Tivo 2 Features On the Horizon
Lemuel writes "Tivo has finally pre-announced its music and photo pictures for the Tivo 2. Users will be able to play MP3s and view photos that come from their computer. It will also be possible to program the Tivo via a web site. An official announcement is due in January. There will be revenue associated with these items. Only the remote programming sounds interesting to me, but I'm glad for anything that would keep Tivo afloat."
Due to pressure from the MPAA, they're dropping the program recording capability.
There will be revenue associated with these items.
You mean fees?
The shareholder is always right.
I have the freedom of recording whatever I want on my pc with my video capture card, without paying a fee, and without my viewing habits being tracked. I wonder what kind of nasty stuff they have cooked up in this Tivo 2 of theirs....
In college, really poor, need a flatscreen.
move files onto the computer for archiving/storage? The article talks about playing mp3's/video from the computer as well as "home networking", but there are no real details. Any other info?
Like pi? Try 10,000 digits.
int sexualStatus ( char *sexuality ) {
if ( (strcmp(sexuality,"I'm not gay goddamnit")) == 0 ) {
recommendGayPorn();
fputs("Sorry, Dave, we think you're gay", stdout);
} else {
recommendGayPorn();
return 1;
}
PC moderators can suck my White pierced, tattooed dick. If you think pride == hate, s/dick/Aryan meat mallet/g.
Tivo is evil. It allows me to record programs on tv while I'm away from home. It controls my life when I am at home. I swear to God the thing watchs me sleep at night as well... probably records it too. Who's been watching those videos? Because it isn't me...
Back to wearing my tin foil jump suit
We wanted to announce that we are gonna say this at a later date. Oh wait! Crap!
It doesn't look like they've allowed for updated Tivo over broadband yet. I dropped my land line for a cell phone and broadband (had the cellphone already anyway). Tivo looks great, but is un-usable.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Andrew Tridgell's notes on hacking the TiVo, including his various hacks for the device. Also, TiVo hacking FAQ may be of interest.
I.O.U One Sig.
http://tivo.lightn.org/
:)
No add'l streams of revenue off us Tivo 1-model hackers. Heh heh heh.
Yeah...we can't view photos (boo hoo) and listen to MP3s (Apex DVD player anyone?) but we can extract shows, FTP, telnet, etc. into our Tivos...
Wonder if Tivo will now be disabling this "ability" with a new round of hacker "thwarts"?
The second generation TiVo has been around for quite some time (months even), and it does not have broadband support. Unless they'll be selling hardware upgrades (which is doubtful considering the warranty situation), you'll probably have to get a third generation TiVo.
Of course, that's not to stop you from getting the Turbonet Ethernet Adapter Board for your TiVo from The 9th Tee.
TiVo already has full motion video. i thought the trend went: text -> pictures and music -> video.
I've been puzzling over how you can "pre-board" an airplane. Board before you board?
Of course they use the term "de-plane-ing" (not even sure how you would spell that) to mean disembarking from the plane so who knows what they're thinking...
(And for you logic nazi's, I do get it. I just think it's stupid)
I WANT them to track my viewing habits. It's like voting for your favorite show. And if they want TiVo to record show that follow my habits, more power to them. Anything to reduce the "Friends" ratio can't be bad.
And for watching TV on my PC, I think I'd much rather sit in my Lazy Boy, with my feet up, looking at a 35" screen and not having the sound drowned out by CPU fans.
I refer of course to using the television as a medium for viewing video clips saved in formats such as wmv, mpeg, divx, avi, etc. If users could transfer porn^H^H^H^H educational videos and the like directly to the Tivo box from their computers, it would be a great increase in convenience, and might just be the app that secures in the customer bade Tivo needs.
I've been a Tivo subscriber for 2.5 years now, and while I love my Tivo (Series 1, 90+ hours), $13 a month is starting to get old. I don't understand who would be willing to spend yet more to play music and view pictures.
