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Latest SnapStream PVR App Reviewed

martensitic writes "Yahoo! posted this positive AP review of the newest version of a third-party PC app designed to compete with TiVo and Microsoft's Media Center. SnapStream 's 'Beyond TV 3' (sounds like something Fox would produce) allows streaming to standard web browsers for watching on other computers in your home, and promotes automatic commercial break recognition that has been downplayed in other products. (Previously mentioned here.)"

7 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. Re:two questions. by pineapples10 · · Score: 5, Informative

    1. As long as the PC was a cable connection coming into it, it can record, it requires no TV. If you wanted to, you could put the PC, lets say in the basement, and run cables for video, and one for the IR remote (most IR remotes use common 1/8th audio jacks, so you could get an extension cord rather easily).

    2. BTV3 CAN be run as a service. It can also be run in a window, or fullscreen, and can be configured to open on startup as such.

  2. Better yet, it saves shows in a standard format by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 4, Informative

    I really enjoy my Beyond TV version 3 setup:
    WinPVR card, 200 GB hard drive, a DVD burner, and Beyond TV.

    It saves the shows in a standard file format, and I can use other software to convert to a more compressed format and archive to DVD. :)

    At one point, I had problems with it frequently crashing, but downloading the newest update solved that problem.

    I still use my TiVo, but I am slowly switching my TV viewing to the Beyond TV system.

  3. Re:.net? fuck that by normal_guy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Do you know what .net is? Why are you afraid of it? It's part of WindowsUpdate, perhaps you'd feel more comfortable getting the framework from that site. Think of it as the newer VB runtimes.

    --

    Linux: Free if your time is worthless.
  4. Re:Too bad it sucks by pineapples10 · · Score: 5, Informative

    lots of people say that it "runs slow" or "sucks", but in my experience, its usually that people dont have adequate hardware. A lot of people use ATI's All In Wonder cards with this program. While they are great cards, they offer no kind of hardware encoding. thus, anytime you are recording a show, cpu usage skyrockets. Combine this with the fact that people are often VIEWING the show while it is being encoded, you can understand why the cpu gets bogged down and the recording "sucks". A hardware encoding card fixes most peoples problems. The Hauppauge PVR 250 is a common choice, and retails for about $125. It brings cpu usage (while recording) down to about 5% on my 1.2ghz machine.

  5. Snapstream? by ColaMan · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'll pass, having installed their previous efforts.

    And besides, my (here we go again) MythTV box does the same... and also lets me:

    - Play my giant MP3/Ogg collection
    - Have a slideshow of all the digital photos I've ever taken.
    - watch DVD's and rip them if they're any good.
    - play about 40G of movies on command,and share them on my local network.
    - Have a nice auto-updating weather display, with forecasts and satellite photos.
    - Read a bunch of RSS newsfeeds

    All of which is accessible from my remote.... and free, if your time is worth nothing ;-)

    Seriously, first person who makes a 'standard' mythTV box for under a grand (AUD) will make a killing.

    --

    You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
    There is a lot of hype here.
  6. Re:or you could by The+Vulture · · Score: 4, Informative

    MythTV used to be a major b*tch to setup, I remember compiling the tarballs, pulling in all of the dependencies by hand, etc. It was quite painful (this was back around 0.9, when I started using it).

    However, now that Jarod has put up his excellent website on setting up MythTV with Fedora Core 1, and Axel builds RPMs, it's a no-brainer. And, at least for me in the United States (California), XMLTV hasn't broken in months. And, thanks to the crack programmers, there's an option to check on the status of the last XMLTV grab (and MythTV e-mails you also).

    Now of course, if your hardware deviates from the website, then you might have a problem. But, for the most part, it's still pretty easy.

    -- Joe

  7. Re:Cool by ZoneGray · · Score: 5, Informative

    Considering that what it does is record the shows to an MPEG or WMV file, the answer here would be yes. Even better, it can use third-party capture/encoding cards (WinTV-PVR), so it doesn't even touch the program stream (although it can use software encoding too).

    If you record in MPEG2, you can use something like TMPEG to drop it onto a DVD without re-encoding.

    What's funny is that the review didn't mention the coolest feature, which is the remote scheduling through snapstream.net. It's just a regular TV listings page, and a free account comes with the software. You can click to record a show, and the PVR checks in every ten minutes or so for additions, and adds them to the schedule. It's just an outbound HTTP connection, so it works through a firewall without exposing anything.

    The net result is that if I'm away from home and hear about a show I want to record, I can set it up it in seconds from any web browser on the 'net. Try that with your Tivo.

    This was a fairly shaky product in early versions, but it's really developed into something useful. I'd never go back to a VCR.