802.11b on your Tivo
Otto writes: "Those who don't regularly read the Tivo Community Forums may not know that a 802.11b wireless adapter for the Tivo, called AirNet, is in the works. It's being made by jafa, who also created the TurboNet card, a similar device to the TivoNet adapters available at 9thTee but faster. Long story short, he's auctioning off 4 beta boards of the AirNet adapter for the Tivo and giving the proceeds to the Elf Foundation, a group which brings Home Theater to ill children by setting up mini-theaters in children's hospitals nationwide. Good fun techie geek stuff, and for charity too! You can't beat that. The auction is here on ebay." Looks like the guy's home page is silicondust.com.
Troll 37 of 131 from the annals of the Troll Library .
tivo to visor?
and CmdrTaco will sing the requiem.
Tivooooooooooo
youuuuu areee the wind beneath my wings
+ Donald Gunth
+ Email: dgunth@quicktek.net
"Caffeine is the greatest lubricant ever created." -ESR
There was a young man from St. Rose whose love life was so full of woes he loved sixty-nine he'd do it all the time but always got shit on his nose
Let's analyze this scenario for a moment: Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda proposes to his long time girlfriend Kathleen Fent on February 14, 2002. Now lets assume that this proposal was accompanied with an engagement ring, which can be a very pricy item. Then on March 1, Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda drops a bombshell on the Slashdot community with news of a subscription service:
"For some time now we have been developing a unique subscription system that we hope will make our users and advertisers happy." -CmdrTaco, 03.02.2002
This subscription service, that had been developed "for some time," is nothing more then a counter script and a PayPal account. Are we to believe that this "Subscription Service" was a long developing site enhancement? Isn't it in fact more likely, that Rob "CmdrTaco" Malda received the first bill of the aforementioned engagement ring, panicked, and developed this hastily put together scheme?
I am not fooled...
Your perfect spelling reveals you to be overqualified.
The goatse guy for president. Win one for the gaper!
This sounds like a product for people with $$$. This sounds like a product for geeks with $$$. This sounds like a product for geeks with $$$ in this isht economy. Hmmm....
yo ho ho, im the pirate troll. suck on my peg leg all you slashdot biiiatches!
Now someone will crack the security and buy Battlefield Earth, pay-per-view!
I need TeePee for my bung-hole.
ARE INFERIOR !!
GENTLEMEN!!
Yeah! I got FP! I am so totally enjoying this FP, and I got it so good! Are you hearing me?
Liberate your mind in two clicks or less.
How long before the MPAA cracks down on the Elf Foundation for unauthorized public viewing of their copyrighted works?
I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
Hmmm. Very interesting. I myself think it's to pay for living quarters for his laotian fuck-boy Twan after Katherine kicked him out.
Flogging 4 items may not take long, so perhaps donate direct to http://www.elfsystems.org instead?
The real issue with /. subscriptions is their contradiction with the fundamental philosophies of this site.
Users provide the stories (with links & research). Readers also moderate the discussions (without this vital moderation the dicussions would be so hard to wade through that they would be pointless).
So, we provide the content, and the moderation which provides the means for discussion... and we are supposed to pay for this? We are supposed to pay to be allowed to do Taco and Friends' job for them?
I find an interesting story, find a couple good background info links, and submit the story. Taco clicks "Accepted", and it goes live. Then he goes back to masturbating to Cowboy Bebop soundtracks, while I moderate his discussion about MY article, so that the site is usable. Again, I'm supposed to pay for this?
+ Donald Gunth
+ Email: dgunth@quicktek.net
"Caffeine is the greatest lubricant ever created." -ESR
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Connectivity allows applications to transparently communicate with other programs or processes, regardless of their location. The key element of connectivity is the network operating system (NOS). NOS provides services such as routing, distribution, messaging, file and print, and network management services. NOS rely on communication protocols to provide specific services. The protocols are divided into three groups: media, transport and client-server protocols. Media protocols determine the type of physical connections used on a network (some examples of media protocols are Ethernet, Token Ring, Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI), coaxial and twisted-pair). A transport protocol provides the mechanism to move packets of data from client to server (some examples of transport protocols are Novell's IPX/SPX, Apple's AppleTalk, Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) and Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile(GOSIP)). Once the physical connection has been established and transport protocols chosen, a client-server protocol is required before the user can access the network services. A client-server protocol dictates the manner in which clients request information and services from a server and also how the server replies to that request (some examples of client- server protocols are NetBIOS, RPC, Advanced Program-to-Program Communication (APPC), Named Pipes, Sockets, Transport Level Interface (TLI) and Sequenced Packet Exchange (SPX))... that I can connect my Tivo to my neighbor's network and force him to watch Pauly Shore movies?
Listen up ye' Linux scallywags! You are an landlubbers and scurvy mouthed bastards whiling away your days sucking cock for sixpence and a mince meat pie! Ye all must go to sea to be real men! YAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRG!!!
There once was a man from Nantucket, whose cock was so long he could suck it while licking his chin he said with a grin if my pussy was an ear i'd fuck it.