Really, there are too many things competing for a consumer's monthy share of the paycheck. There's cable/satellite. Cell phone. Bill payment service. Bank fees. The ISP. Tivo. Gym membership. Subscriptions to various web sites. And it's been said that the world's favorite operating system and supporting programs will be billed monthly in the not-too-distant future. With an economy in not-top-shape (here in the US, anyway) and the unemployment rate rising, who can afford to pay for all these monthly services?
As for increasing my $13/month to Tivo for new services... I'd consider a one-time charge to add software to it, similar to when I install an application onto my PC. But not a monthly billed increase.
Some links:
8 34255&mode=thread&threshold=
http://www.digitalregime.com/tivo2svcd/
http://www.tivonews.com/article.pl?sid=02/09/09/1
Why not make a feature that we can really use... like high definition support!
By it being programmed through a website, do they mean a web interface, or an actual internet web site? If it's through a web site, I think I'd be wary of them tracking my viewing habis.. more so than they do already..
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
What makes them think that people will pay extra to listen to music? People may pay extra if they get to download the music and burn it to CDs and transfer it to their MP3 players, but I can't imagine Tivo getting away with that when others have tried and failed.
And I can't even imagine how they could get people to pay extra to show their own photos on their own TV.
As a Tivo subscriber, I find it alarming that these guys are flailing around aimlessly with stupid business models like these. It makes me think that their days truly are numbered.
If electricity is produced by electrons is morality produced by morons?
There certainly are. Several of the ReplayTV models are priced (or were, maybe they've changed) sans-subscription. Of course, the prices started at $500, coincidentally, very similar to the subscription-based models + lifetime fee. The subscription fee is really just a different method of making a profit on the hardware. The catch is that few (or fewer, as these companies are all struggling) people would shell out $500 for this equipment, but $200-$300 falls within the acceptable range. Just think about it this way: your PVR costs $500+. You can pay them now, or you can break half of that out in installments.
Not to toot the ReplayTV horn again, but their units ship with 10BaseT Ethernet. Although there isn't official Replay->PC support, there are programs that let you do it.
I don't know about you, but my computer can already play MP3's and view photos. Why pay $250 to do that again?
Sigh. What is with these lame, ignorant posts getting modded up tonight?
1. Can your computer play MP3's on your stereo in the living room, which just happens to be hooked up to your TiVo?
2. Can your computer display photos on your big TV in the living room for the entire family to see?
If you answered No to either question, you just may be in their target market. Golly.
"And like that
Are there any good PVRs out there that you don't need to pay a monthly service fee to use?
No.
I mean, come on. TV listings are hardly worth $5/month or whatever. I can get all of that off the web for free.
Then do it.
However, if you think it's too much of a pain in the ass to write and maintain a program that can consistently generate accurate results for your home-brewed PC-based PVR, then you just may be interested in a TiVo, where everything is easy to use, and it costs a mere $13 a month for the entire service.
I also really don't want some company (and possibly TIA in the future) sifting through my TV viewing habits.
1. They're aggregate, not tied to you. 2. You can turn it off. 3. What are you afraid of? That Mr. BigWig will know you are one of 100,000 people watching X-files reruns at 3AM. WTF cares? Worry about something that matters.
Are there any PVR solutions out there that just let you record TV shows and watch 'em later?
The beauty of TiVo is what happens when you don't have to worry about setting your device up to record shows. You tell it what you like, and it does everything for you.
I think you may be looking for a VCR?
"And like that
Not really. Your best bet might be keeping track of the Freevo project, although I've no experience with that, and it doesn't appear to be able to tape at the moment.
...some company sifting through my TV viewing habits
> TV listings are hardly worth $5/month...
We own two TiVos, and you're not just paying for the listings, but for the superb user interface. As many other posters have already mentioned:
"Yes, you COULD do everything TiVo does with a homegrown computer, but TiVo comes in a squeaky clean WORKING package, as opposed to cobbling something together from assorted parts lying around your garage."
I've had two SW upgrades during the couple of years we've had the TiVos, and both upgrades have brought features that significantly enhanced the use of my TiVo. Easily worth $10/month, IMHO.
>
TiVo are very open about what they track and what they don't. IIRC, they don't even trace back to the user, but use your information in conjunction with others to create profiles.
