Which DVR - Tivo or ReplayTV?
lkd7 asks: "I have recently decided to buy a DVR, but I'm not sure whether to go with Tivo or ReplayTV. I know that it is a shaky market right now, but my VCR is just not cutting it anymore. I have tested out both Tivo and ReplayTV, and would be happy with either one (I do not have satellite service and so UltimateTV is not an option for me). The Tivo stocks and SonicBlue/ReplayTV stocks are not the most reassuring. I know that going with either one is taking a risk, but I would like to go with the less risky bet. I'd rather not invest in a $300 paperweight. Does anyone have a recommendation?"
Personally I'm waiting for this to appear on the shelves in the UK - 52 hours on the hard disk and a DVD-RAM burner in the same box.... (I submitted it as a story a few weeks back, but it was rejected).
I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered. - George Best
I bought a Tivo almost a year ago now. Never regretted it. I can't speak highly enough about my Tivo.
I reccommend you check out the AVS forums at http://www.tivocommunity.com/
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You're question is vague in a sense that when you say ReplayTV, are you talking about the old generation, or the new generation that is coming up?
You're probably not going to find many people on Slashdot who will be able to intelligently compare the risks to both companies. I guestimate the chances are roughly equal for both. But keep in mind that the TiVo is much more 'hackable' than ReplayTV.
Yes, they've found ways to load television guide data into the box. If the company goes titsup.com, and the product is completely abandoned, you'll still be able to use it and still be funny functional, just self-serve. But you'd probably have to invest in a network card to do well.
Also keep in mind that you're probably going to be paying less than $300, certainly for the TiVo models. It is too bad that you aren't on DirecTV. Circuit City is selling a Philips DSR-6000 for only $99. And that includes the dual-feed antenna for only $0.01. But if you are very careful in your looking around, you could get a 20 hour TiVo as low as $150 or so. Retail stores are clearing them out.
My bottom-line opinion is to take risk out of the equasion, and choose the one that will give you the best price and features for your money.
Several co-workers who purchased them almost a year ago love them.
I've had the priviledge to do some development work "under the hood" and can attest to some of the finest engineering and craftsmanship I've ever seen in a consumer device.
A very sharp, reputable outfit, IMO.
The lesson here is this: You get the smallest TiVo you can find (14 hour, 20 hour - Walmart supposedly had the 14 hours on sale for $109 or something), and then read this.
I had a 20 hour TiVo, and after a trip to pricewatch to grab a 5400rpm drive, and 9thtee.com to get the mounting bracket for the new drive, my cheapy TiVo unit now holds 130 hours.
The current crop of PVRs lack the ability to archive or copy the mpeg video files to a computer for the purpose of making a VCD, SVCD, or DVD recording which would allow the program to be viewed on most DVD players.
The monthly subscription is an annoyance. I just want normal VCR programming functionality. I want to program the machine to record specified commercial free wild feeds from my C-Band Dish. This programming information doesn't appear in their subscription data base.
Free software (as in beer) is available for the Tivo which will allow mpeg capture and transfer to a PC. An ethernet adapter is also required. These are hacks that aren't supported by Tivo. I understand that the latest Tivo OS release will encrypt the mpegs on Tivo's hard drive to discourage copying. Who needs this crap anyhow! There's no reason for it.
The Wintv PVR PCI card by Hauppauge looks very interesting and seems to do everything that I want it to do. The retail price is $249 USD and street price is around $209 USD. A PC of course is required to host the card and to provide hard drive storage. The captured mpeg2 files can made into DVDs or SVCDs etc.
For the moment I'm using SVHS to archive my favorite shows (Startrek Enterprise) with plans on converting to XSVCD format which I can watch on my DVD player. Direct digital capture, of course, would be better than capturing from tape.
I have the direcTivo model, and I cannot deal to watch normal cable or satellite TV without it. It is another of those tools that you dont appreciate until you have it, or have to go without. Just think of your TV without the remote, and how much of a pain that was (if you are old enough, or your TV was).
I cant say enough good things about TiVo.. they must have some kind of subliminal ads/messages in their menus- but that is ok with me as long as I am still happy with it. Dual tuner is pretty sweet as well.. watch one thing while recording the other... I think they are making cable dual tuner boxes now.
im rambling, have a good one.
I love my replay. I have the replay 2000 - an older model now, but I love it to death. There is no monthly subscription fee like there is for tivo.
