a Windows 10 computer you
can watch live DRM protected content
through those platforms but not through
the DVR so it's a cable industry thing
they're working through it but do make
sure that your cable system is not
encrypting the channels you want to
watch before you take the plunge on this
in my case HBO is really the only thing
that I'm not getting but I have the HBO
Go app so I'm able to work around that
issue but just keep that in mind some
cable companies are not friendly to this
and silicon dust is working on that at
the moment
now the HD homerun prime supports three
tuners at the same time so that means it
can record or watch three things
simultaneously so you could have for
example one TV watching something live
while two other shows get recorded if
you're finding you're hitting tuner
limitations you can add more tuners to
the network and the software will
automatically make use of those so if
you're finding that your kids are
watching too much TV and you're trying
to record something and can't because the
tuners are occupied adding another tuner
to the network will likely resolve some
of those issues for you but if you want
to ditch cable completely and go over
the air you'll need one of these two
boxes the HD homerun connect or the HD
homerun extend and what you do with
these if you plug in an antenna versus
your cable signal and it connects up to
your network in the same way the box
will automatically go out and detect all
of the available channels that it can
pick up and then those will be made
available to your network now the
difference between these two is that one
has an encoder built in the extend which
will make it work better over Wi-Fi
networks the signals that broadcasters
use are an older mpeg-2 format still and
those can be very demanding on Wi-Fi
connections it's better with AC wireless
the new 5 gigahertz standards that a lot
of newer stuff has but if you've got
little TV boxes all over the house or
something and finding that you're not
getting a reliable signal the extend will
help with that because it's able to
encode video to a smaller size to
compresses the video with h.264 the
extend cost one hundred and thirty
dollars give or take and the connect
costs a hundred dollars they both have
two tuners in them each but again if you
buy multiple versions you can add more
tuners to your network and it works
pretty much the same as the way the
cable one works once you get them hooked
up now if you have no desire to record
anything with a DVR you are done here
you can buy this box once pay no monthly
fee and be able to watch live television
on any device that's compatible with it
and the compatibility keeps growing all
the time and there's different app
developers that are supporting the HD
homerun platform
one of the things that developers like
about is that they don't lock anything
down so you're not just stuck with
silicon dust software if you want
something with a different style channel
guide for example you can choose to
purchase that app from a developer that
presents the content to you the way you
want so you do have a lot of options here
with this hardware they don't restrict
the types of software that work with it
which is a great thing in fact if you
don't want to use their DVR you can use
somebody else's DVR that's compatible
with the HD homerun platform I think
there's probably two or three now beyond
the offering that silicon dust makes
that's compatible with their hardware
and again it can all work concurrently
provided you have enough tuners
available it's pretty flexible in how it
works now what I have on my network is a
network attached storage device that is
running the silicon dust DVR software
they call it the recording engine it
runs on that network hard drive and what
that does is it kind of sits in the
middle between the HD homerun Prime and
my devices so it's recording everything
that I want recorded it's doing the
playback of the recorded shows that I
wish to watch it shoots it over the
network digitally of course but it's
managing all of that it also works as a
time shifting device if I want to pause
live TV and rewind it it's acting as the
intermediary in that or for example if I
am maybe watching something that is
still being recorded but I want to watch
the beginning again the DVR recording
engine on the NAS is acting as the
intermediary so it kind of sits in the
middle and does all of those things for
you and I'm surprised how well it works
even on low cost hardware which I will
be detailing here in a second now the
the heat that I got on the last video
was the fact that my current setup is a
little more on the pricey side of things
I kind of put together the Cadillac
system here so I have the HD homerun
Prime which cost 135 dollars I've got
three Nvidia shield TVs on my three
televisions that I'm doing this with so
those are about two hundred dollars
apiece that were quickly escalating the
cost here the NAS device that I'm using is
quite expensive because that one does a
lot of fancy video transcoding for Plex
which we covered in the first video so
that is why we needed something more
powerful so that one's an $800 purchase
and then of course you've got the annual
DVR license for the HD homerun recording
engine which is $35 a year now $3 a
month I think it's probably the least
expensive DVR on the market right now
and I think it's pretty reasonable given
that you do have to pay somebody for all
that channel guide data they have to pay
people too so that is why you're paying
a little bit there but thirty five bucks
a year is a lot less expensive than many
of the other stuff that's out there but
nonetheless my setup right now is about
fifteen hundred dollars and I found it
