Posted by
CmdrTaco
on from the everyone-loves-tivo dept.
aagha writes "According to this story on CNET's News.com, two Texas companies will offer software to give your PS2, Tivo-like functionality." I'm all for anything that gets more people PVRs or PS2s ;) Course I think the next GTA and Tony Hawk will do more for the cause of the PS2.
140 comments
Ah, but does it include Digital Rights Management?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 4, Funny
It's not exactly turning your PS2 into a Tivo though, they've had software out for a while to allow you to use a PC to record programs, this is merely using the new network adapter for the PS2 to get that content from your PC to your TV screen.
That makes sense. I was wondering how the content would get onto the PS2, as it has no video in, and I don't know of any hardware addon that would add that feature either.
I was also going to comment that PCs are kinda loud with all their fans. But I can hear the PS2 across the room also. I bet I could build a quieter PC (not that I have a fetish for quiet PCs like the/. crew, I think the louder the better, shows you have power.:)
Most of the people I know, myself included, use their PC's in either a study room, or a bedroom. With a PS2 in the lounge next to your TV, you can now run Cat5, or even a wireless network into there, or wherever you keep your PS2 setup and have the functionality of a Tivo.
As with all technology, some will find it useless, some will find it wonderful. IMO, this technology does have the promise which some others just didn't have. (ie, Microsoft Bob, Fee-based file-sharing (at least while Kazaa is around.))
And if you're wondering how to hook the ethernet up to is, check this out.
Out can pretty much have a cable line into your PC in one room, for recording, a powerline network to connect your PC to the PS2 in the other room, and the PS2 hooked up to the TV.
I guess if you are really hardcore, you don't even need a cable line in your TV room. Depends on if you can stream programs as they are going (which I imagine you should be able to). With multiple PS2s, you could use this to have cable in multiple rooms.
The only thing I don't like about this is that I do enjoy being able to leave a game running for a day or so because it doesn't have convinient save spots, while switching over to cable to watch something. I guess the fact that the PVR is recording it makes it so I don't have to switch over, though.
Or burn the captured videos to VCD and watch them on your DVD player?
Ooooh.... you mean that ps2 I bought to play games AND watch DVDs on that doesn't play VCD's?;)
That's 'cause your mom won't let you leave your things lying around the house, right?
Yeah you're right. While I'm living with my parents, I have to abide with their rules. Not all of us have the luxury of living by ourselves yet, so while I'm not, I have to make do with the best I can. (Which is a bedroom full of computer bits and bobs and a house which is Cat5 wired.)
Wouldn't the Harddrive addon be needed for this? i think it would possibly tip over the price of a Tivo on its own, so im thinking whats the point of reinventing the wheel with something that costs more?
--
"What do you mean you have no ice? Do you expect me to drink this coffee hot?" - Random Customer, Clerks
and i didnt fully read the artical did i...ill mod myself -1 for this...
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"What do you mean you have no ice? Do you expect me to drink this coffee hot?" - Random Customer, Clerks
Re:Costs?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Because not only can the PS2 have Tivo-like capabilities, I hear it can play some games and DVDs too. So the question is does it cost more than a Tivo+DVD+Game console?
Wouldn't the Harddrive addon be needed for this? i think it would possibly tip over the price of a Tivo on its own, so im thinking whats the point of reinventing the wheel with something that costs more?
The title is a bit misleading. All this software does is that it allows you to stream video(with add-on network adaptor) from a PC and show it on your TV. There is no actual information stored on the system. The PC is the one that does the recording.
The system is more or less a video dumb terminal for your PC.
-- You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
Re:Costs?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
(Score:0, Troll)...I can hear the moderator's thought process now. He actually admitted a mistake! No one on Slashdot would do that. He must be a Troll!
Wow, not only that but you were modded up for the comment you admitted was wrong!
--
Shoot Pixels, Not People!
Cool, but....
by
blues5150
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· Score: 3, Insightful
When I saw this article I thought great PS2 being used as a PVR. Come to find out after reading the article that I need a PC with Snapstream too! Seems ridiculous to have the PS2 even in the mix. Yeah I know that playback on the TV has been an issue with the Snapstream/PC combo, but I'm sure better alternatives top this mongrel can and have been proposed here on Slashdot.
Unfortunatly, the com.com author didn't actually read BroadQ's website...
They have two products - SnapStream which is PVR software for your PC, and QCast - which allows you to stream media files from your PC(or Mac) to your PS2, where they're decoded and played on whatever components you've hooked up to your PS2.
The article mistakenly makes it sound like this is one product that allows you to record TV shows onto your PS2 directly. In reality, you'll need both pieces of software, as well as the network adaptor for the PS2.
I already have a real Tivo hooked up to my TV, so SnapStream isn't very interesting to me, but QCast might be, if they can drop the price a bit ($50 for the PS2 network adaptor + $50 for QCast is a bit too much just for something that can play video files on my TV in my opinion.)
Why not just use a TV tuner in a PC? With this setup, you have to turn on the PC and the PS2 to record any television. PVR's are meant to record on the spur of the moment, not waiting 60 seconds when Micro$oft Winblows starts up.
Re:Simplicity
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Why not use a USB based TV tuner ?
Re:Simplicity
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Head out of ass time please.
XP takes just under 30 seconds from post to desktop on this p3 500 with 256 megs of ram. I haven't had a chance to test it at home on my 1.6, but I can tell you it's significantly quicker.
I still get your point (instant on is better than waiting at all)..I just wanted to challenge your ignorance about the performance of MS' current OS.
So?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Who cares? No one in the entire universe except for the Homo who posted this crap! No one cares.
Another use...
by
youngerpants
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· Score: 2, Funny
So, I currently use my PS2 for 1) PS2 Linux 2) DVD Player oh and 3) Playing games
and now its going to be a tivo
I cant wait for the coffee making functionality, mowing the lawn add on and DNA cloning plug in
Re:Another use...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I cant wait for the coffee making functionality, mowing the lawn add on and DNA cloning plug in
That is what emacs is for.
