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Pioneer To Release TiVo/DVD Burner Combo

TK-421 writes "According to an official Pioneer press release, 'Pioneer is revolutionizing home video recording with the introduction of the world's first DVD recorders featuring the TiVo service. These new recorders offer consumers the control provided by the easy-to-use TiVo service integrated with advanced DVD recording for the option of short-term storage on a hard drive or long-term archival of broadcast programming on DVD-R/RW discs.'" The options include both 80 and 120GB models, starting at a not-inexpensive $1199, and there's more information via a CNET News article.

3 of 252 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Macrovision? by Osty · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unlike videotape, DVD will not degrade over time when exposed to heat and humidity.

    But CDs and DVDs do degrade over time. Not in video quality, since that's all digital, but the storage medium itself has been known to rot (mostly CDs and laser discs, since DVDs really haven't been around long enough to see any noticeable deterioration). Sure, they last much longer than tape, and don't degrade with repeated viewings, but to say that they won't degrade at all is naive.


    Are there any good long-term storage solutions? I'm talking on the order of decades, not years. Paper's done a pretty good job so far, but even that degrades, and it's a little hard to store digital information in an easily retrievable format on paper.

  2. Re:Everything comes up short... by Pedersen · · Score: 5, Informative
    You wanna burn to DVD? Here ya go:
    • MythTV, also used to edit commercials out of the recording
    • MythMkMovie, used to make DivX files

    After that, burn to DVD to your heart's content. Oh, and MythMkMovie is getting ready for the 1.0 release finally (within the next two weeks it looks like).
    --

    GPL made simple: What was my stuff is now our stuff. If you improve our stuff, please keep it our stuff.
  3. Today's word is "litotes" by Daemonic · · Score: 5, Informative
    Understatement by negating the contrary.

    It's not uncommon.