At that level, I don't have much of a problem with it.
ceci n'est pas un sig.
TiVo has been "signing" their kernels so that the TiVo hardware will only recognize the kernel compiled by themselves. So, while TiVo does provided the source code to the Linux kernel and their modification to the source code, you will never get your own compilation of the kernel to ever run on the hardware. Of course, this defeats the hole point of CopyLeft/GPL!
But, even if you don't care about Free Software and the future of Linux, there is also the issue of the future of TV. The FCC keeps claiming that there will be *ALOT* more ATSC digital TV broadcasts in 2006. That is only 4 years away! Why would anyone want to pay at least $200 + $250 subscription for a total of $450 on something that the NTSC tuner can't be replaced in?? TiVo still makes no claims to the be "HDTV ready." If it had some USB2 ports then there might be hope in the future but the two USB v1 ports provided have a *practical* maxium through-put of maybe 16 Mbps *combined*. An ATSC tuner can spit end up spitting out 19.2 Mbps of digital TV goodness of which the TiVo USB ports can't keep up. By the time TiVO figures out how far behind they are either a future version of Xbox or PlayStation will have entered the PVR market.
According to an "unofficial" post by a TiVo marketing rep there is much more to this than just mp3 and picture viewing.
My guess: Originally when series 2 was announced they mentioned that they would have some deal with Real. I am guessing that you will be getting some of the premium Real content with this.
Q.
1. Yes
2. Yes.
Wow. That sure was hard. >$200!
I didn't say both answers would be No. I said IF either answer is no, THEN you MAY be in their target market.
The person I was replying to was implying these addons served no useful purpose. There are plenty of devices out there that will, for $250 or more, give you a nice interface to play MP3's on your stereo, with or without your home computer as the intermediary.
Now TiVo is coming out with one of these devices as well, and it will also support displaying photos, and it will have the advantage of integration with the already-slick user interface of TiVo.
So shut your pie-hole.
"And like that
Replay alrady does this and more
-lets you set your program from the web www.myreplaytv.com
-Pictures can be uploaded to it
-streaming over the network
-share shows over the internet (you cant share what you recieved)
I can live without mp3
I did some temp tech support for these before SONICblue moved to India (last week). Nice PVR, wish I bought one.
my associative arrays can kick your hash - TCL
Geez, I'm getting sick of seeing so many damn Tivo stories on Slashdot... not because I think Tivo is crap, but because I would love to try one of these out, but I can't! The only thing that comes close up here is Bell Satellite with their PVR, which is something like $500-$600 up front I think.
And as many Tivo users have said, it's not the PVR functionality that kicks ass, but the service features such as Season Pass (hey, that rhymes). And from what I've seen the UI is really good. My fiance and I are dying to get one of these.
Damn you, Yankees! Damn you, eh!
My friend recently did some UI testing for Tivo and said that they are integrating a DVD burner into the Tivo, goooo Tivo :)
Soo... you're lazy?
Fuck yeah I'm lazy. Why should watching TV be work? Isn't it the opiate of the masses?
I don't know about you, but I don't like having to look up information about my opiate's schedule.
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
Are there any good PVRs out there that you don't need to pay a monthly service fee to use?
Uh, yeah, there's this one called TiVo that you just might have heard about. I got one and decided after a bit that I wasn't really getting much out of the service, so I cancelled it. As their web site states: "Without the TiVo service, a TiVo DVR has extremely limited functionality." It works just fine for me as, essentially, a tapeless VCR that has the ability to schedule more than 6 events, which is all I really needed. So if your needs are like mine and within the realm of what is considered "limited functionality", check out a TiVo.
1. Can your computer play MP3's on your stereo in the living room, which just happens to be hooked up to your TiVo?
Yes. I use a Y-splitter to send the audio output of my computer to my computer speakers as well as my stereo.
2. Can your computer display photos on your big TV in the living room for the entire family to see?
Yes. I use the 'video out' of my video card to send the video signal to my television.
I do both of these things to I can, watch DVDs, have a picture slidshow, listen to music, and sometimes play video games (with the help of a controller).
