EFF Reviews HDTV PVR Solution for Mac
enrico_suave points out this "PVRBlog post about EFF's Review of Elgato's EyeTV 500, an HDTV solution for the Mac. Well, a very speedy dual-processor G5 Mac, apparently. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has been doing a lot of important work defending our online and digital rights including opposing the dreaded FCC mandated broadcast flag (cue boos and hisses) Elgato and Plextor also have a Standard Definition homebrew PVR solution with an EyeTV and ConvertX PVR bundle (Wired review)." (See also this earlier review from a Slashdot reader.)
I've got no problem with reading ONE article, but this is ridiculous!
Speaking of that dreaded broadcast flag, wouldn't it be a rather simple matter of making a little embedded box that sits there, watches the data stream and resets said flag on the fly? I remember using of of these boxes to do exactly that, to defeat digital copy with MDs (iirc).
Could someone in the know enlighten me here?
On Monday, comcast will install a $10 a month PVR with dual tuner and one that can record 15 hours of HDTV and 60 of regular TV. Why should I invest in a dual G5 power mac and an additional $350 to basically get the same functionality.
iTele [for os x] is free, works with generic digital tv tuner cards and supports the high definition picture for those regions where it is available, i.e. everywhere except the uk.
http://www.defyne.org/dvb/
just think about not only being able to connect your iPod or DV camcorder or digital camera or flash media reader, but third party peripherals like this HDTV tuner to it. and it all being networked!
<--#insert file="witty.sig"--
Slashdot people are stupid fucking loosers.
Go stick a USB cable up your ass!
Hhm.. I haven't had a TV for the past years actually. Waste of time :-) Besides, bittorrent gives easier access to movies anyway.
see a Text Widget
To have regul6ar and/Or distribute
As a hacker, I constitute a circumvention device.
Since when does publishing a thinly vieled advertisement for someone's product constitute "defending our online and digital rights"? The EFF ought to be ashamed of themselves. This sort of action does not help their credibility at all. If the IRS got wind of this, they would be well within their authority to revoke the EFF's 501(c)3 status.
Well, since the article is from the EFF, I bet this one does things that the comcast won't let you do, such as:
- archive programs
- move programs to a different device
- save programs as long as you like
- record whatever you want (despite the broadcast flag)
(If you want to send me a dual g5 to test on, I'll probably think up a few others)
Granted, $350 (or $4000) > $5/mo, but this is true for Media Center PCs as well, and they are so afraid of the broadcast flag, you can't even record HBO. And, soon, neither will your comcast PVR...
http://www.allyourtv.com/0405season/news/novemb
I just got this box the other day and it is FANTASTIC. I had a Tivo as well and I think this thing is just head and shoulders above the Tivo. It's got most of the same features and is just much smoother than the Tivo (especially the guide). HDTV recording is just awesome (as well as dual tuner).
Why do you need such a great CPU? The article says it's because the hidef MPEG2 content is decoded in software. Huh? I though graphics cards started doing MPEG2 assist and later complete MPEG2 decoding years ago? It that feature just not in the drivers, or was it dropped due to cost and faster CPUs? Guess you should budget in some more for an MPEG2 decoder card, but they are not easy to find anymore (at least not as easy as they were), they tend to require passthrough (I've never seen pass-through DVI, and would it handle dual link for 30" screens?), etc. Seems like a big problem.
Only an antenna? If this thing can record HD and SD content (as long as it's digital), why not give it an HDMI connector so I could record off equiptment that has HDMI out? Or give it a DVI in for recording off that? Just an antenna seems.... measly.
Interesting though. The CPU problem is not as bad as it sounds considering how many people would currently want to use their computer to timeshift full glory HD content. If you have the TV and such for that and you can afford this box, you can probably afford a computer to play the file (or at least an MEPG2 decoder card).
Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
Welcome to slash-fucking-dot.
With the exception of VHS downconverted archiving
Can you...
export the HDTV recordings to other media?
archive the HDTV recordings?
edit out portions of the HDTV recordings you want to discard or save?
Do I even need to comment?
THere is also GNU Radio
Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
The editor is simple to use, requiring no special video editing expertise, and works reliably. It does, however, make a temporary buffer copy of the entire recording being edited, so you need at least enough free disk space to accommodate the temp copy. I discovered this limitation after I managed to repeatedly crash the EyeTV software because I had run short of space. To its credit, the EyeTV application did not corrupt the original recording, despite my repeated crashes. That's a nice touch, suggesting some careful, fault-tolerant programming.
Did anyone else find that hilarious?
"I seem to have mastered a certain amount of control over physical reality."
god damn I wish I had mod points.
this is the most informative post so far
"Well, a very speedy dual-processor G5 Mac, apparently" reading the article only the dual G5 was able to play back HDDTV - just goes to show how slow those crappy processors are in the first place... a single P4 or AMD would do the trick...
Been running MythTv for over a year now, and am curious if this thing throws std MPEG streams or something funky?
The price is a little steep, but with accellerated playback on NVidia cards under X, it would rock on most recent Athlon systems. (2600+>)
A dual G5 requirement for smooth HDTV playback is a big problem. You should be able to easily do this with a midrange G4 system.
The problem is that Apple has not opened the API for the MPEG2 acceleration available in most of the video chips in Macs. ( The equivalent of DxVA in Windows, or XvMC in XFree86 ). In the x86 world, this takes the CPU requirement down from ~ 2.4GHz P4 to ~ 800MHz P3.