was going to take a while to make back
that return on investment especially
considering my net savings is about
fifty seven dollars a month when
factoring in the HD homerun annual fee
for the DVR system so what I wanted to
do was find a way to rebuild this system
from scratch with the least expensive
components possible and I found a way to
do it that's going to bring us in around
four or five hundred dollars and you
might be able to reduce this amount if
you've already got stuff laying around
the house you can repurpose or use with
this system a lot of things you already
have may already be compatible let's
take a look at what I pieced together
here so I am considering this a
over-the-air project but if you wanted
to go with the HD homerun prime of
course you'd have to add another thirty
five dollars or so to the first item on
the list
I do recommend though if you are
planning to do this with Wi-Fi to get
the HD homerun extend again another
thirty dollars or so to get that version
which will work better with Wi-Fi
networks now instead of the expensive
Nvidia shield boxes I found the least
expensive box that works the best which
is our favorite little mini computer the
Raspberry Pi this is the Raspberry Pi
three it sells for $35 you really can't
beat that price and it does a pretty
nice job of tuning live TV and working
with this DVR system I'll show you how
it works and how to set it up here in
this video but I'm continually impressed
by the things you can do with this
little box and I'm sure if you are a
techie like me you've seen a lot of
other different projects you can do with
them also I've got a little pile of
these around the house because they're
so fun to play with so I'm using that
you do have to get some accessories for
it namely a case which I found cost
about seven dollars on the average you
also need to get an mpeg-2 license which
I'll talk about in a few minutes
especially if you're doing over-the-air
broadcast you do have to get in mini SD
card for each of these devices along
with a power adapter and power cord so
I'm considering about twenty dollars for
the cost of all of that you don't need a
very big card so I think
a four gig card should be enough to get
this up and running it's not going to be
storing any video on here at all it's
going to be using the network
exclusively but you do need a card to
boot it up with so you'll have to get a
few of those we got the $35 HD homerun
DVR license and I also have a single
drive WD my cloud on this list and I was
testing this setup with a single drive
WD my cloud for a while it's not a very
expensive device you do have to jump
through one hoop to get the recording
engine installed on it the HD homerun
DVR setup software that you run on
Windows or Mac will automatically get it
running on your little single Drive my
cloud NAS the only caveat is is that if
the drive shuts off reboots you have to
reload the software on every time if you
go up to a slightly more expensive WD My
cloud mirror you can install the
software and have it running as an
internal app that will continually be
operating even if the drive reboots but
again if you're doing this on the cheap that's
the way to go now if you've got an
inexpensive computer or a computer
you're not using anymore you can just
put that on the network and have it run
24/7 as the server and knock out the
NAS component completely this DVR
recording engine is very lightweight
software it doesn't need all that much
to run considering it can run on a
single Drive WD My cloud NAS and it's
definitely worth considering if you
don't want to go through that complexity
of having to continually reinstall the
software on the cheap drive but again
the my cloud mirror which only costs a
little more I think it's in the 230-50 dollar
range or something should be able to
work fine for you likewise if you have
an Xbox one on the network or another
compatible TV box already you don't even
need the Raspberry Pi either so again I'm
estimating starting from scratch with
nothing and trying to get three
televisions connected so you can pick
and choose which devices you want to use
for this and possibly save on your ROI
so let's take a look now and see how we
can get this software installed on the
Raspberry Pi and get it connected to our
HD homerun DVR network now to get all of
this working we're going to use an app
called Kodi which is a very popular
media app that the HD homerun devices
work with and there is a version of Kodi
for the Raspberry Pi called Libre elec
this software is completely free of
charge
you download it we're going to
install it onto this SD card and it will
boot the Raspberry Pi up into Kodi
every time it turns on there's nothing
to type or configure just boots right
into Kodi and the operating system here
is optimized for it and the nice thing
is it's very easy to get working we're
just going to click on downloads here
I'm running on a Mac right now but this
will be the same for Linux or Windows
I'll click the download for Mac OS I'll
wait for the app to download here what
this will do is it will automatically
burn the image onto this SD card so we
can boot everything up so here is the SD
card creator and it's already got the
configuration that I'm looking for so
you want to make sure that it's selected
as a Raspberry Pi 2 & 3 you do though
have some additional options you can
even install this on the 0 and the 1 if
you want to try a lower end version but
I would say stick to the 2 or the 3
it'll automatically pick up the
installation that it needs you're going
to click on download and what this will
do now is go out to their servers and
download the file for the Raspberry Pi