Having some of these features might be good if one does not have a computer, however, with a computer and some RCA cables one can do all of this for a one time fee of about $30.
Welcome to the land of the free...pay toll ahead...no photography...please open your bag...
1. Can your computer play MP3's on your stereo in the living room, which just happens to be hooked up to your TiVo?
Ever heard of Audio Out?
2. Can your computer display photos on your big TV in the living room for the entire family to see?
Ever heard of Video Out?
So an answer to your question, yes, I can do all of the above. Hey, why mark me as a troll? I'm trying to save you money!
To make a pun demonstrates the highest understanding of a language
You are right, there is a distinct lack of recordable consumer-level HDTV interconnects right now. You've got analog component, but nobody seems interested in recording it (plus the MPAA et al probably want it to go away ASAP since it's not encrypted).
The two digital standards are FireWire (IEC 61883-4) and DVI. In the next few years I expect most HDTV tuners and TVs will sprout at least one of these, and analog component will fade away. I have a JVC D-VHS deck with FireWire I/O, and I've successfully captured and played back 1080i ATSC video using a custom Linux utility. This proves it is possible to construct a HDTV PVR...
The big sticking point of course is the copy-prevention business. Currently ATSC broadcasts are not encrypted, and some HDTV tuners can be modified to output the unencrypted signal via FireWire. However, it is likely that all transmission of HDTV video over FireWire will be encrypted in the near future (or there will be a "don't copy" bit embedded in the video, backed by DMCA enforcement). DVI has been scrambled from its beginning as an HDTV transport format. (AFAIK DVI sends uncompressed video, so it's not clear you'd be able to record it even without any encryption)
I've heard rumors that the encryption developers have not learned their lesson and are still using cryptographically weak algorithms. So we might very well a DeCSS-like utility for decrypting HDTV FireWire streams.
There's nothing in the text or spirit of the GPL that says Tivo needs to allow you to port new software to run on the Tivo hardware while you're using the service.
If you don't use the service, you can use the machine for a frisbee for all they care, but if you want to use the service on a day to day basis, you need to run a certain signed version of the kernel.
You're more than welcome to use Tivo's modifications to the kernel in your code, or any other code. That's the spirit of the GPL. Not that Tivo has too allow you to port new code to their architecture.
Yes, we've done the arithmetic. A minimal system costs $100 more than the TiVO, and gives you far less functionality than a dumb (no subscription) TiVO with the single difference that you can archive the files. But with a basic ($100 more than TiVO) setup, the quality will be so bad that you really wouldn't want to.
If you want to argue that you're just paying $50 to put the ATI card into your existing powerful PC then you go ahead and kid yourself, but at least factor in the super-quiet fan you'll need to make it bearable.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
Nobody is forcing you to pay for any of these "pre-announced" new features. Don't want to pay for them? Fine, don't add them to your service. It certainly won't be a requirement.
If TV listings aren't worth $5/month then they certainly aren't worth the $13/month that TiVo charges. But if TV listings aren't worth that to you, then don't pay and the Tivo will still work - you'll just have to manually set up all the record times.
Why can't I moderate something "Wrong" or at least "Grossly Misinformed"?
I hate to admit this, but I did an NPV analysis of the various payment schedules. This was back when monthly was $10, lifetime was $200, and (now unavailable) yearly was $100.
The upshot was that monthly was cheaper until month 17-18, and lifetime was cheaper after that. Yearly never made sense. So, if you expect to keep your TiVo longer than 18 months, which plan to get is pretty clear.
It's been pointed out that I should've included an end value for the lifetime subscription. I didn't, but that would just make the expected usefulness of the monthly plan even shorter.
I haven't re-run the numbers for the new pricing scheme, but I expect they'd be similar.
ceci n'est pas un sig.
Does anyone know if they're going to be using Rendezvous for the MP3 and photo viewing features? If so, that's another reason for me to possibly get cable and a Tivo.
mbbac
There will be revenue associated with these items.
;-)
Well I'm glad we got over THAT hurdle. Perhaps the next step will be making a profit?
Interested in open source engine management for your Subaru?