PS/2 as a solution?
by
lucifuge31337
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· Score: 3, Insightful
I'm using SnapStream. It's problem is not output to a TV, it's lack of an integrated guide feature.
Is PS/2 software and a NIC really a better or even less costly alternative than a video card with an S-VIDEO out? No.
And I _DID_ read the article. This is stupid. It's a poor solution to a "problem" that doesnt' really exist.
What he *should* have been talking about was QCast, and left the whole PVR/Tivo thing along.
QCast uses the PS2's network adaptor to allow you to stream MP3, MPG, and DIVX files from your PC to your TV and stereosystem. Yes, I assume this would work with content SnapStream recorded for you, but this doesn't really turn your PS2 into a Tivo.
If you already have a PS2 and are looking for a way to play MP3s on your normal stereo system, QCast might be worth looking into.
If you had just read the *Before using Linux Kit (for PlayStation 2)* section of the web page you would have had NO surprises as they clearly indicate what you SHOULD know and have PRIOR to ordering/installing the Linux PS2 Kit.
Let's keep in mind that this Kit is a very wonderful undertaking for the Open source community and that criticizing is always easy...
We should be backing them up and not hitting them when they are already down (taking this type of risk in packaging this bundle was quite a ballsy move and I'm not sure that they are coming even in their investment)
If we want more products like this to be available maybe we should ease up on the harsh responses and be grateful that *someone* is trying to reach out to us and not only focus on the cash-cow main-stream market.
Re: OT :Re:Another use...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Just because they are being "ballsy" doesn't mean that you can't criticize them. They aren't above criticism and without it they won't improve.
If you are silent they will assume that you are happy and if that isn't the case you aren't helping yourself or anybody else.
I wonder if this will be available outside the US, specifically in Australia...Tridge's brilliant hacks for addinf Ethernet and PAL support aside, I'd really love one of these things.
Of course, I suppose it's all worth nothing without a good supply of TV Guide type information. Sofcom is probably the best we've got down here, but I imagine a real service would include a lot more meta information connecting the episodes in a series etc.
Re:US Only?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Are there any TiVO'ish devices available in Australia? If there are, are any compatible with the cable networks?
A Boot game! Back to the '80's era of boot floppies!
-- Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
TiVo functions != PVR/DVR
by
Sc00ter
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· Score: 5, Insightful
After reading some comments it seems like this doesn't even make the PS2 a PVR, but just because something records TV shows to a hard drive doesn't give it "TiVo-like functions". It gives it PVR/DVR functions.
TiVo is MUCH more then recording shows to a hard drive. It's got suggestions, season passes, thumbs up/down. This is stuff that ReplayTV doesn't have (well they have the season pass).
Just making sure that you all keep in mind that slapping a TV card in your computer and making it record the simpsons to you hard drive may be cool (and it is) and may make it a PVR, it doesn't come close to what TiVo can do.
Actually, ReplayTV does not have Season Passes. A Season Pass on a TiVo makes sure that TiVo will record any airing of a particular show on a particular channel, even when the day and time of the show is changed. Replay does not do this: if the show changes time and/or date, it will not be recorded. TiVo also has Wishlists, which are like Season Passes, but are across all channels, so you do not have to worry about what channel a Wishlist show will appear on.
And thank God for that. Suggestions and thumbs up/down are Playskool level functions. I can figure out what I want to watch all by my lonesome, thank you, without Tivo monitoring my likes and dislikes.
Micro Channel Architecture finally pays off...
by
dpbsmith
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· Score: 4, Funny
(Oh, wait, they're talking about some OTHER "PS2.")
(Am I the only one to whom that initialism evokes the memory of the behemoth of personal computers, and the marvellous Micro Channel, with powers beyond imagination waiting to be unlocked by OS/2? Oh, how the mighty have fallen! Now PS2 means a game machine... and DEC, the Dairy Equipment Corporation of Madison Wisconsin, founded in 1947, lives on today, while another company of the same name is but a memory.
Re:Micro Channel Architecture finally pays off...
by
red_dragon
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· Score: 2
The more anal-retentive amongst us would abbreviate "PlayStation 2" as "PSX2", continuing the usage of "PSX" to refer to "PlayStation" as in the original PSX. The fact that Sony chose to put a big "PS2" logo on the side (top?) of the PSX2 doesn't help, and those who've used PS/2s before (myself included) have a hard time reading "PS2" without associating it with a personal computer line from Big Blue.
-- In Soviet Russia, Jesus asks: "What Would You Do?"
Re:Micro Channel Architecture finally pays off...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The more anal-retentive amongst us would abbreviate "PlayStation 2" as "PSX2", continuing the usage of "PSX" to refer to "PlayStation" as in the original PSX.
Which reminds me of a rant - where the hell did the 'X' come from in PlayStation? The 'P' and the 'S' are obvious, but the 'X'? WTF?
Re:Micro Channel Architecture finally pays off...
by
Evil-G
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· Score: 1
However, the original abbreviation "PSX" was the original name of the Playstation before it was released. It was later renamed to Playstation, although PSX has mistakenly been used ever since.
Sony seem to have made this clear by sticking "PS2" on the side/top of the Playstation 2.
Graham.
Re:Micro Channel Architecture finally pays off...
by
poot_rootbeer
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· Score: 1
The IBM machine was the "PS/2", not the "PS2".
This joke hasn't been funny for years, but even less so when you get the joke wrong to begin with.
Well your PS/2 is only going to lock up daily if you do to it, what you've done to your Tivo. I'm guessing you've done something to your Tivo, because, out of the box, It doesn't lock up.
I'll give ya the 'slow' bit, but buggy, and crash prone. NO.
