TiVo Service Cost Rising
evil_one writes: "Shortly after the article on ReplayTV mods, comes this story about TiVo cost increases." A 30% increase in the cost of TiVo service will probably affect a lot of readers -- and might just make the hassle of a homebrewed PVR a little more attractive. Of course, TiVo service is what makes a TiVo more attractive than a plain recorder anyhow.
What is TiVo service anyhow? Is there anything specific in the service that you can't code into a homebrewed version?
Couldn't one create a distributed PC client that would compile the TV listings from around the world (Maybe leeching content off of TVGuide.com).
Change the dial-up information to your dial-up account (if anyone still has one of those... and if you don't $9.95 for NetZero is still cheaper than TiVO or ReplayTV's subscription costs).
Just the added note... Could you imagine a beauwolf cluster of TiVO's?
Seems like this should spure a rise in the hacked TiVo market...I've seen it done. You can get free Tivo and DirectTV for life with a little technical know-how and some extra components. Copy-protection going right out the window with DirectTV/TiVo comin in for free...
Your signatures belong to me.
...for a limited time, the cost of a lifetime subscription has dropped from $250 to $200. Maybe they're trying to get people to switch to lifetime service. It potentially means less money for TiVo in the long run, but a shot in the arm right now.
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
I was just looking at the TiVO web page recently and noticed that they were pushing the version 2 of the recorder. (With USB ports for future expansion)
My question is why not Firewire?
Having an external firewire connection to me makes MUCH more sense in that they can use to for additional storage for drives. They can also make the device communicate with a PC easier where it acts as a "camera"; of course these very same suggestions might get them into "hotter" water with the Media companies..
If they had a Tivo that had the firewire features, the rate increase may be worth it... but as of now... nope...
--
Time is on my side
There are basically two options available for me as a TiVo subscriber: $9.95/month (now $12.95/month), or $199 (or $249 off-season) for a lifetime subscription, which is the lifetime of the TiVo, not the subscriber. So of course, it only makes sense to get the month-to-month subscription, as who can predict if they will still have the same TiVo box 15-19 months from now?
Also, TiVo is BLEEDING money. They have never had a profitible quarter-- losing between $50 MILLION and $34 MILLION net for every quarter that they have posted so far. According to their published #'s, without some serious additional financing, TiVo will be out of cash in a year. I can't really blame them for increasing their service fees...
Of course, TiVo service is what makes a TiVo more attractive than a plain recorder anyhow.
What service is that exactly? TV Guide? The one I get free off the satellite dish? Even on the standalone boxes (of which I still own one) you can get TV guide date for $20-30 a year. The only "service" received from TiVo is based in their blocking my choice of where to get TV guide data from. In other words: In support of a poor business plan. I only paid for one year of service with my nearly new DirecTiVo, on the assumption that the company will go out of business and I will lose my already limited reluctance to use the existing hacks to avoid paying for the DTiVo.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
b) You simply cannot match the features (and AI) currently offered by the TiVo service by attempting to hack into various online listing databases..
c) Once your piehole is shut, remember to breathe through your nose.
It just might make the hassle of a homebrewed weblog a little more attractive. Of course, Slashdot service is what makes Slashdot more attractive than a plain weblog anyhow.
For my household, I see no sensible alternative here. We had a bargain, but... they are altering the bargain. I will pray that they do not alter it any further.
however, these are locked to the UNIT itself.
There is a website that will transfer the service from a pre-existing TiVo to a new one. Here is the direct link, they have other services as well, such as removing the nag screens (for people who don't want the service, such as myself), memory upgrades, harddrive upgrades, etc. Well worth bookmarking.
SealBeater
-- Its survival of the fittest...and we got the fucking guns!!!
Hmmm...that link doesn't really convey what the main page said. Try just going here and scroll down.
SealBeater
-- Its survival of the fittest...and we got the fucking guns!!!
"It's a reflection of the cost to deliver the service on an ongoing basis," a TiVo spokeswoman told Reuters. "We have delivered multiple upgrades and new features, and haven't raised prices."
Recently, I've had my trusty TiVo reboot twice while recording shows, give me VERY noticable compression glitches, and a slew of other lesser bugs. All of these problems seem to have happened after the 2.5.x upgrade.
Hell, yeah, TiVo needs 30% more of my money -- they've given me at least 30% more bugs!!!