Who the hell wants to run cables and set up software on their PC to their home theater system 2 floors away? Not I. The PCs versions of Tivo are just kludges and you know it, so quit bringing it up. Buy your Tivo and be done with it.
Why? Is there any indication that other companies can't provide the same service just as well and possibly more cheaply?
I, for one, am rather disappointed that a couple of companies have tried to build patent fences around DVRs for what are pretty simple ideas that had been "in the air" for many years. Tivo's bankruptcy wouldn't necessarily free those patents, but at least it would demonstrate again that patent landgrabs don't assure commercial success.
I think this support for Tivo is similar to the support for Microsoft: people are saw awed by a product or feature that they don't stop to ask the question: how well could others do in this market if they had the chance?
So an answer to your question, yes, I can do all of the above.
First of all I didn't say you couldn't. My point was there is definitely a market for a device that does this. Hell, I bought a Slimp3, which is basically the same thing without the ability to view photos on the TV, and it cost $250, and it was worth it!
Yes, you could run cables all the way from your PC to your stereo/tv, but with this TiVo device it makes it easy to control the listening/viewing from the comfort of your living room. Those A/V cables you're using, you have to operate everything through your computer. Not very user friendly.
"And like that
TiVo is, in my humble opinion as a TiVo user, the best thing that's happened to TV. Posters who complain about the fee, saying that the same services can be had for free simply don't get it. It's a luxury item, my monthly fee pays for a service that I find highly valuable, and for $15 a month it's well worth it.
If you're interested in assembling your own computer PVR that's great, go ahead. But for me, and tons of other TiVo users, the value of TiVo can't be beat. The time it would take to cobble together and support a home-rolled box is non-trivial and personally, my time is worth more than the paltry fee I pay each month.
It's just like any other luxury item or service. I drive a sports-lux sedan because I value the extra pleasure I derive from driving it. If you don't want to drive a sports sedan that's fine, but your preference doesn't invalidate the choice for the rest of us that are willing to pay for it.
So I have to upgrade to a new, more expensive, Tivo2 just to have the ability to pay an extra fee to get the new functionality? Nevermind if you think this new ability to do MP3s and pictures is valuable, you have to pay extra for it, on top of paying for the new Tivo? I think I'll just spend a hundred on a new giant harddrive and upgrade my current Tivo.
Ogg, that is. I mean, come on, is this slashdot? I want ogg support in the new TiVO, not just mp3.
the major advances in civilization are processes which all but wreck the societies in which they occur - A.N. White
This is starting to sound like a really nice entertainment box, one that I would finally consider buying. Still not enough, though. Here's what I want, and I want Apple to build it.
A box with a removable (40/60/80) gig firewire hard drive. Do the normal PVR stuff. Plays some mp3's, pictures, etc. Whatever. Make the Hard drive removable, though, so that when I record a show I like, I can plug it into my mac and burn to DVD, using a plugin to iMovie.
Maybe add some kinda 802.11 networking thingie so that I can transfer small files (mp3's, jpegs) wirelessly and I'm happy. Make it Rendezvous/zeroconf aware so that I don't have to fiddle with network settings on my teevee. Rather than have to plug the thing into a phone line, have it talk to my mac and get updates via my mac's internet connection. If I'm a dialup user, have it update the info whenever I'm connected.
Why Apple? Duh. iTunes. iMovie. iDVD. iPhoto. This device is screaming to be integrated with Apple's digital hub. Wanna show your family vacation pictures? Build a slideshow in iPhoto, upload the quicktime mov to the iBox and watch it on your teevee. Wanna listen that great mix of your favorite 50 mp3's or build a killer party sound track to play on your stereo? No problem, just upload the setlist. It could even stream the mp3's using iTunes powered Rendezvous.
Build in some intelligent DRM that doesn't restrict fair use but also doesn't turn Joe Sixpack into his own Sopranos pirating station. Disable internet file sharing of recorded shows (ugh) or delete the file once it's been burned to DVD.
This is a device I would buy. I would watch teevee with this thing. I would buy more CD's. I want it--now.