How are you defining these terms? I've had my Tivo (Sony stand alone) for a year now. Never had a crash or any 'bugs'. Including after going in an adding additional storage. And from talking to the other people I know that have Tivo's and have done the same, I'd have to say you are more than a little off-base.
-- "This must be a Thursday, I never could get the hang of Thursdays."
Yeah, I added in an extra hard drive to my tivo and after about six months it has never locked up on me. Admitantly when you have a little over 50 season pass stuff it can get pretty darn slow but no crashes. Besides I've been thinking about one of thoose memory upgrades but I'm not sure its worth it...
Never opened. No hacks. Relatively simple usage. Could it be hardware? It's a Philips and it died once completely. This is the secodn model we've had. If you believe the news groups on that it's very common for the Philips unit to fry.
I don't think we've gone more than a full week without at least one go out to lunch (i.e.: lock for at least 15 minutes).
When it crashes/locks it's the worst. And it crashes/locks at least once a week. I loose no data but it becomes non-responsive (completely) for more than 15 minutes. Sometimes if you let it sit for an hour or two it will come around. Sometimes not.
Everyone in my office (20 people or so) got the sony tivo for Xmas 2000. I've added an extra 80Gb Drive to mine (including replacing the built in fan and drilling holes in the case for better cooling, and neither mine nor anyone else's is "buggy" or locks up. It's been rock solid for 18 months now.
I'll give you the slow bit, but generally only when I'm re-arranging my 30-40 season passes. Other than that, it's eminently usable.
The USB network adapter is connected to the PS2. The network adapter is connected to your home network. This gives the PS2 access to the PC's networked drives which contain the recorded video. The PS2 decodes and outputs the video to your TV.
The only advantage I can see to this vs. using a video card with S-video out would be having a TV in the living room with the PC back in the office. You could have a long run of Ethernet rather than a long run of S-video and audio. Also, I would imagine the PS2 controller would provide the ability to "drive" rather than trying to use some type of IR remote to control your PC that is in another room.
I don't know if a PS2 has an IP stack built in or if it is included in networked games, but games that supported play hook into home networks easily. I have my PS2 hooked into my router and can connect to net to play networked Madden 2003.
cool idea but ...
by
Mr_Silver
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· Score: 3, Interesting
... they're going to have to work on it.
Personally I think a combined DVD player, console and Tivo in one would be a killer. I seriously don't fancy paying out for three items of kit and having three boxes sitting underneath the television.
But, this isn't really Tivo functionality. Hell, I doubt I'd need all the stuff Tivo has, but recording, time stretching, on screen programming and on screen television guides are pretty much a must.
I'll watch the space.
-- Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
I've said this before and I'll say it again. I just don't think you can combine a PVR and a game console into one box. They is to much CPU time being used for one or the other. So are you going to lose frame rate so you can record your show or lose quality on a recording because you were playing a game at the time?
Now, I don't think a TiVo/DVD combo is out of the question.
-- Brought to you by Team SPAM! where we believe: "Information in the noise!"
Time to dust off the old IBM PS/2
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
will be the backbone of my entertainment centre soon. Now that it just became a Linuxbox recently and got a shiny new TFt attached to it it will also work as a vcr...this really rocks.
Wicked!
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Cool! No need to mess with configurations - just boot from your CD and there you go! BTW, Linux version is faster than windows version. I get more FPS.
Re:Wicked!
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Linux version is faster than windows version. I get more FPS....and of course there's no chance that this bootable CD is more optimized for this single task then your Windows setup. So of course Linux "rulez" and kicks "Micro$haft" "Winblows" ass up and down the block.
Re:Gentoo and UTournament
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Hey, that's wicked (yeah, I'm a Britishman also mate!)! Now my son can't mess up my computer - all I need to do is give him this bootable CD and he can play Unreal Tournament. No need to worry my wife or son would render my machine useless!
Re:Gentoo and UTournament
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
AWESOME!!! I'm already downloading!!! This is a milestone in Linux gaming!!! A native version of a number one hit game for Linux!!!
Great
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Now let's try doing this on a console that doesn't suck. ANY other console. Yes, even Xbox.
Anything that sells more PS2s is evil. This is a case of the worst technology taking over again. Gamecube, Xbox and Dreamcast are all superior games machines.
Snapstream appears to be taken a disproportionant ammount of credit for this. The real news here is the Broadq software which installs as on your PC as a media server which you can access thru a PS2 with a ethernet adapter. Supports MP3, MPEG1,2,4, DivX, and JPEG formats. Server side runs on Linux, Windows, or OS X.
The Snapstream software is just one way to get mediafiles on your server to watch. . . .
Closest Open Source project similar to this VideoLAN
Very true, I have a Tivo so I'm not in the least bit interested in Snapstream, but that broadq software looks AMAZING. Playing all my DivXs on the TV over WiFi, cool:) Only down side? No european version:( I think I'm going to cry.
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Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"
Re:Broadq
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I submitted a full post detailing all of those (and the DivX support), but apparently Slashdot editors prefer to air "concept piracy" (i.e., turning a PS/2 into a TiVo, which is NOT the goal at all) instead of new solutions...
True, your Xbox has to be modded to run these, and they're harder to find, but they've been around for some time now.
--
Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
PLEASE NOTE: The pural of Tivo
by
slashuzer
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· Score: 0
Is not Tivos or even Tivoz.
It's Tivii.
j/k
I think you guys are missing the point
by
acksion
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· Score: 2, Insightful
I think this software is probably the best example of convergence I've seen in a while. It lets you stream mp3s and divx movies from your PC's hard drive directly to your Playstation2. The PS2 has built in digital out and there is a remote control add on available. They also mention Ogg Vorbis support as a possiblity.
I was already planning on building a HTPC to do the same thing but now I can use my PS2. Imagine how much easier it makes things for other people who don't want to deal with file shares and building a second PC to store all this.
Re:Gentoo and UTournament
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
It's amazing! It works like a dream and the game is amazing! Wow, I hope this game is just a start! We'll see more quality games for Linux!