I bend the laws of time in space to my very whim! Eat it, bitches!
Liberate your mind in two clicks or less.
Err, why is this such a great thing? I mean, obviously it is - there are people on the forum mentioned above saying that the guy who did this is a "deity" and so forth. But none of them actually seems to have said what they intend to do with wireless, and I have to say it's not obvious to me what a Tivo and a PC could usefully have to say to each other.
Can anyone who knows a bit more about the Tivo enlighten me?
Now this is handy, use a tivo anywhere in the house.. I must go buy one now.
Even not knowing the video format, how hard could it be to hack two tivos such that one broadcasts the data it's storing over the wireless link, and the other stores said data. Combine that with a good antenna, and one guy on the block could provide cable for everyone.
vi is my shepard, I shall not font.
Oh my, I am hot today! I already have three First Posts in this article!!! I will take my first post trophies and put them in my living room, next to my bowling trophies. They will be shiny when I watch TV and eat KFC.
Liberate your mind in two clicks or less.
I might get modded down as a troll for this, but...
Isn't this charity kind of frivolous?
<sarcasm>Forget homeless/starving/victims of war, we need to make sure sick american kids can watch "dude, where's my car?" in surround sound.</sarcasm>
They accept donations here.
(Because I had no idea what is was either.
WTF with this charity stuff? Are the folks designing this board subconsciously feeling guilty for ripping off media companies that they feel they have to donate the proceeds to charity???
When will someone get on the ball and just develop an Ethernet->802.11b adapter that can be pugged in to any device that has standard 10/100 Ethernet jack so it could be put on a Wireless network?
Is this just an impossibility? Am I the only one who thinks this would be a hot seller? I want to buy a new ReplayTV 4000, but I have no desire to run Cat5 to it. I want to eliminate extra wiring hassle from my home theater.
Ah, well - probably just a pipe dream.
I realize that this is a somewhat offtopic question, but does anyone know why 802.11a, or 802.11anything-but-b equipment is not out yet? If I remember correctly, 802.11a goes 54mbps full duplex, as opposed to the current 11mbps on 802.11b.
I don't know about you guys, but the idea that something faster exists and should be accessible is what's keeping me from buying anything wireless right now.
-kwishot
Carl
Vote Libertarian
Hmmmm... My audiotron arrived today and I've been thinking of how best to get network to it. We're also thinking about a TiVo. Altho 802.11b is a neat idea, I think the future is having a 4 to 8 port hub/switch at the home entertainment center tied back with 100BaseT.
These products will need decent bandwidth and I just can't quite seeing juryrigging aerials and pringles cans looking something like tin foil on rabbit ears...
The card itself is just a tivo->PCMCIA(cardbus?) bridge. It should support any flavor wireless you want to stick in it. The enabling factor here is the Prism2 driver software. What would kick some serious ass is if he'd slap on a nic too. That way you could have your tivo and AP in the same box... hack on an antenna and an amp and you'd have a seriously cool broadcasting rig. Keep your power below 1w and nobody's gonna bug you.
I thought it said 802.11 your Taco..
For those that already purchased TivoNet or TurboNet... I read that you can buy the WAP11 from linksys, run the ethernet from your TivoNet/TurboNet into the WAP11, and set it up so that it acts like a client instead of a normal wireless hub... connecting to your real hub. Since I have a couple items in my living room that can be internet connected, I was looking into this. I wonder if you can connect a regular ethernet hub into the WAP11, and then run all your devices into the hub. Or is the WAP11 limited to one IP address negotiation...
WAP11
"And like that
2002-03-06 16:16:38 Beta 802.11b cards for TiVo being auctioned off fo (articles,tv) (rejected)
Posting AC because I have mod points right now....
Just getting rid of the damned phone line would be great. My wife trips over it, my cats chew it, I forget about it. Big pain.
AMCGLTD.COM. Where cats, science fictio
No need to introduce yet-another-interface. Install your favorite RJ45 jack on the back of the tivo. Punch a short length of cat 5 to it and crimp a modular connector to the other end. Plug the modular connector into the one on the Turbonet board. This will maintain the twist. Ribbon cable would not.
Until the TiVo ripping software is a little more advanced and doesn't desync the audio quite as frequently as I have seemed to experianced for the most part (or is it cause I only record in Basic?) a wireless card will be of little value.
My other concern is the TiVo's total lack of security, with my wired network card in my TiVo I can have it behind a firewall or direct linked to my system, wireless TiVo would let anyone and their brother into it.
To be sure, you can configure quite a lot of access point devices as bridges (including the WAP11), but not as both bridges and access points at the same time. Just clarifying.
- Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
With this device and what we already know about the Tivo network, how long will it be until somebody figures out how get in and find out what their boss/mayor/Senator/etc. is really watching when he's up at 1am.
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Firstus postus, beeotchae!!!
Bow down and worship my flatulent resplendence!!!!
pleeeeease?!!!
What about Xenix ?!!!
I say again, if the subject line is funny in and of itslef, why do I have to fill out the comment box?