that will be running it so I'll click on
my downloads folder here to tell it
where I want that file stored and now
we'll just let it download here and when
it's done we'll burn that image and
we'll take it from there
ok the download is complete the file is
now on my computer's hard drive but we
got to get it over to this card so we
can boot up the Raspberry Pi so now
we've done all that you can see here
it's asking me to select my USB stick or
SD card you do need to make sure you
select the right cards and my advice
would be unplug anything you don't want
accidentally erased here just to be to
be careful so we've got my 16 gig card
here selected I'm going to click on
write and what it's going to do is give
me a warning here to remind me to make
sure I'm on the right device here and
now it's going to write that image to
the card so I'm going to let this thing
finish writing itself out we'll then put
it inside our Raspberry Pi and boot it
up and get the rest of the process going
so stay tuned and hang on
ok so we are all set I've got the card
burned with the Kodi image you're going
to pop that into the bottom of the
Raspberry Pi here and then I'm going to
attach power to it these little
raspberry PI's do not consume all that
much power they're just basically
running over USB voltage here it's
pretty low impact and you'll notice that
I do have my Raspberry Pi connected via
ethernet that's one of the things I
really like about these low-cost
computers is that they do have
Ethernet jack built-in and that is going
to give you the best possible
performance especially for over-the-air
broadcasts that are coming in with that
older mpeg-2 format it really likes
being on a wired network versus a
wireless one there are ways this will
work with Wireless just fine but
typically the Wi-Fi that I found on
these little raspberry PI's doesn't have
the latest and greatest AC technology so
my recommendation really as best you can
try to get a wired network I do not like
powerline extenders they don't seem to
work very well you'll find those on many
online stores but I do like the MOCA
adapters that I've covered here on the
channel in the past and what those will
do is work over your cable TV wiring and
allow you to basically convert cable TV
to Ethernet and it works great in fact
it even works if you have existing cable
television on your network it's very
reliable rock-solid and if you really
want to get wired connections out to all
your different devices new your
television without rewiring the house I
would say that that is probably the best
way to go it's really seamless how well
MOCA works for extending your network so
now we've got this thing booted up and
it's already showing us the welcome
screen here so I'm just going to step
through everything really quick here to
get up and running and we don't need to
worry about too many of these things I
do have it on Ethernet as you saw so we
don't need to worry about the wireless
connections but you can configure that
over there
I'm going to leave these things as is
and then just go out to the main menu
here now in order to get this to work we
do need to install the HD homerun add-on
it is free it will work if you're just
doing the live TV thing without a DVR
subscription but if you do have the DVR
software installed it will automatically
find the DVR on your network and work
with that as well in order to get to
that we have to go over here to add-ons
and I'll select that by the way I'm
using a wireless keyboard and mouse
right now but there is a app for Kodi
that you can install on your phone
whether it's Android or iOS and use it
as a remote control there's ways to
control this without having to go and
get additional peripherals but for me
it's just easier to use this at the
moment so we're going to go over here to
video add-ons I'll go to the enter
add-on browser option now what we're
going to do is just kind of scroll down
the list until we get to the h's so
let's go
a page down here until we get to H and
then we should see here HD homerun on
the list I'm going to select that let's
go ahead and click on install here and
it'll just take a second for it to
download what I found what this is
everything that I used with the HD
homerun it's pretty low impact here now
it is installed you can see that message
just came up on there and if I back out
of here and go to my video add-ons
folder here you'll see now that we have
the HD homerun up and running and if I
click on that it's going to find my
devices automatically fetch the TV Guide
they'll give me some instructions as to
how to use it here and here we go I've
got my cable system going I can start
browsing through the channels with their
slice guide here just like you could on
one of their regular apps so let's take
a look now and see how it works
ok so we are up and running now
everything seems to be working fine I've
got my local ABC affiliate up on the air
I can tap right here on the phone remote
to browse through the slice here and
find a different channel to watch so if
I want to switch over to PBS here for
example I can just tap on that icon and
it will then start tuning that it does
work very quickly here surprisingly so
given what the cost of the hardware is
and what's really interesting is that
it's been working ok with mpeg-2
broadcasts like the one that we have up
on screen right now and it's doing
better than the prior editions did I do
want to show you the mpeg-2 license in a
little bit in case you do run into some
issues here but so far it's been working
fine with both mpeg-2 and mpeg-4
broadcasts that come over my cable
system here now if I wanted to record
something that might be on later tonight
for example if I want to go maybe to the