Anyway, I've been an avid TiVo fan and I evangelize the service to all of my friends and family, but now, it's getting too expensive for most people to "risk" trying it. That was always the biggest obstacle to getting anyone to try a TiVo: "Well, you mean I have to drop $300 on the machine AND pay $10/month to use it??? No way... the free TV guide in the newspaper and my old VCR work just fine!"
As for myself, I think I'll just look into the RePlay boxes (or whatever they're called) since at least I'll get some updated hardware for the monthly cost...
Pinball, arcade video, tech and more: www.micsaund.com
I think it would have been better to say TiVo's service cost is rising from $9.95/mo to $12.95/mo. It sounds far better than "increase by 30%." Its only another $3/mo, and that's only another $36/yr. I'm pretty sure most subscribers, myself included, can handle another $36.
I won't homebrew my own because I am not just paying $12.95/mo for TV Guide data. TiVo has a lot of power in its software to handle that data. It seems to me that if you want a peice of software to record TV shows automatically (based on what you like), track when shows move, allow you to watch a show while its still recording, continually record liveTV, and update itself (to fix bugs and add new features) without any intervention on your part what-so-ever, then have fun writing it. If you want to do that, fine. Stop wasting time by posting and go do it. I, on the other hand, bought TiVo and pay for its service because its extremely convenient. It only took me about 15 minutes to set it up. How long is your homebrew going to take? I get free software upgrades to an already excellent UI/system while I'm sleeping. Can you code in your sleep?
I don't personally don't watch TV on my computer, nor will I put a computer in my living room so that I can. You get a lot for $12.95/mo. Not just guide data. You get a system supported by a company well deserving of another $3/mo. (BTW, a company I now understand why sent out TiVo Window clings last month...)
Before posting "What does TiVo service offer?" just howzabout going to their website and looking it up for yourself? They do a lot better job then having a bunch of /.'ers put it in their own words. www.tivo.com
Next before saying "I can do that!" no, you really can't. Not in a nice box with a good remote and trick-play and quality recording with some exemplarily expert system software all hassle-free. Yes you can cobble together some Frankenstein of a solution that will get you 70%, mebbe 80% of the way there but it's those final few steps that make the whole thing a pleasure to use and not some annoyingly geeky custom half-solution.
Will we see these stand-alone devices superceded by PC-based ones? Mebbe, mebbe not. First off folks like to watch TV on their TVs, not on their computers (yes some of you don't, I'm talking the majority.) They want to sit on their couch with a remote in hand without cables strung across the house from the PC and be able to click the shows they want with minimum hassle. That doesn't describe most of the PC-based systems that we're hearing about.
Next there's the question is it preferable to make your great-as-a-PC PC do double-duty as a PVR? Sure the network connection is already there but in most cases the rest of the wiring (TV-in, TV-out, Audio out, IR-in, etc.) is a major PITA. Then there's just the hassle of having a heavy-load application running on your un-optimized hardware. Do-able? Mostly. Worth it? Likely not IMHO.
Lastly comes the question of the listings. This is where TiVo and the like really differ from a VCR - they're SMART. That smartness is based on having those current detailed listings customized to your local system & tier and no, that information isn't easy to come by. Yes it might be possible to try and snarf the listings out of TV Guide or someone but that's brittle and if enough folks did it they'd soon find ways to break it. Given that along with these listings come software updates and tech support and such it's likely that they're not all that bad a deal.
So - is TiVo gonna make it? Probably. They just got another round of financing, have lots of investment from the right folks, seem to be doing well in spite of the uphill battle of teaching folks just what their product is. The price hike isn't a great thing but with the lifetime-offer price still being offered for a short time that takes the sting out and once folks go TiVo they really don't want to go back, will pony up. Next fall we'll likely see more companies coming out with more licensed models and possibly another design but for now its TiVo & Replay.
I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
Am I the only one here who bought lifetime service? When I got it, people thought i was crazy for paying for it when tivo could go out of businiess any day now. That was 2 years ago, and the lifetime has already paid for itself (in terms of monthly fees), and I've still got the same tivo (although now with 200 hours, a network card, and a memory upgrade). The service is absolutely worth it.
Here is the orignal (informal) announcement with some Q and A:
. ph p?s=&threadid=47571
http://www.tivocommunity.com/tivo-vb/showthread
Hmm, kinda. The parts are there, but no-one has put them together in a neat package yet. That's probably since Linux video software has really taken off in just the last 6 months.
There's mplayer which is a great player for any video-format out there. It can even play DVD's, although it doesn't have menu support like Ogle. It can also rip DVD:s to MPEG-4 (a.k.a DivX) using a couple of different encoders. Xvid is my favorite open-source MPEG-4 encoder, it's also got good reviews on Doom9 (good place for DivX info!).
