TiVo to Aim for PC Desktop
Dave writes "Ars Technica has reported on TiVo's fourth quarter earnings call, and I was interested to see that the company is looking at providing some kind of desktop service for computers." The details are pretty sparse, so it'll be intriguing to see what they've got planned.
TiVo to Aim for PC Desktop
Not if I aim it out the window first.
Don't desktops generally have something like that available called a spam filter?
So its like a pay BT site?
time is a perception of a being's consciousness
time is your 6th sense, the wierd ones are 7+
This could help them to overcome the big advantage that the cable and satellite companies have going for them.
Currently I own this nice piece of kit.. a Nebular electronics digitv PCI card..
Will TiVo bring (Tivo) to our desktops in the form of a PCI card too? If that's the case, I'm sure many will have case to cream their pants!
Online backup with Mozy, sounds like Ozzie, but more!
I don't use a TiVo, but my understanding is that you use this machine to record stuff for playback when you have the time to relax. Do you really want to go relax in front of a desktop PC?
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Tivo costs £10 per month to get guide information... Or you could buy Microsoft Media Centre edition, costs you £89 up front but you get the guide information for free forever plus you can hack it (using any x86 tools).
Long time TiVo competitor, ReplayTV, has had a PC interface for some time now by means of an open source JAVA program called DVArchive. With it, user's of LAN enabled ReplayTV's can stream recorded shows onto their PC's. DVArchive can even act as a virtual ReplayTV, serving up shows for all the real ones in the house. If this is what TiVo has planned, it sounds like they are playing catch-up.
for this to actually work for Joe "i own a dell" Enduser, it would more then likely have to have a USB interface....and frankly, USB capture cards are way system intensive and typically crap... besides, why would any one who has have a brain just not use myth TV, or even M$ media center edition? unless its jsut a way to interface you curent TIVO box with your pc, like say for archiving shows and keeping the TIVO drive clear.......i have a feeling this may just not work
I mean they are great for plowing through a whole bunch of information in powerful ways. But what is there about PVR's that can utilize my desktop/laptop/pda?
I have a TV and a place to watch it(recliner), I have a desk and a computer to do information processing... How can I use these to best advantage?
Burn to DVD
-- jimmycarter
Probably just going to be a PC interface that allows you to watch and schedule stuff on a TiVo box on your nextwork. There is too much DRM stuff going on now for them to be able to let you re-encode and copy shows. Also, that nicely competes with Windows XP Media Center, as you could add it onto your machine by simply buying a TiVo, instead of having to buy an OEM MCE machine.
All the "thoughts" that I've seen thus far here about what Tivo is up to amount to a TV tuner card. Come on /. Think outside the box a bit. Maybe they're getting into the content delivery game. Downloadable episodes!!
The nice thing they have going for them is that it's hooked into the home entertainment system. You can record and playback all on your couch. When they move to the computer, they lose the oh-so-powerful couch comfort factor and most of their users.
I'd really like to see TiVo go more in the direction of the media pc that everyone wants...the one that hooks into ethernet and plays mp3 and videos off a shared network drive. They've got a great interface for media playback and they'd do really well to extend it's reach beyond broadcast and into your personal media store.
TiVo, forget the PC and extend your foothold in a way that makes sense for your current users!
Dobbs has an article about a Home Media Engine that can be activated in all the Series 2 Tivo's that allow you to build you own applications to run on the Tivo. I, of course, didn't read the article completely yet, but it sounds like they deliver a SDK for you to develop Java applications . You have to buy the mag, but the following is a link to the article.
http://www.ddj.com/articles/2005/0503/
Building on TiVo
Arthur van Hoff, Adam Doppelt
The Home Media Engine lets you build TiVo applications that integrate seamlessly with the familiar TiVo user experience.
Apple is Aiming for Tivo
I know that the Linux desktop market is small, but Tivo is already Linux-based. I assume that the entire Tivo system is just some libraries and applications that run on a plain old Linux kernel. Maybe they will release desktop Linux Tivo? Ok, probably not. They would have to have support staff trained on it, support for all the different distro variations, etc, which would make it not worth it.
I've already got a Radeon All-in-Wonder 8500 video card hooked directly up to cable. . . I record all the shows I want! Granted, I have to remove commercials manually if I want the gone before I burn something to DVD, but I don't mind. It only takes a minute or two... less time than it would have taken to watch the commercials anyway.