news hour I can just select that from
the slice guide here it will then pull
up the DVR interface and I can choose to
record all these episodes or maybe just
record this upcoming one so I can click
on here and go over to record and that
will set up to record in my DVR and this
will now have a rule that will record
that show on the DVR recording engine
and any other device on the network will
be able to see that I set that recording
as well as be able to play it back when
it's done so this is just the same
computer or NAS device I'm working off
here as I would on anything else around
the house here and you also have access
to recordings on the device too- so if I go
back to our phone remote here if I hit
the back button it'll pull up the
recording interface here so if I wanted
to go down and watch one of the things
that I've recorded prior I can go to
maybe the Deadliest Catch here and click
on the August first episode and just
start watching that and it will now
stream this off of my recording from the
NAS device here and it comes over
fairly quickly so it is working and I
can do all my full controls I can
fast-forward rewind and do all the
things you would normally be able to do
with a recording yet we're doing it on
our Raspberry Pi here that's pretty
flexible I can hit that back button
again to go back a level I can go over
here to the discover tab which is a way
of finding what it's currently on-air
we're being able to search for different
things that covered this interface in my
review or overview of the app that we
looked at in part two so you can get
more information about that I can also
scroll over to the tasks screen here and
get access to all the tasks that are
currently scheduled on my DVR and
everything I do on here of course will
impact the rest of the networks we have
full access to everything that's going
on there if I hit the back button again
I can go back to the live TV interface
and then I can also when I go back over
there hit the back button again and be
able to do a search so if I want to look
for something specifically I can just
click on search and a keyboard will pop
up here on my phone and I can start
typing in the things that I am looking
for so lots of good stuff on here that I
think are pretty neat to have on a very
inexpensive device even if you have an
Nvidia shield TV as your desired go-to
device on your main TV you can get these
little boxes for little money on all
your other televisions and have a pretty
functional experience here you just have
to show people where to go to get it
activated you just have to go down to
the add-ons menu and click on HD homerun now you saw during the demo how the
mpeg-2 broadcast we were watching look
just fine on here surprisingly so but if
you are running into trouble there is a
way to enable a hardware mpeg-2 decoder
on the Raspberry Pi this will certainly
be an issue if you're running with one
of the older Raspberry Pi twos and on
the Raspberry Pi store they have one by
the way there is a license key that you
can get for just over two pounds it's
going to be about three or four dollars
in the u.s. here and what this will do
is unlock the secret hardware decoder
that's built into this thing so if you
are having some performance issues
especially with over-the-air broadcast
buying that license will get you going
you got to buy a separate license for
every raspberry pi that you own and
they're tied to the serial number on the
device let me show you how you can
easily get the serial number out of this
thing without having to go into some
crazy
command line to find it so we're going
to do here is go up to the gear icon and
we're going to go over to the system
information screen here and what you're
going to see here is a whole bunch of
information about our current
configuration and IP address and the
free memory we have I'm going to scroll
down over here to hardware and what you
want to look for is the number next to
the words serial you want to either
take a picture or write that number down
because you're going to have to give
this to the folks at Raspberry Pi on
their web store here to buy that license
either type your serial number here and
add it to cart and what they're going to
do is email you probably a day or two
later a code that you're going to put
into a text file which I'll show you in
a second to unlock that Hardware decoder
so let me show you how to do that right
now okay so the Raspberry Pi is shut
down we've got the card inserted into my
Mac here and what you want to look for
is a file called config txt so you can
edit this in Windows on notepad or on
the Mac here with their text editing
application and what it's going to do is
pull up this configuration file and when
you get your email back from the
Raspberry Pi people they're going to
give you a serial number here to put in
this will not work for you because it's
tied to my raspberry PI's own unique
serial number and what you want to do is
scroll through here and look for this
decode MPEG 2 line of this text file
we're going to remove the little pound
sign there and what we're going to do is
actually just grab this section of the
text here and bring it over here I'm
going to delete all the zeros and
replace it with that and now I'm going
to go up here and click file and save
and then eject the card and reboot our
Raspberry Pi and that is it you'll have
an MPEG 2 Hardware decoder
ready to go so let me get this thing
booted back up so we are booted back up
now I did want to show you one
additional add-on that I
thought might be of interest for all of
you if you are into Plex like I am i use
a plex server here in the house for my
personal media and one of the nice