For the TV-in recording part you can use a $50 WinTV card and the Video4Linux drivers. On top of that you need an audio-video capture application that can use encoders such as Xvid and Lame to encode to MPEG-4 (video) and MP3 (audio). I use NVrec. If you try the NVrec suite, use the DIVX4rec app (with the Xvid library instead of divx4linux which isn't maintained anymore). On my P-III 500MHz I can compress 29.97 Hz (NTSC) 320x240 in real-time to 800 kbit/s (video) + 80 kbit/s (audio). It takes about 5 hours to make a one-pass encoding of a DVD, so with a faster CPU it's probably possible to do real-time de-interlacing and encoding of 640x480 video.
A drawback is that NVrec is a command-line app for recording, I'm working on a patch for real-time preview on Matrox G400 TV-out. Or if you have a fast enough computer you might be able to run mplayer on the file as it is being recorded. This would allow for Tivo-like pause and resume. It might be a problem with AVI files from NVrec though since I don't think they're streamable.
Now, to put all of this together you need some kind of control application. That's not really that hard to write compared to all the other pieces (mplayer, xvid, nvrec). I've been working on one for the last couple of months, and have an alpha version that is usuable. It only supports the Matrox G400 for TV-out, and is a little crude, but it works good enough that I have it hooked up to my TV for everyday use. It's controllable by a remote control (see Lirc), using a very simple text-menu system to view tv, play avi/mpeg/mp3/dvd, record tv-in and rip DVD's. I'm getting ready to put it up on Sourceforge as Freevo within the next couple of weeks.
The application is written in Python which is great for stuff like this. Once the basic stuff is done, it might be cool to make a plugin architecture where you could interface to other stuff. For instance, with OSD (on screen display), it is easy to add things like new mail notification while you're watching TV. Or new Slashdot headlines, ICQ chat notif, phone caller ID interface, www control, etc. And, of course, an interface to some kind of tv-guide.
I haven't really found any other complete applications like this. Not that I've looked that hard, I'm always looking for an excuse to write software. mplayer might end up with all these feaures eventually, it is improving at an incredible rate at the moment.
Freevo - Linux Multimedia Jukebox
I'm curious as to why anyone would buy the "lifetime" plan. It's not going to last your lifetime, you know, only the lifetime of your box, or of the company, whichever comes first - and from what I've heard it seems a decent bet that will make the monthly fee cost you less in the long run.
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Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
Hey,
First off, I don't think that $12.95 a month is a lot worse than $9.95 a month. When I get a TiVo I will happily pay that much.
The OT part: I want to get a DirectTV thing with a DirectTiVo thing. The local stores either have NO iea what I'm talking about (Best Buy) or think I should spend $750 on special dishes and receivers (Audio King). Not to mention I need to add a few HDDs (;
You can get DirectTV for practically free after rebates if you get just the standard receiver and a standard dish - the receiver+dish cost $50 anyway and there's free installation. I understand that a DirectTiVo setup would cost more - but $700 more?
The only DirectTiVo receivers I saw anywhere are the pretty expensive Sony ones at Audio King, who are known for price-inflation. Best Buy had 'Ultimate TV' which they claim is the same thing as TiVo, but (A) Says 'Microsoft' on it, and (B) lacks features I want and contains features I don't need.
I see a lot of comments from people mentioning DirectTiVo - what's the deal with the thing? Any decent online resources (TiVo.com didn't help much)? Is it REALLY that expensive?
In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is kinky.
It's 3 dollars. Really folks, 3 Dollars. :-) That's one less bag of potatoe chips you can buy a month. Let's face it, there is such a thing as inflation, et cetera, eventually they had to increase the price. Three years without a price hike is pretty freaking good!
Derek Greene
I can't afford a TiVo myself, although I would love one. I do have a software solution on a PC however.
I use Showshifter from http://www.showshifter.com to watch, record and pause tv. Add Digiguide from http://www.digiguide.co.uk to this, and you now have the option to click on a program and choose "record in showshifter". Using an ATI all-in-wonder 128 card I can output the whole lot to my TV, and showshifter can use my remote control. Showshifter can also play back DVD's, CD's and MP3's, although it does need some improvement.
The cost of this? Five pounds per year for digiguide. The main drawback is that this software is only available under windows, but I do most of my work on other computers running linux and irix, so it's not too big a problem.