The replay can be hacked, another hard drive added to double the amount of recording time. I've never had any problems with it. The replay 4000 looks especially cool.
Rocks. I know - no linux, but seriously if you read /. then you're the type of person who wants a VCR on 'roids. That is a Replay box.the Tivo is lower and more moron oriented.
A friend of mine got a Tivo to my chagrin. He returned it 2 weeks later and got a replay. He's been happy since.
Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
You can archive mpeg files from a ReplayTV unit. The only problem is that you have to pull out the drive.
If you get a pair of 100GB drives, you could swap them every time one gets about full (probably once a month) and archive the shows you want to save.
Or just get one 100GB drive, and put the original back in for while you're archiving--less convenient, but cheaper.
Here are a bunch of resources for ReplayTV:
The AVS discussion forum. This is the leading site for discussion of ReplayTV. They also have a TiVo forum.
The ReplayTV Hacking Project at SourceForge.
A site for hacking the ReplayTV Remote Control
extract_rtv, a tool for extracting the MPEG files from the ReplayTV
This sort of thing is asked all the time in the Tivo and Replay forums at avsforum.com. You'll have to filter out the posers and the zealots (not like on Slashdot, with it's high concentration of well informed, balanced, mature and non-dogmatic dialog) but there's far more well-informed PVR information there than will be found here.
Arguments can be made for or against either companies long-term viability and trying to guess now who will win is probably futile. Both will likely last at least until their current models become obsoleted by newer ones, either their own or someone elses so whatever you buy today you'll probably feel the need to replace soon no matter what happens to the company. Best advice is to find the one the features you like and buy it.
A feature comparison from someone who owns both.
I have a ReplayTV 2020 (which I intend to soon upgrade with a larger hard drive). When I bought it, I didn't realize how much it would change my TV viewing experience. I've programmed it to record all the shows I'm interested in watching, so when I feel like watching TV, instead of channel surfing, I watch something off the disk. And I never watch commercials.
I think ReplayTV has several advantages to consider carefully:
* There is no monthly fee. I've heard of people buying units for as little as $199 (with a $100 rebate!) on closeout, so you don't always pay more than you would with TiVo for the base hardware.
* There is a 30-second skip button and 8-second instant replay button on the remote. This didn't seem like a big deal when I bought it, but it is incredibly useful. It is thanks to these buttons that I never watch commercials. I remember back when I used fast forward with a VCR on recorded shows, and this is just so much better.
* My.ReplayTV.com lets you access your box over the Internet. If I'm on a trip but have Internet access, I can log in and delete unwanted shows to make space, set new shows to record, and see what I have. This is especially important if you are running low on disk space.
I'm sure TiVo has its own advantages, but I'll leave them to a TiVo owner.
- PVR - record TV to hard drive, pause live TV etc.
- basic local programming guide
- advanced local programming guide (recommendations, sophisticated
search etc.)
- modular component fits well into home AV system
Anti-Features of TiVo:- monthly fee
- some tracking of user activity
A point about computers - we all have different experiences and setups - I have a Mac as my main desktop, and a low-end PC as a multimedia machine that sits next to my television. So I never have to worry about running a PVR on my desktop computer.So what I look for in a PVR is features 1 and 2. I don't care about 3 and 4 and I don't want antifeatures 1 and 2.
For PVR, basically, again to my way of thinking, you need a PC with reasonable monitor, moderate CPU and memory requirements, because the sound card and video card will do all the compute intensive stuff (e.g. MPEG-2 encode/decode) in dedicated hardware. Then just pick a suitable sized hard drive and then "all" you need is:
There are many options for PVR software on Windows. There are also lots of ongoing project related to television listings and PVR functionality, particularly of course for Linux.
On the subject of standardized TV listing formats, the one I know of is XMLTV
http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~epa98/work/apps/xmltv/
there are lots of TV guides to scrape information from e.g.
UK TV guide http://www.tvtv.co.uk/ German TV guide http://www.tvtv.de/
As for PVR and related projects, here is a list from my bookmarks
Mac TV Reminder http://members.home.nl/vissering/Shareware.html#T
Mac BTV http://www.btv.org.uk/
WinVCR http://www.cinax.com/Products/winvcr.html
LinuxVCR http://hyvatti.iki.fi/~jaakko/linuxvcr.html
LinuxTV http://linuxtv.org/
LinuxVDR (video disk recorder) http://www.cadsoft.de/people/kls/vdr/download.htm
Kvdr http://www.s.netic.de/gfiala/
Hauppage WinTV-PVR http://www.hauppauge.com/html/wintvpvr_datasheet.
