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ReplayTV and TiVo Compared

j0atz writes "The New York Times is running a story today that, while it's a bit redundant in the beginning and a bit short on technical details later, gives a rundown the newest features for ReplayTV (numbered 4000 or above) and TiVO (Series2); basically, you can program your favorite DVR to record a show from a remote computer or from another (same-brand) DVR. Along with that, you can stream MP3's and pictures with TiVo now. Still...I'd much rather use something like FreeVo or MythTV and actually burn my shows to cd, stream whatever I want, etc, etc."

6 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Question about Tivo / PVR quality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    At the high or best settings, you'd be hard pressed to pick out a digital cable signal from a tivo recorded digital cable signal.

    At the basic quality setting, you'd have no problem whatsoever.

    However, if your input signal is poor, tivo will have a harder time compressing it (as it tries to store all the noise), and compression artifacts might become obvious at High.

  2. Re:An issue with Replay by BonrHanzon · · Score: 5, Informative

    The ReplayTV series was purchased by Denon & Marantz (makers of higher-end A/V receivers), a company with greater resources that SonicBlue ever had. So really they are better off now than they were before. Buy with confidence.

  3. Re:Question about Tivo / PVR quality by Qube · · Score: 5, Informative

    You choose the picture quality (a default which you can override for specific shows/SPs) but higher quality uses more disk space.

    Basic looks pretty horrible, and it does the usual blocky MPEG artefacts when something moves quickly but it's better than VHS at least.

    Medium is quite watchable, and OK for fairly static programmes (gameshows and the like)

    High is what I use for day-to-day and is very good - I have (UK) Sky Digital as the source and it's as good to my eyes.

    Best uses even more disk space, but will be as good as what you throw at it. It's what the live buffer uses and is recommended for sports and other fast-moving stuff.

    It's pretty straightforward to upgrade a TiVo to use a (cheap now) 120Gb disk and you can store a lot at High or Best with that.

  4. A much better comparison by anaradad · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are much better comparisons available, including http://pvrcompare.com/ , a great site for people considering a PVR purchase.

  5. Directv Tivo by asdfasdfasdfasdf · · Score: 5, Informative

    The DirecTV Tivos copy the satellite stream including Dolby digital as they come off the Sat-- so they are as "perfect" as the source-- which means for hi-bitrate channels like HBO, it's not DVD quality, but it's better than any cable I've seen.

    The flipside is that the DirecTivos are more difficult to hack, and I don't think there's any easy way to Hack the HDVR2 (latest and 'greatest')

    As others have mentioned, the HDVR2 is plagued with audio issues, while not devastating, still annoying-- and there hasn't been a patch since release-- 8 months ago. Also, there's no word on support for Home Networking for this model, even though the hardware supports it. :-P

    I've been too lazy-- but if if I give up on DirecTV sanctioned networking, I'm going to actively persue video extraction options.

  6. APEX DVR by bazabba · · Score: 5, Informative

    Looks like APEX is joining the bunch. This also includes a DVD player, or rather this DVD player includes a DVR. I don't read anything about a service fee either.

    ADR-1000