All in all I get slightly more functionality than a TiVo, but at a cost of being more complicated and having far more wires. I also hate to think of the total cost including the PC, but I already had that. I think what I really want is not a TiVo, but a PC in a low profile black case that can sit on top of my video. Armed with showshifter and digiguide ported to linux, I would end up with a far more functional box. I think I have just given myself a project to work on, haven't I.....
Steve.
A latent existence
It's staying at $249. So now, the lifetime pays for itself in about 19 months as opposed to 25. :-)
TiVo will certainly still be around in 2 years. I've done everything but print up my own brochures to explain just how wonderful it is to all of my friends, and most people who've taken the plunge are the same way.
~Philly
The only problem with relying on TiVo and their automatic software updates is the same problem with any proprietary format. Everyone knows about the problem with Web services and keeping your vital company data on somebody else's platform. What happens if they go out of business? What happens is they decide you shouldn't have access any more because of a bill dispute?
Same with TiVo. While they may be more benign now, what happens if they go under, or get bought up? An automatic update overnight and boom -- no more access to those shows you had saved from 2 years ago.
Most TV isn't worth seeing in the first place, let alone saving, but if I were to roll my own, it would be for that reason.
Infuriate left and right
Remember, you aren't getting a dumb box that works the same way forever. You get the benifits of the software improvements Tivo develops. A priority queue for season passes, keyword wishlists that can auto-record, and VBR encoding have all been added since I bought my Tivo.
what does maintain the unit upgrades mean? software? replay updates software all the time on the replay tv units. it just gets pooped into the machine whenever the box phones home. theres no subscription, no tracking to a name (they are starting to gather info, but theres never any tie back to a particular user - other than perhaps caller id, but somehow since its dialing in thru uunet, i doubt they can easily get that)
Free Mac Mini
Free Mac Mini
For my household, I see no sensible alternative here. We had a bargain, but... they are altering the bargain. I will pray that they do not alter it any further.
I don't know why the parent was moderated as funny, it is a fair statment. However, TiVo is a company that is in business to make money, in order to do this they provide a service. Like most business, they must occasionally raise prices to keep up with the raising costs of doing business. This is especially important to a company like TiVo, which has yet to turn a profit. I personally feel $12.95 a month is perfectly reasonable for easy TV recording, but to be honest, I own two TiVo's and paid for the lifetime subscription on both, and this is what I recommend.
"Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
-Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development
Sorry to tell you, but yes, you're paying $13 just for guide data. Everything is else is just software that already exists on your Tivo that gets magically enabled because you're paying. It's like having the "Search" feature built in MS Windows disabled (greyed out) because I am not paying $xx/month for it.
as far as the software downloads, they fit in two categories in my book:
1. bug fixes, which should be free
2. new features, which if you really really want, you should just pay a one time upgrade fee (think of it as buying a windows upgrade) and not having to pay a flat (but sometimes encreasing, apparently) fee to get them.
Just my $0.02 - if paying $13/month for guide data is acceptable to you, great for you and great for TiVo! It's certainly their right to do this, but I will not take any part of it...
For quite some time I've wanted to make a homebrew PVR. In fact, I shelled out quite a bit attempting to make one. Here are the basic problems:
1) TIVO and ReplayTV technologies all have built in MPEG encoder/decoder cards. In the US, such cards simply do not exist. There are MPEG decoder cards, but they are barely supported in Linux.
2) TV-OUT technology simply doesn't exist in the US for Linux. The most promising technology is with the ATI-AIW card. I have heard some folks have mixed success using a framebuffer but in framebuffer mode, all video acceleration is lost.
3) It takes an _aweful_ lot of processor power to perform real-time MPEG-encoding. Larger processors also bring high heat and require more cooling and bigger cases.
4) Cost is just enormous. An ATI AIW is around $250 and then throw in another $250 for a HD, then throw in the cost of the other pieces and you end up with a solution costing well over 1K. CD-R only inflates that number.
As long as all manufactors are keeping the specs to their hardware closed, homebrewed PVRs are just not possible. Hardware is desperately needed to complete the solution.
ATI was working on a set-top motherboard but I do not know if it was targetted at consumers or OEMs. Maybe some enterprising hardware geek out there will whip up a custom StrongARM-based single board with built in S-Video out and MPEG encoding/decoding...
int func(int a);
func((b += 3, b));
You know, no one is *forcing* you to get the service.
I bought a 20 hour Tivo in December, upgraded it to 80 hours on my own, and have been using it without service since then. I still think it's great!