ATI All-in-Wonder Radeon http://www.ati.com/na/pages/products/pc/aiw_radeo
preview article about Bell Expressvu Canada's PVR service http://www.cedmagazine.com/ced/2001/0401/04e.htm
I can assemble a web page on these topics, if there is interest.
If you've been following the press, you'll see a distinct difference in attitude between TiVo and ReplayTV corporate marketing. TiVo seems to be working carefully to avoid upsetting the TV networks. When ReplayTV came out with a 30-second skip button for avoiding commercials and TV networks complained, TiVo said they would never include such a feature. Now the new generation of Replay boxes goes even further and will automatically skip commercials on playback. And taking it a step further, Replay 4000 units will even let you send shows to other boxes over the Internet (granted, they limit the number of copies you can make to keep from getting sued, and they probably also encrypt the MPEG files for the same reasons).
So while TiVo got a big boost from the open source world because they used Linux instead of a proprietary OS, I think ReplayTV is more in touch with the attitude of the community.
Posts are in fact almost never deleted. Threads are sometimes locked when they turn into flamewars or get excessively idiotic, but they're still available for reading and searching.
One thing though is that stock talk is generally prohibited in the Tivo forum because such threads are often started by or hijacked by short sellers looking to spread anti-Tivo rumors and FUD. But such threads are usually only locked, not deleted.
It comes with an nVidia remote, which is such a cool feature. Unfortunately, according to this TV Tuner Video Card Roundup from AnandTech, the PVR software included with the ATI All In Wonder board is a lot better than nVidia's.
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What's more, the service is emminently hackable so if they really did go down it wouldn't be hard to build a listings service that kept the unit functionality going in spite of a company closure. Several people have claimed to hack this already, though code is not readily available last I checked (for obvious reasons). Either way, I've got my daily calls going over my ethernet network, so it wouldn't be hard to sniff out the necessary bits or put some work into documenting the MFS partition formats and inserting it directly from a source like XMLTV.
So, for a fun project and damn useful toy, grab yourself a 20 hour Tivo cheap (see AVS TiVo Forums for pointers to cheap deals at Wal-Mart, Target, etc.), a big harddrive (most any 5400 rpm will do), and a hard drive bracket and ethernet adapter (here's a good tutorial). Then have fun with a device that's both well suited to the task (stable, nice tv based user interface, very sharp picture) and gives you a chance to sink your teeth into some fun hacks.
FWIW, I've been spending a lot of time hacking up my own media-box project of late and I really think that it isn't yet a viable option. Dual booting Debian/WinME with a AIW Radeon and SB Live Platinum 5.1 gives you the ability to do everything a TiVo can and more, but the interface, stability, and interoperability leave a lot to be desired. On the up side, its great to be able to play DivX, MP3, Emulators, etc. in the living room A/V system. Wonderful as a system oriented towards archived playback, music, and games, but don't buy one thinking its going to be nearly as useful in place of a TiVo.
... rjs
monthly fee: So buy the lifetime service.
some tracking of user activity: Replay tracks the same thing Tivo does, anonymous aggregate viewing data. The only difference is Tivo lets you opt-out of their data gathering, ReplayTV doesn't. It's all in their privacy policies.
TiVo is inexpensive, extremely hackable, TiVo has been forthcoming with information on how to do this, and TiVo is Linux based.
Supposedly there's free TV listings avalible for tivo someplace, can anybody fill in on this?
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A particularly idiotic feature of the Panasonic Showstoppers is their occasional tendency to mistake weak or abnormal signals for Macrovision and refuse to allow them to be recorded, buffered, or watched. This can happen even on signals that don't seem to be weak at all. Panasonic whines that it's a difficult problem to diagnose because it's rare (which it may be) but it could be easily fixed if Panasonic wasn't bending over for content providers. All they'd have to do is make their system handle macrovision the same way the others do which is record the show then reproduce the macrovision on playback.
That ReplayTV hasn't insisted Panasonic ditch this stupidity blows a hole in the "Replay will fight for the consumer" theory that's been suggested here.
I found the remote and menus much more
intuitive on the Tivo.
One little example:
The Tivo has a TV (&/or stereo) power button.
On the Replay you first change the remote's
mode to TV, then hit "power".
No big deal to anyone who's worked a multi
device remote control, but even my mother
inlaw can work the Tivo.
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