How Is This News?
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
This has to be a marketing scheme by Sony to fetch more people to buy their $40 network adapter...save your money, buy a PVR card with a hardware decoder and watch it using the card, instead of saturating your networks bandwidth.
I don't, in fact ive had many tv tuner cards over the years and none of them had tv out, unless you count ATIs all-in-wonder, but thats a all-in-one video card , not a stand alone tv tuner card, my video card has a svideo out, but my tv doesnt support svideo
Tivos dont crash.. Arent slow or buggy...
by
Viewsonic
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· Score: 1
Did you hack yours or something? I've never heard of any of them locking up, or being slow.. Or anything of the sort - Or are you just a ReplayTV fanatic?
Re:Tivos dont crash.. Arent slow or buggy...
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OSgod
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· Score: 1
Dedicated Tivo fan.
Just wish it would stay up.
BTW -- on my second unit. First one went into eternal re-bootville which is one good reason a box shouldn't rely on computer hardware for consumer electronics.
Cost $100 to have it "exchanged" through Philips because it was 3 months beyond the 3 month warranty.
Most days I couldn't live without it. When it's acting up I'd like to kick the butts of the developers.
Software issue or hardware?? Don't know, don't care. It's a package issue.
I want it, I need it to be faster on responding and not to ever appear to crash (heck, do a kernal dump in the background for all I care -- just let me go on with life!!!).
It's a start
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
I always thought the PS/2 would make a nice platform for multimedia software. Built in USB/firewire/digital audio/tv-out. I would love to see something like Native Instruments Reaktor ported to the PS/2. Just plug in a mouse and midi over usb keyboard, I'm sure it would outperform my pIII box without a problem.
Sony
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
"I'm all for anything that gets more people PVRs or PS2s"
So... a company that's ultra-monopolistic, a member of both RIAA and MPAA, and generally as bad as Microsoft but with their finger in far more pies is to be promoted just because their machine has cool video games?
Riiiiihgt....
*cough* hypocrite *cough*
Does PS2 have a line in?
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rodionpunk
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· Score: 0, Redundant
I was just wondering, does PS2 even have a line in? How does this grab input?
Silent PC
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
If this can be utilized to working on your computer from the PS2, that would be great.
My PC is far quieter than my PS2. 1 fast Athlon, 1 zalman flower and case/psu fans in series = no fan noise just a slight sound from the air flow over the grills. Cost about 10 GBP more than a normal pc that sounds like a vacum cleaner. My PS2 on the otherhand is loud and isn't hooked up to a nice high resolution monitor. You can build fanless PCs with heatpipes and aluminium the size/shape of a VCR, that would look good in a living room. Why use a PS2 at all except for games/novelty?
So I did something a little weird with my PS2 network connector.
On the place where it plugs into the PS2, there's another pair of holes that line up exactly to a standard IDE hard drive power and data port.
So I plugged in an extra hard drive I had and plugged it in.
Nothing happened.
But...there's no reason why something *can't* happen. We know this system is used in Japan for their hard drive/network connector kit (used in games like Final Fantasy X and XI). So hopefully the folks at Sony will get off their goddamn asses and release the HDD in the US so we can use it for TIVO things like this with just a DVD stuck in the tray.
Then again, they're probably making us wait until the PS3.
There is only one expansion "slot" on the PS2. If the network card didn't have this feature, then you would be forced to choose between having a HDD or having a NIC. The HDD connectors on the NIC are a "pass-through" connector of sorts (more like they took a PS2 HDD connector and merged it with the NIC). Also, the reasons nothing happened when you plugged in your HDD are (1) no games I know of use the HDD, just the linux kit, and (2, maybe) Sony says in the documentation for the linux kit that there's something special about the hardware in their HDD that makes it slightly different from a normal HDD. They claim if you use a normal HDD in the PS2, it won't work quite right and if you use their HDD in a computer, you could fry your computer. (I didn't write it, they did.) This might just be marketing FUD, or there actually might be some differences between the PS2 HDD and a normal IDE HDD, who knows.
-- ---
"...And everybody died!!! Except for me, of course...you know why?
Because I had my tray table up...and my seat ba
Call me silly, but would it not be easier just to buy a new PVR (or if money is the concern, buy a used one on ebay)? To me it sounds it would cost about the same to buy a dedicated unit or the ps2. Since I work and study, it would be logical not to waste my time with a ps2, to have it operational. It would be also be logical to use my time more efficently to use a dedicated unit? By using a dedicated unit, you may have more features than a ps2, have a full warrenty. I currently use a DishPlayer 7200 and works great! Cost me $150 from ebay. Got the entended warrenty from Dish Network (for $3.99 a month). I upgrade the unit to a 100 gigger worked great too. Two months ago, something went "flooky" on it, called up Dish, and they sent me a replacement unit in a week. I just removed my drive and placed it into the other one. Did not void my warrenty in any way because both units were factory serviced already:)
--
NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
Games + recording
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wizman
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· Score: 0, Redundant
My concern would be this -- what happens when you want to play a PS2 game, but your PS2 is busy recording one of your scheduled programs? Seems rather inconvenient to me. For as cheap as TiVo's are, I rather have the convenience of TiVo doing it's own thing and allowing me to use my game console whenever I want without interrupting a recording.
Now if the PS/2 is just a playback device, with the PC doing the recording, that may not be an issue. I still prefer an all in one box to take care of business.
The importance of TiVo-like functionality
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n3k5
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· Score: 1
TiVo can do much more than just schedule shows for recording on a hd and playing them back later. It tells me what to watch; which shows are good and which are bad. You know, I rely on that functionality, I absolutely cannot decide something like that on my own.
Ugh. Get over it! PS2 != PS/2
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psxndc
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· Score: 2, Offtopic
I am sooooo tired of seeing the "oh I thought they meant the old computer..." jokes, references whatever. I had a PS/2, I have a PS2. It was funny 3 years ago when SONY was naming the next Playstation. Now it's just as lame as "Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of...". It's old, it's been done, please move on.
psxndc
--
The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.