Sure, service would be nice, I would get to see the program names and scroll through tv guides, but I'm still happy without it. TIvo records the same programs for me every day (I set it manually to repeat), and it does perfectly well for me.
Maybe when I start making some more money, I'll justify paying another monthy fee to some company, but not now. I'm already fed up with those cable, telephone, etc. companies.
ReplayTV doesn't have a subscription cost.
Not that I don't wonder about a company with no continuing revenue stream, but fwiw, there's no cost. (I have a Tivo.)
El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
BASIC cable costs me $45/mo from Comcast.
I'm seriously considering cancelling it. I don't watch enough TV to justify $500/yr.
Too bad there's no real "basic" option (other than broadcast) at a more reasonable price.
i don't know about you, but the thought of relying on windows to stay up more than half a day is not good
That's stupid... I've had awesome months-long uptimes with XP. So have my friends who run it. Yeah, 98/me blew. XP is kickass. Get over your zealotry.
El Karma: excelente(principalmente la suma de moderación hecha a los comentarios de los usuarios)
I wasn't pissed. My cable company raises their prices every 6 months. This is the first price increase I've gotten from Tivo. I just forked over the $200 for the lifetime sub and was done with it.
A while ago, I did a quick NPV calculation on whether you ought to do the monthly scheme or the lifetime subscription. It was a while ago, but used $250 for the liftime sub and $10 for monthly. It also did yearly, but that option has gone away.
Anyway, although I didn't count the end value of the box at the end of the lifetime sub, the point at which the two plans cost the same amount was about 18 months. I'd think, with the new scheme, that the break even point would be shorter, say, 14 months or so. Notably, the yearly sub never made sense.
End result: If you're planning on keeping that specific TiVo for more than a year and a half, you're probably better off with the lifetime sub.
Besides, 30% of not much is even less....
ceci n'est pas un sig.
A drawback is that NVrec is a command-line app for recording, and this makes it a better app than any of the other X-junk.
Why would anyone want to cripple their home-brew PVR with a recording app that requires X,Gnome or KDE and lost of other eye-candy bloat? Hell Nvrec gives me the ability to make a TiVoesque server in my basement on a horribly slow and inefficent P-II333 (Gawd, anyone use this crippled old delapoated stuff anymore? --JK)
to record my shows, and I select them from a web browser on my webpad for viewing, adding what to record, etc...
I hope that Nvrec never ever will have a X interface... Command line is perfect.. If you want an X interface, make a program that controls NVrec and leave the bloat of a GUI away from my favorite linux recording program.
(Note this is why Mplayer is better than any of the X players.. No bloat.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Oh you are wrong as it only supports the Matrox for Tv out.
mplayer will happily use a Hollywood+ or Creative DXR3 mpeg decoder card. and that will increase the quality of your video out abut 10 fold.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
It was modded as funny because it's a Star Wars allusion. Darth Vader to Lando Calrissian.
Okay, I feel stupid. My wife, who got it, is administering the Clue Stick now.
"Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
-Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development
It would be a trivial operation to have the OS report back storage space and check if that is in line with the model (derived from the serial number.) While TiVo has let lots of hacking go on they've never (to my knowledge) in any way communicated this was something they supported or wouldn't shut down the day they felt the cost/benefit ratio was in their favor.
I'm not saying they're likely to but don't fool yourself; tomorrow they could cut those folks off, release a patch that limits machines to their proper size, does checks on the OS to make sure it isn't hacked, etc. Sure it would piss off many of TiVo's most ardent supporters but remember TiVo is going for the consumer electronics model of business, not the computer end of it.
I'm likely to buy an "upgraded" TiVo myself at some point but I'll do so knowing full well that it's at my own risk and there are no guarantees (like the 3rd party folks won't fold up 30 minutes after the shit hits the fan?)
I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
I got my Tivo last April. Based on the cost of monthly subscription versus lifetime membership at that time, I decided that a lifetime membership was the best course. Basically, I would have to use/own the Tivo for 20 months for that investment to be worthwhile.
Well I've totally fallen in love with Tivo, and now have only 9 months left for the membership to have paid for itself. Will I still be using it then? I don't doubt it for a second. Tivo isn't going anywhere, not with their partnership with Sony, plus the pending merger of DirecTV and EchoStar.
Is it wise to get a lifetime subscription today? I think that even today that would be a good deal, as it safeguards you against further price increases, but YMMV. Do the math and determine if you think you will be using the device for at least two years--usually a good bet with most devices.
