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TiVo Plans More Functionality Reductions

TiVo has been in the news recently with a couple of plans to make their service less useful than it could be: first, TiVos will now auto-delete pay-per-view and video-on-demand movies, and second, TiVo is making sure that you can't use a TiVo to view NFL games outside the specified market area. TiVo's lawyer explains.

5 of 521 comments (clear)

  1. Build your own... by Standmic · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.byopvr.com/

  2. Re:accelerating their own death by jgordon7 · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a recent owner of one of those Cable DVRs and being a previous tivo owner.

    I hope that is not the case. Since my experience with the cable service DVR is extremely poor. Even though the Cable one can record HD channels and has Dual Tuners, its user interface is down right awful to the point of being almost unuseable. It is slow to react, trying to FF through commericals is almost more painful than watching the commercials. Its conflict management is just plain dumb. If one episode of a show you have as a favorite conflicts with a movie you want to watch you tell it to record the movie and not the favorite show, well it stops recording ALL future shows of that favorite TOO.

    If you start watching a recorded show that is not done recording it starts you at LIVE time, not the beginning of the show. If you rewind to the beginning which is what you have to do, and the show finishes recording before you finish watching the show it JUMPS you forward to LIVE TV. And it does not remember where you were in the show when you go back to watch it.

    Trying to find something to record is damn near impossible. The only search ability is by Title FIRST LETTER, so for say Simpson you have to weed through all of the shows that begin with "S". It has Genre search but is equally useless.

    And for recorded duplicate shows, even if you tell only get first runs, it records every airing of a show. This also make the poor conflict management even worse since it wants to records shows that have repeat showings in a week too.

    I will be dropping this POS, as soon as I get my money together to build a HTPC.

    Its only saving grace is price. However that is big for alot of people and means we will soon see more crappy PVRs in the future.

  3. Re:Glad I have myth by enrico_suave · · Score: 5, Informative

    You won't necessarly have a problem when you switch to digital cable... you'd do the same thing a TiVo user does... You'd use an IR blaster (or a serial cable if you have a motrolla 2k dig cable box that hasn't been crippled by your cable company)

    The IR blaster will be controlled by your mythbox... the ir blaster will simulate your digital cable boxes remote control presses to change teh channel at the appropriate times to record the shows you want... you just pipe the output via svideo or composite into your capture/tuner card =)

    e.

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    Build Your Own PVR/HTPC news, reviews, &
  4. Re:Glad I have myth by Darth+Maul · · Score: 5, Informative

    Amen. MythTV is a great solution for anyone considering a PVR solution. A few points to consider:

    1) Back- and front-end architecture. I have one backend that records, and two front-end lightweight machines that can view content.

    2) Free (not counting computer hardware costs, however).

    3) Can use external channel changer like TiVo (I have a satellite box, so I need an IR transmitter to change channels on it).

    4) More than just TV! I have my entire music collection on there, along with DVDs, games, weather, images...

    5) Need more recording space? Just stick in another hard drive (I know you can do this with TiVO, but your warranty is then void). I currently can record up to 160 hours on my box.

    6) Different themes available.

    7) Auto commercial detection.

    8) Can edit and cut out parts of a video recording so you can burn to DVD without commercials, etc.

    The list goes on... I've used it for well over a year and just love it. The WAF is also quite high (skipping commercials is huge).

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  5. Nope by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Informative

    DVB-T is DVB for TERRESTRIAL. It's Europe's equivalent of ATSC digital broadcasting in the US.

    DVB-C is for cable, and is Europe-only. US cable uses QAM modulation also, but the coding scheme and other minor details about the signal differ, so DVB-C cards do not work with U.S. cable.

    There ARE QAM-capable tuner cards for US cable on the market now, but since almost all U.S. cable channels are encrypted, they're not very useful.

    PC-based DVB-S receivers won't work in the U.S. except for getting Dish Network's preview channel, as Dish's encryption scheme is modified enough from standard Nagravision that the Nagra access cards compatible with PC-based DVB-S receivers won't work with Dish.

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