External TV Tuners/PVR Devices Tested
Solomon writes "TV Tuners for the PC have existed for a long time but with the ever increasing popularity of TiVo-like services and the possibility of replicating such features on your Windows PC with little effort and a small investment, tuners have been getting a lot of attention this year.
Today there's three-way shootout posted at TechSpot with products from Digistor, Transcend and a very appealing offer from RTV called the VEG that lets you play consoles in your monitor. Although neither of these devices can match TiVo completely, they do give you a very cheap alternative."
Anyway, I have a 9600 all-in-wonder, and I really really like the cable tv tuner deal. I desperately need to upgrade, but I am having a hard time parting with the built in tuner. I suppose these would be a good alternative.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/
...of any external tuner that claims to let you play console games. *Every* external tuner I've seen has had too much lag to let you play console games.
They failed to review the best product available, EyeTV
I paid the going retail price for a Windows screen reader and got a free Unix computer!
USB 2.0 has sufficient bandwidth if the device performs onboard encoding. (MPEG2 for instance).
A USB high speed (2.0) interface is good enough by itself.
DO your research FIRST, and just buy a PVR-250 or PVR-350. Friend of mine didn't listen to me, and went and bought himself a cheap $29 tuner card for $180 -- and no MPEG.
I have an old non-mpeg tuner card, and it works great with MythTV. Dedicate a box to the task. Get a nice TV-Out card that you can live with. Get the remote control, or a longer-range wireless keyboard.
MythTV blows my mind everytime I use it: KnoppMyth
Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
Its a shame they didn't compare these products against MythTV. I've been using it quite happily for some time on my Linux box equipped with a Hauppage TV card. I suspect it works out cheaper than the options offered in the article and has comparable features to a tivo...
could they pick some of the crappiest cheeziest bunch of external tuners to test?
What about hauppauge wintv usb 2 or plextor convertX PVR (which has both PC and Mac pvr software)
For internal devices I like the wintv pvr250. Yes the pvr150 is cheaper and comes with a better remote/ir blaster, but the pvr250 is better supported in linux with the ivtv drivers being pretty mature/stable for that card.
*shrug*
rampy
Build Your Own PVR/HTPC news, reviews, &
The PVR-150 does not work with the ivtv driver or Myth. It is close to working. According to the mailing list, the audio does not work yet. One developer reported a solution. He has not rolled his code back into the main driver yet.
I hope the PVR-500 becomes supported by ivtv. It has two tuners on a single card, a great gain for people building compact MythTV systems.
Be very careful when purchasing hardware for MythTV. It is a fantastic package, but only with the right hardware.
"... us lucky people in Europe can receive MPEG2 streams over the air using DVB tuner cards, no encoding necessary"
The lucky people in the USA can get our MPEG2 streams free with an antenna and OTA HD tuner. But awareness of this capability is still quite limited. It seems as though the cable and satellite companies have succeeded in convincing most people that HD is only available by paying a monthly fee.
Here is the best chance. If any company makes such a product, El Gato is the one.