What If...
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
What would really be cool is if someone used the PS2 Linux Kit to write a Tivo like program that stores the video files on the PS2 HDD (are those even available yet?). The only problem left would be getting the video input into the PS2, but you might be able to do that with an RF to USB/Firewire adapter (though I don't know off the top of my head if there is enough bandwidth with USB or Firewire to do that). In any case, it's a nice dream...
Has anyone looked into the idea of combining PS2 linux and the various DVR projects for linux out there? It would be a reason to get PS2 linux and the hardware that comes with it.
-- I am, and always will be, an idiot.
Karma: Coma (mostly effected by.hack)
This does not make a PS2 a PVR!!
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Hello.... Hellooooo...
Did anyone actually read the article? It DOES NOT turn a PS2 into a PVR. It turns the PS2 into a multimedia player that uses a PC for a file server. There is no video in for a PS2, there isn't a hard drive yet for PS2. I repeat, it does not record ANYTHING.
If you already have a Multimedia PC in your living room, move on, there is no news here. If you are like me, and you have 1 main PC that does everything, and a PS2 with a network adaptor in the living room on the big screen, this is kinda cool. I can play my DivX movies and MP3s using my PS2 through my 500W stereo and on my 32" TV rather than on my 17" monitor with 75W speakers.
Also note, the PS2 WILL NOT play any movies from discs. You can't swap discs with a PS2.
Re:This does not make a PS2 a PVR!!
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amuro98
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· Score: 1
The article is misleading at best...
The article *should* have been about QCast's ability to stream media files from your existing PC to your PS2, but hey, News.com.com isn't known for their accuracy.
Your last sentence confuses me though...
The PS2 most definitely *does* play DVD movies...
As for swapping discs, I've played several PS1 games which came on multiple discs,and when the time came, I was instructed to swap out the disc, and the game continued. You use the eject button, not the power button.
Go buy yourself a Hauppage PVR card for your computer, they cost like 150 dollars, im sure most peoples pc harddrives are bigger than the miniscule one for the ps2.
-- I hate sigs.
Blah, XBox eats it for lunch
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
This might have been cool 6 months ago. Now my XBox will play all the games I own off its 60 GB hard drive, along with just about any media format (DiVX, MPEG, etc.). I have a Playstation 2, and I love it, but ever since Bunny broke the XBox I haven't even bothered turning my PS2 on.
And Dead to Rights, *drool*
For those of you who didn't bother the read it.
by
djweso
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· Score: 1
No it doesn't make your PS2 record TV. It lets it recieve streamed recorded TV.
What this is is software that is loaded on your PC and streams over IP multimedia files to the ethernet adapter available for the PS2. Because it loads the software off of a pressed CD/DVD {not sure which} it does not require you modify your PS2 in any way that would void your warranty.
Why the hell would someone want this? Well I want it because it will give me an inexpensive way to create a server/client network for passing my media files around my house [small apartment]. I can have one computer that stores and records all of my tv and mp3 needs and an easy way to access it around the house.
djweso
-- "I like my sugar with coffee and cream." - Beastie Boys
Re:For those of you who didn't bother the read it.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
... something that can already be done with PCs, laptops, etc. anyway...
Nothing to see here folks, move along...
Re:For those of you who didn't bother the read it.
by
amuro98
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· Score: 1
I don't live in an apartment. My main A/V system is on one floor of the house, and my main PC is on another floor.
Sure, I could put a PC in my living room and connect it to my A/V system....or I could spend $50 for the PS2's network adaptor, another $50 for QCast, and just stream stuff from my PC over my existing network.
Say what you will, you're *not* going to be able to build a PC for $100.
In the past 6 months,/. has run how many stories about MP3 components for your stereo? If you've already got a PS2, this sounds like the cheapest way to get streaming media to your TV & stereo.
let me paraphrase the cause of the PS2 using a quote from the Matrix:
Trinity: It's a video game machine, built for only one thing...
Tank: Profit making.
--
"What thou shalt not, I shalt did!" -Bart Simpson
Commas, commas, commas...
by
AyeRoxor!
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· Score: 0, Troll
"According to this story on CNET's News.com, two Texas companies will offer software to give your PS2, Tivo-like functionality."
There is no reason whatsoever for a comma to be placed after PS2.
If you feel the need to put a comma, or a semicolon, or an asterISK somewhere, chances are your sentence needs to be rewritten.
In the future, try this:
Instead of "will offer software to give your PS2, Tivo-like functionality."
Try "will offer software to give Tivo-like functionality to your PS2."
I didn't know Sony was in such trouble...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Puhlease people...
Tacos comments of "I'm all for anything that gets more people PVRs or PS2s;) Course I think the next GTA and Tony Hawk will do more for the cause of the PS2." make one think poor Sony is starving to death.
I was hoping that this "news" would be exactly what you said but sad enough its not. Its not even a big thing since i can do all that with my pc already.
Btw, the HDs come shipped with the Linuxkit, and you can use any other custom HD as long as you have the Network adaptor. Sounds strange? Heres why...the adapter connects the HD to the proprierty ps2 port.
As fascinating as this may seem for the geek factor of recording on your PC and then piping through a PS2 to the TV, you can still buy a standalone TIVO for ~ $100.00 . Its quiet, requires no tinkering, doesn't require any other new hardware or cabling, and is incredibly simple to setup and use.
This just strikes me as a case of using a sledgehammer to kill a cockroach. If you want Tivo, just buy one, and save the tinkering time for something more interesting
-- If privacy had a tombstone it would read "We did it for your own good" . -- John Twelve Hawks
Here is someone with 10 of them for sale on EBAY for $99.00 each.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item =1379631771
I recently bought my second unit, a phillips dsr6000 from www.americansatellite.com which I found by linking from www.tivo.com for $119.00
-- If privacy had a tombstone it would read "We did it for your own good" . -- John Twelve Hawks
...it only breaks 4096 patents, but with special "patent combinations" it can break up to 58,621.