Apple's DVD player uses the MPEG2 acceleration, but they don't allow others to use it. So, we're stuck with extremely high CPU requirements of dec oding those hi-res HDTV files.
Can anyone list the typical power costs of a modern PC/Mac running 24/7 compared to a consumer DVR?
If I lived 15 miles to the west, on the other side of a hill, I would have great TV reception and this would be wonderful. As it is, I'm stuck with Comcast, and all their scrambled DRM bullshit, and it sucks to be me :-(
- i have one sitting in the box on a shelf...pretty bad piece of Mac-related gear... the software never worked correctly and the resolution was awful...
This may sound as troll, but hear me out:
Times have changed since the days when VCRs were introduced. Back then, we had a few channels to choose from, and even fewer good programs. E.g., there were 2 or 3 sci-fi shows a week and if they were shown at the wrong timeslot you were SOL. Worse, video rentals hadn't been invented and tapes of TV shows even less. So back then, recording TV shows for time-shifting was quite useful.
Nowadays, the good shows come out on DVDs which you can rent from the corner store or through the net, and the not-so-good shows, well it's not the end of life if you miss one or two episodes. So there's really not so much urgency to time-shift. Furthermore, we're moving away from the one-way TV, using the internet and interactive entertainment more and more, which is good.
The broadcast flag will make it harder for us to watch TV. This'll force us to move away from TV even more, move away from commercials and the social pressure of watching certain "must-see" shows. It'll force us to be more picky about the shows we watch (through DVDs) and open the market to independent shows released on DVDs only. So while this will have a serious effect on the life of some people, it'll be a good effect in the long run.
This is utterly ridiculous .. i was intending to donate to the EFF .. (donated to tsunami relief instead) .. Anyway .. I was planning to donate later this year.
.. why the hell are they doing REVIEWS? what the heck is their problem. Even worse, the review comes off as highly biased .. what's the deal with writing off all the Windows and Linux hardware hdtv solutions as shit WITHOUT EVEN DOING A COMPARISON STUDY?
But I'm asking
I'm very disappointed in EFF for making this move.
Would some other people please hop on the torrent for the HD LoTR sample? I'm getting a whopping 1.5 K/s down and 6.8 K/s up. :-)
please moderate the project to truth, for aal be treated bay your
When I asked EyeTV why it did not take advantage of the hardware acceleration included in the graphics cards installed in modern Macs, they explained that Apple has not made those interfaces easily accessible to third party developers. Enabling hardware acceleration is thus not likely to be in the cards for EyeTV's software in the near future.
What exactly does this mean? Does OSX not export an API for 3rd party software to leverage video card's hardware?
-Aaron-
Too easy, you must use Linux.
There is no reason for FCC to mandate broadcast flags! The FCC mandate is to keep broad casters spectrums form overlapping, and in the good old days it made sure news coverage of elections was actually fair and balanced note sarcasm here. Their purpose never was and never should be to impose big brothers will of what we watch and when we watch it. I'm sick of the government forcing the will of a large corporation on individual citizens. I'm just waiting for trusted computing to delete this before I can post it. Well that is my rant for today. Someone else get off the ass a take back out government will you. I've signed EFF until I'm blue in the face and it seems liek no matter what the corperation layer have more money and energy and find a new way around.
I'd just like to throw in that over the past few months there have been TONS of patches added to MythTV that add OSX compatibility.
I'm not sure how close Myth is to working completely on OSX, but I don't doubt that once it's working on OSX, it will be a formidable entry into the world of PVR software for this operating system.
I'm somewhat interested whether playback using Apple's QuickTime MPEG-2 Playback Component makes a significant difference here. It's only $30 CDN ($19.95 US -- I guess they haven't changed their pricing since the Canadian dollar gained on the US dollar), and doesn't require QuickTime Pro, so I imagine a non-dual G5 user who wanted to use this system to watch their captured video could just buy this.
I'm tempted to buy this to test it out and post the results here. Does anyone here have the MPEG-2 playback add-on for QuickTime who can comment on this?
Yaz.
"As a mohel, I constitute a circumcision device." It's late.
"It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
If Apple tries to enforce the broadcast flag with Tiger, just keep an older Mac on Panther hooked up to the EyeTV box, and pull the streams off to whatever - it's just a mpeg2.
You can of course always dump to Divx/Vid/3vix/etc. and playback on whatever computer you want.
So... I have the QT MPEG-2 decoder.
OS X 10.3.7
1.5Ghz PB
1GB RAM
Finder.... restarts if one hits "play" on preview window
QT... opens huge yyyyy x 1080 window, no audio, no video, crashes, sends report to Apple
iDVD... can't import the file
iMovie... starts to import the file, then interrupts import
VLC Player... works, but image choppy when camera pans. Still, they do a lot better than Apple. Paused image quality is amazing.
Cheers,
The next pasture is always greener
I know this is OT, but I've been keeping an eye one the Telly by Interact-Tv.com....it has come down in price and looks real appealing (features, open HW/SW and SDK).
Does anyone have one, or know of any reviews / comparisons?
How will the broadcast flag affect DVHS over firewire?
t hreadid=386740&perpage=20
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?s=&
http://mac_hdtv_timer.home.comcast.net/
What?!?!?!? My Mobile phone can display video... Orange SVP 500. Got a 512MB SD card in it... so I get over 4 hours of 15fps video and stereo sound... Not bad, for a mobile phone...
Visit London Scalextric Club
is that awesome, or what?
More information about using GNURadio to receive hdtv at: http://comsec.com/wiki?HowtoHdTv