things about the kodi installation here
is that there is also a plex add-on you
can run plex inside of kodi I think we
covered that a few months ago on the
channel let me just show you how it
works on here so we're going to go back
to the add-on screen here we do have to
go at this a different way than we did
before so I'm going to go over to
install from repository and we'll go
over here to the Kodi add-on repository
and we'll go down to video add-ons again
and down the list if we scroll all the
way down to the P's we're going to see
that there is a Plex
add-on here available an official Plex
one so I'll click on that and click
install and I'll show you how this works
now it seems to work just as well as it
does on any other platform yet it's
integrated into this Kodi
installation so let me get logged in and
I'll show you some of the things you can
do with it so here is Plex running on
top of Kodi on my Raspberry Pi and I do
want to mention in the interest of full
disclosure that Plex is a sponsor here
on the channel but they're not
sponsoring this video I covered in
section 2 of this series about how I'm
using these two services together the HD
homerun stuff along with the Plex stuff
and you can get access to all your Plex
stuff here what's cool about this is
that you can also connect to servers
outside of your home which is one of the
strengths of Plex so you're able to for
example connect to a friend server
somewhere and stream media to your
Raspberry Pi just like you would on any
other plex client which I thought was
pretty useful on such an inexpensive
little device I can also go on here and
play back some of my movies so I've got
the Empire Strikes Back here for example
and I can just go ahead and play that
over my network via my plex server I do
get a little warning up here when I
start playing it back that it says the
read rate is too slow or too low for
continuous playback but I'm not seeing
any dropped frames or anything else like
that but I think if you are playing back
media locally on your network Kodi is
probably the better choice because you
could just point it at wherever those
movies are stored and play it back
natively through Kodi without the add-on
but there might be reasons why for
organizational purposes that you will
want to use the Plex option and you have
it here with this raspberry pi and then
when you're done you can just go ahead
and back out of the Plex add-on you
brought right back into your
Kodi screen you can boot up your DVR or go
over to media that you've pointed
directly at Kodi you can spend months or
years playing with this and tweaking it
to your heart's content but it works
great even with these two little add-ons
right out of the box for free which I
thought really makes it worthwhile here
and maybe worth probably a small investment
of your time to get everything set up
and running initially so if you're
looking to do things on the cheap that's
how I would do it I think we knocked
about a thousand dollars or so off the
initial entry point here and if you have
things like an Xbox one or another
compatible device that can work with the
HD homerun software or Kodi then you can
knock that off your price list because
you can just use what you already have
to get it done I was really hoping that
the amazon firetv stick would be a good
option here because it does run Kodi it
also runs the HD homerun app natively
but it doesn't do well with interlaced
broadcasts that come over the air and
through your cable system unfortunately
so it kind of knocked it out of
contention it did work actually quite
well even over Wi-Fi but this the image
really looks terrible because it doesn't
playback the interlaced content properly
it doesn't De-interlace it like we're
doing here with the Raspberry Pi to make
it look nice on a current TV so that one
is unfortunately not something I would
recommend at the moment it's a shame
because it's only 40 dollars and it
costs just about what the same as what
this cost but you get Netflix and a
bunch of other apps with it also but
we'll keep on the lookout for other low
cost options I'd love to hear some of
your suggestions down below of things
that I should look at to try out there
are a bunch of these cheap Android boxes
on Amazon that you could look at but
they're not always that reliable and
they're not from name brands that I
know and I like this this option here
there's no other thing running on here
but Kodi it just boots right up pretty
simple to operate and you can get a
bunch of these deployed again very very
cheaply that's going to do it for part
three of this who-knows-how-many part
series I'll be doing on this project the
good news is that I think I'm about
three weeks into this if not a month
into it now and it's been working just
fine I haven't had any issues whatsoever
my wife is okay with it which is the
most important thing in this project to
keep under consideration and I think I'm
at the point now where I can completely
retire the windows media
server and have this running as my
primary DVR capture engine I'll keep you
posted as to when I actually pull the
plug but I think we're there because I
haven't really had any reason to switch
back to my old DVR I'm just going to
pull some recordings off of it but I
think other than that we are going to
cut the cord on this cord shaving
project and transition over to this new
setup please do keep your questions and
comments coming though because that is
helping guide me in not only the things
that I do here in my house but coming up
with future content ideas so definitely
leave those comments down below and I'll
see you next time this is Lon Seidman
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