--
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
preaching to the converted
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
the next gta and tony hawk will do nothing more for the platform. not wihtout making some serious changes anyway. because they've already been done. atleast the playstation audience is yet to see a tivo style thing work on there platform
It's a great option - if you've really got your heart set on doing this with your PS2. But I tend to agree witht the guy at the end of the article from DFC Intelligence that this is something that will probably be a stock feature of something like the Play Station 3 and other upcomming devices that will use IBM's embedded "Cell" distributed processor. That way, television sets, and desktop boxes, that also have the Cell processor embedded in them can assist in on-the-fly compression of real time video to a hard drive or some such similar storage device like we're already seeing in gaming consoles like MS's XBox.
This doesn't turn a PS2 into a PVR.
by
Animats
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· Score: 2
This does not turn your Playstation 2 into a Personal Video Recorder. This turns a fast PC with a big hard drive into a PVR. The Playstation 2 is used to interface to a TV set, the Playstation's remote control, and a PC.
You probably need to dedicate a PC to the PVR function, since recording and playback will suck if other loads cause dropped frames. So you've got a PC, a PS2, and some cabling dedicated to the PVR function. This will probably cost more than a TiVo.
And if you have to tie up a PC, you may as well put a video interface card in it and lose the PS2.
It's good that the software is available, though. This has potential for other uses, such as business presentations. Put the TV in the conference room on a PS2 and use it to suck video off a server on the LAN. It can display images one at a time under control of the remote, so you could use it instead of PowerPoint. Plus you can show video. This could be useful for small multimedia shops, where you want to show clips to the customer in a conference-room environment but don't want to dedicate a lot of hardware to that function.
Plus, you can probably get the sales people to learn how to operate the PS2 remote, rather than having them tie up an editing bay with an operator .
The good thing about the Tivo
by
Colin+Smith
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· Score: 2
Is the schedule service that Tivo provides.
A PC or PS2 which can record TV for me is no more use to me than a VCR.
Also, I'm sure it breaks at least 65536 patents.
It's not exactly turning your PS2 into a Tivo though, they've had software out for a while to allow you to use a PC to record programs, this is merely using the new network adapter for the PS2 to get that content from your PC to your TV screen.
Why not just buy a gfx card with a TV out?
Wouldn't the Harddrive addon be needed for this? i think it would possibly tip over the price of a Tivo on its own, so im thinking whats the point of reinventing the wheel with something that costs more?
"What do you mean you have no ice? Do you expect me to drink this coffee hot?" - Random Customer, Clerks
When I saw this article I thought great PS2 being used as a PVR. Come to find out after reading the article that I need a PC with Snapstream too! Seems ridiculous to have the PS2 even in the mix. Yeah I know that playback on the TV has been an issue with the Snapstream/PC combo, but I'm sure better alternatives top this mongrel can and have been proposed here on Slashdot.
Why not just use a TV tuner in a PC? With this setup, you have to turn on the PC and the PS2 to record any television. PVR's are meant to record on the spur of the moment, not waiting 60 seconds when Micro$oft Winblows starts up.
Who cares? No one in the entire universe except for the Homo who posted this crap! No one cares.
So, I currently use my PS2 for
1) PS2 Linux
2) DVD Player
oh and 3) Playing games
and now its going to be a tivo
I cant wait for the coffee making functionality, mowing the lawn add on and DNA cloning plug in
I'm using SnapStream. It's problem is not output to a TV, it's lack of an integrated guide feature.
Is PS/2 software and a NIC really a better or even less costly alternative than a video card with an S-VIDEO out? No.
And I _DID_ read the article. This is stupid. It's a poor solution to a "problem" that doesnt' really exist.
Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.
Talking about ps2 linux
any one happen to know where you can find the ps2 linux kit in europe ?
42
I got the image of an 80's model IBM PS/2 with Transformers Armadda being recorded on it!
Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
I wonder if this will be available outside the US, specifically in Australia...Tridge's brilliant hacks for addinf Ethernet and PAL support aside, I'd really love one of these things.
Of course, I suppose it's all worth nothing without a good supply of TV Guide type information. Sofcom is probably the best we've got down here, but I imagine a real service would include a lot more meta information connecting the episodes in a series etc.
Wouldnt it just be cheaper to get a tv-out capable vidoe/standalone card?
A Boot game! Back to the '80's era of boot floppies!
Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
TiVo is MUCH more then recording shows to a hard drive. It's got suggestions, season passes, thumbs up/down. This is stuff that ReplayTV doesn't have (well they have the season pass).
Just making sure that you all keep in mind that slapping a TV card in your computer and making it record the simpsons to you hard drive may be cool (and it is) and may make it a PVR, it doesn't come close to what TiVo can do.
Free Mac Mini
(Oh, wait, they're talking about some OTHER "PS2.")
(Am I the only one to whom that initialism evokes the memory of the behemoth of personal computers, and the marvellous Micro Channel, with powers beyond imagination waiting to be unlocked by OS/2? Oh, how the mighty have fallen! Now PS2 means a game machine... and DEC, the Dairy Equipment Corporation of Madison Wisconsin, founded in 1947, lives on today, while another company of the same name is but a memory.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
Now my ps2 can lock up daily.
Tivo is one of the first major Linux embedded systems. Too bad it has a reputation for being slow, buggy and crash prone.
I like my Tivo -- it time shifts things easily. If it were only more reliable. Makes me want windows some days.
The article is a bit short on the technical details.
How does the network card provide a path to the Television? I didn't understand that part?
I don't have a PS2, but I would like to know: Does it have an IP stack? How would a PC communicate with a PS2?
-- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
Personally I think a combined DVD player, console and Tivo in one would be a killer. I seriously don't fancy paying out for three items of kit and having three boxes sitting underneath the television.