My other computer is your Windows box
Yes indeed, TiVo comes with USB2 ports. It's true, the original Series2 units (AT&T TiVo, real early Series2 units) only came with USB1.1. However, TiVo released a new hardware stepping that fixed a few complaints people had (bad reception on a few channels on the internal tuner, etc) - and one of the new features added in this minor hardware revision: USB2.
The new hardware revision has been on the market for months. It was a silent revision, there is some minor change in the S/N to distinguish the units, but I don't have that information in front of me. Regardless, the fact still remains, that yes, TiVo has USB2.
As it has been stated in the TiVo Coffee House forum by TiVo employees, there will be no upgrade for the Series 1 hardware.
I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
> but why would a man ever do it?
It's a compromise thing. There are joys in the here and now, but it's also a long-term investment into not dying a lone bastard. I've seen too many wretched souls awaiting the end of their days in some retirement home/death asylum without anyone ever coming to see them, and the thought of that terrifies me personally.
There are plenty of mailing lists (and a newsgroup, too) that cover those topics. They're more usable than most web fora anyway.
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
Can you explain the IR blaster thing? Does it take input from the Replay remote and send the signal to the DISH reciever, without hooking anything up to the DISH reciever? if so, this is what I am looking for. The built in ethernet and VCD capability seals it for me.
This is the perfect opportunity to note that Tivo's "lifetime membership" is NOT the payer's lifetime but the tivo unit's lifetime... which means that when your tivo unit stops working and you have to buy a new one, you have to pay the "lifetime" membership fee AGAIN.
In my opinion, this amounts to one of the sleaziest, most misleading abuses of market-speak that I have ever encountered.
.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
Keep in mind that Tivo's so-called lifetime fee only covers the lifetime of the unit; when the unit needs replacing, so does your lifetime membership. How long will your tivo last?
.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
IMO, this is a Good Thing. The TiVo Community Forum asks that things that will a) cost TiVo significant revenue or b) Open TiVo up to legal exposure not be discussed there. In return, they provide de facto support for all other kinds of hacking. Good luck finding that for any other piece of consumer electronics.
OTOH, as the above links show, information about the Other Stuff (like saving shows to CD) is easily available.
Sounds like the best of both worlds to me.
Um, that should be "40 hour Replay". Sorry about that. A 4-hour PVR would be useless!
Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
Or get a PlayStation 2 and Qcast Tuner software for $50 (one-time) from BroadQ. Total cost $250, if you don't already have a PS2. I suppose that TiVo might have an interface advantage depending on how they implement it, compared to loading a disc in the PS2. But then the TiVo won't do digital video as well as photos and .mp3 -- the Qcast Tuner will.
As a gift, especially for parents, it probably depends on how tech-saavy they are. If they're still not comfortable with programming a VCR, then a non-service TiVo is not the way to go. Like I said, it works for me because my issues with the VCR were not of the programming/setting the clock variety, but with the constant tape changes and the limited scheduling. So if they're mostly happy with the way a VCR works, gift them with just the unit. If they're the kind of people that really enjoy TV entertainment but have trouble with technology, the TiVo service is actually well worth the money. Compare what is the price of a dozen DVDs to how many trouble-free hours of broadcast viewing they could do and make your decision.
Maybe, but I've used a ReplayTV 2020 for over 3 years, consider myself "technically savvy", and am happy.
Maybe I'm too tolerant of minor flaws. Maybe I have an irrational commitment to an underdog platform. Maybe I'm beset by cognitive dissonance because to abandon ReplayTV is to admit I was wrong. Maybe I'm just happy enough with them for my own purposes and choose to support them because I value competition. Maybe I've made an emotional investment and feel certain the ReplayTV engineers will be able to justify my support. Maybe I feel ReplayTV is being condemned by the technical community for early problems which have long since been corrected.
From my point of view, Tivo dominates the discourse of the techical community at a rate of near 95%--maybe more. I simply don't believe it is that much better, and that everybody is way too starstruck and unadventurous, and the result is going to be another monopoly!
Don't blame me when it happens!
Machines take me by surprise with great frequency. -A. Turing
Why can't you leave it tuned to something interesting -- like porn.
:P
______
Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.