BTW, even if Tivo were to fold, it would not mean we would all have useless Tivo boxes. On the Tivo forums one of the Tivo techs has made it clear that in the event of Tivo's demise, he will personally provide the backdoor code to "free" the Tivo from the subscription services. Presumably this means the Tivo would function just as it does today but without any further software updates.
Hard drives are physical devices and while they may test ok from a storage device perspective, that doesn't necessarily mean they can push data at a steady enough data rate for the DirecTiVO to record two data streams and play back a third.
If this was Wednesday night a couple weeks ago with a DirecTiVO, it wasn't your TiVO that flaked out, but DirecTV making a mess of the local channels again. They are getting so aggressive in their anti-piracy measures that it's starting to affect paying customers.
Also if you're on DirecTV, you may be seeing compression glitches that are the result of DirecTV's aggressive compression. With DirecTiVO, the unit just stores the data stream from the satellite and doesn't recompress the data. Those glitches are the result of signal errors (very rare) and severe bit rate compression (quite common.) Alas, the bit rate problem won't go away as long as DTV is trying to push so many channels without having a lot more bandwidth available.
A final possibility if you are getting periods of jerky/pausing playback is that the garbage collection/reindexing tasks are running. After a few weeks of comparing the logs to the periods when I have playback problems I've noticed that GC/reindex of large drives takes 10-20 minutes, during which playback is unreliable. The unit is smart enough to schedule these tasks to run when no recordings are scheduled, so your recordings are safe.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Supposedly MS will be releasing XP SP1 by the end of the year, containing Freestyle software. Freestyle lets you control Windows from a remote control, presenting a special UI and features just for that. The features included DVD playback, etc, and also television recording, pausing, just like the TiVO. Basically, MS disbanded it's ultimate TV, and sent the developers to either the Freestyle camp or the XBox camp.
At Best Buy, on sale, the day after Xmas. I got the Hughes unit, but other units are generally about the same price or even sometimes cheaper. The Hughes unit is model # GXCEBOT, Phillips has the DSR6000, and there are others. Your local Best Buy should carry it even if they haven't the slightest what it is, or you can get it from various online outfits. Check out American Satellite for good info. Prices seem OK too.
ehintz
Tivo.com has links to some stores, including http://www.americansatellite.com/products/list.asp ?affl=NT99120101&id=106&CAT=13306&mfg=philips from their 'specials' page.
I got 2 phillips DSR6000s from them. One was $99.99, then I waited a couple weeks, and the price went up to $109.99. Still a good price, considering the walmart down the street had them in stock for $399.99. "No, we don't match prices from the internet!" they cheerily replied when I asked about buying one at a reduced cost. No wonder they had an inch of dust on them - they'll NEVER shift them at that price.
You say "what's the deal with the thing?" The deal is it's a great replacement reciever if you have DirecTV already. It's really INEXPENSIVE actually, compared to retail standalone Tivo devices.
creation science book
(i don't know about you, but the thought of relying on windows to stay up more than half a day is not good)
:) and get a dedicated device which is well-engineered, simple, intuitive, easy to use and solid and stable.
Funny, my W2k box pretty much stays up non-stop. The uptime is pretty much identical to any Linux machines running in the office.
I'm surprised there arn't as many homemade projects around
I'm not surprised at all. Could be the reason there aren't that many home-brewed products is that one you get outside of 'software only' hacking most of the opensource crowd just can't get involved.
You want to put an 'old' CPU in there? To run video recording, email, net, dvd, cd, mp3 and other stuff? How 'old' a machine would actually run all that at a usable performance? If you're one of those "I run everything in the world on my P90 and Lunix 1.1 kernel and 8 meg of RAM on a 400 meg drive and it FLIES compared to Windows" peopel good luck to you. Those of us in the real world will simply pay $100 for a DirecTivo machine
creation science book
Essentially it's a TiVo with expanded capabilities. The CEO is from WebTV and has a good track record, on the other hand they've a late start into the market and are up against some powerfull licensees of TiVo & RePlay's technologies.
Its expected on the market for next winter's buying season if it finds partners.
I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
About 5 this morning, i was surfing the tv and came across a channel that seemed to be trasferring tivo information.
The screen had vertical black bars on the left. The right was divided vertically into 2 frames which were filled with black and white square, surely a binary stream. Between the data frames, was a band with a text message something like "this channel is part of the tivo service".
Has anyone else seen this? Is it an alternative to dialup? Does using it eliminate the need to transmit anything back to tivo? Is it free?