PVRs Down Under?
mgkimsal2 asks: "My in-laws are leaving tomorrow for Australia and they've become quite fond of our Tivo. They asked if there was any way to get Tivo in Australia, but I'm turning up a blank. It seems that some people are hacking it to work over there, but it's not commercially available. Are there other PVRs commercially available in Australia? Similarly, are there any cool PVR products in other countries we've not seen in the US yet?"
I'm not really into this kind of tv/vcr/pvr thing, but u havent heard of anything like it in the Netherlands yet...
There's various PC cards that give you sort of a poorman's Tivo....but not very appliance like, especially as they require a PC! ;-)
Anyone got any idea if I can hack a Tivo to work okay in Canada?
-psyco
You can bet that countries like Japan and Korea have gadgets which perform similar functions. They've got so many things we've never even heard of this side of the world - which is one of the reasons I intend to move there!
Problem is you probably won't turn up much online since the web pages and such will be in local languages.
I'd like to hear what information anybody has who's been living in those parts for a while.
Today's weirdness is tomorrow's reason why. -- Hunter S. Thompson
There are a number on non TiVo PVR's available in the UK a selelection of which can be found at pvruk . As some of these are non-subscription may be candidates.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered.....my life is my own.
fuck, yr relatives are coming to australia and all they can think about in advance is how they are going to watch television there??? please tell them not to bother coming - after all tv in australia is much like it is in america - full of crap made in someplace called hollywood i happen to have lived in australia without watching tv for the last 12 years - how do i survive? - well, i've learnt to speak to the natives and have a bit of a look around the place - you know go outside every once in a while, go to the beach, the cricket, the pub to watch a band etc. etc. my suggestion in that they save the effort (and us) by staying at home and imbibing the 'real australia' by watching endless reruns of 'crocodile hunter' (did i get that right?) on their beloved tivo cheers mate
Are there any PVRs out there that can be pointed to a custom TV-schedule? I live in Greece, and I could probably get a UK PVR to work over there (same voltage, both PAL, just change the plug), but the issue is TV schedules... Can any of the non-TiVO PVRs be customized in this way?
The very first PVR available in Canada was only released a few months ago, and it is tied to a specific satellite TV system. I would be very surprised if TiVo had a system that worked in Australia.
The annoying part is that all it would take to make a TiVo fully functional up here are the show listings. We use the exact same TV standards as the US. We even get some of the same channels. Yet after all these years, there still isn't TiVo or Replay support for Canada.
Buh.
"Tomorrow's forecast: a few sprinkles of genius with a chance of doom!" - Stewie Griffin
first thing that came to mind was that tridge is australian and did a lot of tivo hacking. a quick google search later (tivo australia) turned up a linux.conf.au link, a pdf about adding ethernet to a tivo and why that's useful for australians.
1 /D ay4/tivo_hacking.pdf
http://marc.merlins.org/linux/linux.conf.au_200
(Result 2 of about 7,610. Search took 0.05 seconds.)
andy
Sony licensed the TiVo software, and has something sort of like TiVo but without the guide data in Japan. I think it is basically a little more than a digital VCR, which is too bad. I think the main problem with overseas markets is the guide data (what is on all the different channels), which can be difficult to get right (as anyone with a TiVo or Replay knows)
Twostep
There are 10 different types of people in this world... those who understand binary, and those who don't.
they come on the same carrier signal so if you can get it then you get sound
is this what some saleman told you ?
regards
John Jones
A recent story on slashdot provides a few suggestions on how to use your pc to do that. Should work in australia too.
It's all referenced here: http://marc.merlins.org/linux/linux.conf.au_2001/D ay4/InsideTivo.html
It's also all pretty hairy stuff. Decendants of Tridge and co. have since released a 100MB card that plugs *directly* into the TiVo. It's pretty sweet, and doesn't require an EE degree to build.
However your in-laws would still have the problem of the PAL tuner and the guide data.
Tridge has a palkit that is supposed to help you replace the tuner.
http://tivo.samba.org/download/tridge/
(Lots of other goodies there too.)
But as for the guide data -- maybe you could beg him? Or have your in-laws deliver a pizza? (Old Samba joke.)
I'm a fellow resident of Canberra, where Tridge (Andrew Tridgell) happens to reside when he is not jetsetting around the world with Quantum. At the last meeting of CLUG (Canberra Linux Users Group) someone brought along a UK Tivo to have a play around with. The hacking process was relatively simple and involved no breaking of the seal of the box. Basically you need a custom cable (9 pin serial to 3 pin standard stereo audio jack), and to hit enter a few times within 1 second of bootup. Then you pretty much follow a few of the instructions that can be found somewhere on samba.org (another post mentioned exactly where), and you reboot and get a linux shell. Tridge has reverse engineered the Tivo guide format and has scripts to convert on of the online tv-guides for aussie tv to Tivo format, but does not wish these scripts to be released in the public domain as it would most probably impact the subscription model in the states, leading to possible legal hassles for Tridge. In thory you could use this link to update the Tivo guide data every couple of days, but the even cooler method is to install a network card onto the box. Apparently all new Tivo's come with Tridge's drivers for the custom bus bridge so you should be able to just plug it in and start playing with it on the network. UK models have one other niggle, 5.5MHz vs 6MHz spread between voice and data, but as far as I remember this was changeable in the debug menus that first come up when you boot the Tivo. Moving away from Tivo, I do recall seeing ads for a PVR made by LG Electronics on TV recently, though I've not used or seen them, but they sound like a more consumer orientated solution, if nowhere as powerful as a Tivo. Anyway, it's probaly worth checking out samba.org and maybe clug.org.au (I think this site is currently being redev'd, but I can't remember the link for the propsed new site which might have more details about Tivo stuff, there should be a link in the mailing list archives though).
www.trufit.com.au/tivo All you need to do! The lot, guide data, everything Cheers