But, this isn't really Tivo functionality. Hell, I doubt I'd need all the stuff Tivo has, but recording, time stretching, on screen programming and on screen television guides are pretty much a must.
I'll watch the space.
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
Does TiVo work with the chiclet keyboard too?
will be the backbone of my entertainment centre soon. Now that it just became a Linuxbox recently and got a shiny new TFt attached to it it will also work as a vcr...this really rocks.
Cool! No need to mess with configurations - just boot from your CD and there you go! BTW, Linux version is faster than windows version. I get more FPS.
Hey, that's wicked (yeah, I'm a Britishman also mate!)! Now my son can't mess up my computer - all I need to do is give him this bootable CD and he can play Unreal Tournament. No need to worry my wife or son would render my machine useless!
AWESOME!!! I'm already downloading!!! This is a milestone in Linux gaming!!! A native version of a number one hit game for Linux!!!
Now let's try doing this on a console that doesn't suck. ANY other console. Yes, even Xbox.
Anything that sells more PS2s is evil. This is a case of the worst technology taking over again. Gamecube, Xbox and Dreamcast are all superior games machines.
If only the world had a clue.
Snapstream appears to be taken a disproportionant ammount of credit for this. The real news here is the Broadq software which installs as on your PC as a media server which you can access thru a PS2 with a ethernet adapter. Supports MP3, MPEG1,2,4, DivX, and JPEG formats. Server side runs on Linux, Windows, or OS X.
The Snapstream software is just one way to get mediafiles on your server to watch. . . .
Closest Open Source project similar to this VideoLAN
It's Tivii.
j/k
I think this software is probably the best example of convergence I've seen in a while. It lets you stream mp3s and divx movies from your PC's hard drive directly to your Playstation2. The PS2 has built in digital out and there is a remote control add on available. They also mention Ogg Vorbis support as a possiblity. I was already planning on building a HTPC to do the same thing but now I can use my PS2. Imagine how much easier it makes things for other people who don't want to deal with file shares and building a second PC to store all this.
It's amazing! It works like a dream and the game is amazing! Wow, I hope this game is just a start! We'll see more quality games for Linux!
This has to be a marketing scheme by Sony to fetch more people to buy their $40 network adapter...save your money, buy a PVR card with a hardware decoder and watch it using the card, instead of saturating your networks bandwidth.
So you have to have a computer that has a TV tuner to record the shows. Does anyone have a TV tuner card that doesn't have TV out as well?
"Times may change, but standards must remain the same." - George Carlin.
Did you hack yours or something? I've never heard of any of them locking up, or being slow.. Or anything of the sort - Or are you just a ReplayTV fanatic?
I always thought the PS/2 would make a nice platform for multimedia software. Built in USB/firewire/digital audio/tv-out. I would love to see something like Native Instruments Reaktor ported to the PS/2. Just plug in a mouse and midi over usb keyboard, I'm sure it would outperform my pIII box without a problem.
"I'm all for anything that gets more people PVRs or PS2s"
So... a company that's ultra-monopolistic, a member of both RIAA and MPAA, and generally as bad as Microsoft but with their finger in far more pies is to be promoted just because their machine has cool video games?
Riiiiihgt....
*cough* hypocrite *cough*
I was just wondering, does PS2 even have a line in? How does this grab input?
If this can be utilized to working on your computer from the PS2, that would be great.
So I did something a little weird with my PS2 network connector.
On the place where it plugs into the PS2, there's another pair of holes that line up exactly to a standard IDE hard drive power and data port.
So I plugged in an extra hard drive I had and plugged it in.
Nothing happened.
But...there's no reason why something *can't* happen. We know this system is used in Japan for their hard drive/network connector kit (used in games like Final Fantasy X and XI). So hopefully the folks at Sony will get off their goddamn asses and release the HDD in the US so we can use it for TIVO things like this with just a DVD stuck in the tray.
Then again, they're probably making us wait until the PS3.
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
Call me silly, but would it not be easier just to buy a new PVR (or if money is the concern, buy a used one on ebay)? To me it sounds it would cost about the same to buy a dedicated unit or the ps2. Since I work and study, it would be logical not to waste my time with a ps2, to have it operational. It would be also be logical to use my time more efficently to use a dedicated unit? By using a dedicated unit, you may have more features than a ps2, have a full warrenty. I currently use a DishPlayer 7200 and works great! Cost me $150 from ebay. Got the entended warrenty from Dish Network (for $3.99 a month). I upgrade the unit to a 100 gigger worked great too. Two months ago, something went "flooky" on it, called up Dish, and they sent me a replacement unit in a week. I just removed my drive and placed it into the other one. Did not void my warrenty in any way because both units were factory serviced already :)
NO! NO! Please don't mod me, I'm too young to die a troll. *click* Oh the pain, the pain...
My concern would be this -- what happens when you want to play a PS2 game, but your PS2 is busy recording one of your scheduled programs? Seems rather inconvenient to me. For as cheap as TiVo's are, I rather have the convenience of TiVo doing it's own thing and allowing me to use my game console whenever I want without interrupting a recording.
Now if the PS/2 is just a playback device, with the PC doing the recording, that may not be an issue. I still prefer an all in one box to take care of business.
TiVo can do much more than just schedule shows for recording on a hd and playing them back later.
It tells me what to watch; which shows are good and which are bad. You know, I rely on that functionality, I absolutely cannot decide something like that on my own.
but what do i know, i'm just a model.
psxndc
The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.
What would really be cool is if someone used the PS2 Linux Kit to write a Tivo like program that stores the video files on the PS2 HDD (are those even available yet?). The only problem left would be getting the video input into the PS2, but you might be able to do that with an RF to USB/Firewire adapter (though I don't know off the top of my head if there is enough bandwidth with USB or Firewire to do that). In any case, it's a nice dream...
Has anyone looked into the idea of combining PS2 linux and the various DVR projects for linux out there? It would be a reason to get PS2 linux and the hardware that comes with it.
I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by
Hello.... Hellooooo...
Did anyone actually read the article? It DOES NOT turn a PS2 into a PVR. It turns the PS2 into a multimedia player that uses a PC for a file server. There is no video in for a PS2, there isn't a hard drive yet for PS2. I repeat, it does not record ANYTHING.
If you already have a Multimedia PC in your living room, move on, there is no news here. If you are like me, and you have 1 main PC that does everything, and a PS2 with a network adaptor in the living room on the big screen, this is kinda cool. I can play my DivX movies and MP3s using my PS2 through my 500W stereo and on my 32" TV rather than on my 17" monitor with 75W speakers.
Also note, the PS2 WILL NOT play any movies from discs. You can't swap discs with a PS2.
Thats all I want, please..
Yahoo... Now I can really use my PC as a console... Wait a minute.... why didn't I bought a PS2/EVIL-BOX/Game Cute instead???
Go buy yourself a Hauppage PVR card for your computer, they cost like 150 dollars, im sure most peoples pc harddrives are bigger than the miniscule one for the ps2.
I hate sigs.
This might have been cool 6 months ago. Now my XBox will play all the games I own off its 60 GB hard drive, along with just about any media format (DiVX, MPEG, etc.). I have a Playstation 2, and I love it, but ever since Bunny broke the XBox I haven't even bothered turning my PS2 on.
And Dead to Rights, *drool*
No it doesn't make your PS2 record TV. It lets it recieve streamed recorded TV.
What this is is software that is loaded on your PC and streams over IP multimedia files to the ethernet adapter available for the PS2.
Because it loads the software off of a pressed CD/DVD {not sure which} it does not require you modify your PS2 in any way that would void your warranty.
Why the hell would someone want this? Well I want it because it will give me an inexpensive way to create a server/client network for passing my media files around my house [small apartment]. I can have one computer that stores and records all of my tv and mp3 needs and an easy way to access it around the house.
djweso
"I like my sugar with coffee and cream." - Beastie Boys
Buy an X-BOX, support savage capitalism....
Trinity: It's a video game machine, built for only one thing...
Tank: Profit making.
"What thou shalt not, I shalt did!" -Bart Simpson
"According to this story on CNET's News.com, two Texas companies will offer software to give your PS2, Tivo-like functionality."
There is no reason whatsoever for a comma to be placed after PS2.
If you feel the need to put a comma, or a semicolon, or an asterISK somewhere, chances are your sentence needs to be rewritten.
In the future, try this:
Instead of "will offer software to give your PS2, Tivo-like functionality."
Try "will offer software to give Tivo-like functionality to your PS2."
Puhlease people...
;) Course I think the next GTA and Tony Hawk will do more for the cause of the PS2." make one think poor Sony is starving to death.
Tacos comments of "I'm all for anything that gets more people PVRs or PS2s
Give me a break.
I was hoping that this "news" would be exactly what you said but sad enough its not. Its not even a big thing since i can do all that with my pc already.
Btw, the HDs come shipped with the Linuxkit, and you can use any other custom HD as long as you have the Network adaptor.
Sounds strange? Heres why...the adapter connects the HD to the proprierty ps2 port.
cu,
Lispy
Where's the software that turns a PS/2 into an XBox? :p
"Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
As fascinating as this may seem for the geek factor of recording on your PC and then piping through a PS2 to the TV, you can still buy a standalone TIVO for ~ $100.00 . Its quiet, requires no tinkering, doesn't require any other new hardware or cabling, and is incredibly simple to setup and use.
This just strikes me as a case of using a sledgehammer to kill a cockroach. If you want Tivo, just buy one, and save the tinkering time for something more interesting
If privacy had a tombstone it would read "We did it for your own good" . -- John Twelve Hawks
The PS2 has Component output, and can support HDTV resolutions.
Yes you can get usb tv/radio cards.
Where on earth can you get them that cheap?
Jeez - here in the UK they cost £229 (~$350) surely they're not a third of the price in the US?
Might be cheaper to do this with an older system, and this software which is ofcourse, open source, and more fun;)
I guess since its not about Son'y music branch, its ok to bolster Son'y products.
...it only breaks 4096 patents, but with special "patent combinations" it can break up to 58,621.
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
the next gta and tony hawk will do nothing more for the platform. not wihtout making some serious changes anyway. because they've already been done. atleast the playstation audience is yet to see a tivo style thing work on there platform
It's a great option - if you've really got your heart set on doing this with your PS2. But I tend to agree witht the guy at the end of the article from DFC Intelligence that this is something that will probably be a stock feature of something like the Play Station 3 and other upcomming devices that will use IBM's embedded "Cell" distributed processor. That way, television sets, and desktop boxes, that also have the Cell processor embedded in them can assist in on-the-fly compression of real time video to a hard drive or some such similar storage device like we're already seeing in gaming consoles like MS's XBox.
You probably need to dedicate a PC to the PVR function, since recording and playback will suck if other loads cause dropped frames. So you've got a PC, a PS2, and some cabling dedicated to the PVR function. This will probably cost more than a TiVo. And if you have to tie up a PC, you may as well put a video interface card in it and lose the PS2.
It's good that the software is available, though. This has potential for other uses, such as business presentations. Put the TV in the conference room on a PS2 and use it to suck video off a server on the LAN. It can display images one at a time under control of the remote, so you could use it instead of PowerPoint. Plus you can show video. This could be useful for small multimedia shops, where you want to show clips to the customer in a conference-room environment but don't want to dedicate a lot of hardware to that function. Plus, you can probably get the sales people to learn how to operate the PS2 remote, rather than having them tie up an editing bay with an operator .
Is the schedule service that Tivo provides.
A PC or PS2 which can record TV for me is no more use to me than a VCR.
Deleted