It doesn't matter what happens, Linux and Windows users will remain loyal to the x86 platform so they can continue to leverage their "investments" in commodity boxes they built for $500 back in 1998. Never mind that the Mac Mini offers a secure and more elegant solution than neither Linux or Windows will *ever* offer. No matter that it consumes 1/10 the power of a typical PC. I know, I know... you want the most CPU bang from you buck and only a 500 Gigahertz Ultra Pentium IV will do. Otherwise Firefox will take 20 seconds to launch. And anyway you don't care about "userspace" or GUIs anyway and just toggle between virtual consoles. The dirty little secret of the GNU/Linux world is that every sanctimonious open source user boots into a pirated copy of MS Windows whenever they want ot watch the new Star Wars trailer and have failed to configure their soundcard under Slackware for the umpteenth time.
Well if you could transfer all you dvds and audio cds to you computer, all you really need is a wireless audio/video transmitter and a newer model TV and you should be in business. Of course a good soundcard, not to mention speakers and amplifiers, is preferred for that special surround sound.
Then again if you should attempt any such ting; the music and movie industry will send their goons around and pretty soon they will own you.
*sigh* All I want is all the Simpsons episodes in one playlist, playing continuously, without having to change disc all the time. Or perhaps all episodes ever created of Star Trek in one playlist, looping forever and ever and ever ad infinitum.
So Tivo wants to start competing with KnoppMyth? Trouble is, KnoppMyth is free! Also, I don't know about Tivo, but Myth also allows you to record two shows at once if you have multiple tuner cards in your computer.
BTM
That was the turning point of my life--I went from negative zero to positive zero.
They are already providing "desktop service", which is TiVo To Go and, despite having been talked about for for several years, it sucks so bad, it is not even funny. All it does after all the hype, is allow you to download shows to your PC. It only supports 802.11b wireless, so it takes longer to download, than to actually watch a show. No ability to erase downloaded shows from a PC, no streaming, no upload to tivo, no acess to shceduling -- nothing. Just a simple HTTP download.
More so, it is all surrounded by their stupid DRM crap that does nothing to prevent copying, but makes it impossible to use on anything but Windows.
I sure hope TiVo gets squashed real soon. They deserve it.
Yeah, Dish Network and DirecTV have both offered free DVRs to new customers and a lot of cable companies do it too. This makes it pretty difficult for a company like TiVo to offer a program listing service for $12.95 a month when the Dish and DirecTV DVRs don't require any additional subscription fee. This brings up the argument that TiVo has many patented features that the other DVRs do not, but when you ask the average person what they need out of their DVR they will tell you "I need to record TV and that's it". Maybe if TiVo did a better job at making their product out to be unique they would hold a greater market share. They already have the unique name that is instantly recognizable. I mean 'TiVo' is a damn verb now. I never hear anyone say "Hey man, did you DVR the new episode?". Its usually "Hey man, did you TiVo the new episode?". Just my two cents.
DankLogic - There is a system to everything.
The service for transferring shows from the Tivo Series 2 to PC already exists. I have it. You can transfer & watch Tivo recordings on your PC as long as you have the password/code for your Tivo.
The best thing TiVo could do is saturate the market with their hardware, TiVo boxes, TiVo PC cards... And then open source all the software, broadcasting to the public the software is open source, can be modified, and do what you want with. They can still sell their subscription service for scheduling, because most people will not tweak their boxes. This will take content/media management responsibilities and legalities away from TiVo allowing the user to determine how and what to do with the media.
I suspect that HME plays a big role into the future of TiVo. It's been reported several times on slashdot (motto: if it's worth reporting, it's worth reporting repeatedly). Basically, it provides a way for a remote server to display graphics and stream media to the Tivo (think x-windows).
It's not clear exactly what apps will be compelling -- does Joe User really want to play games, view weather, or get RSS feeds on their TiVo? As currently released, HME does allow interaction with the recording/playback internals, but they promise that they will expose an interface (eventually). Once they do, then we may see some more interesting options.
So what does TiVo plan to do with this? Well, think cell phone carrier. When people download ring-tones or games to their phones, the carrier takes its cut. I can see TiVo acting as the sales/delivery agent for TiVo applets (tapplets?). This could generate a fair amount of income. (Ring tones are a $4 billion business for crying out loud!).
One problem, however, is that TiVo's don't do networking out of the box. You need to plug in a USB network adapter (wired or wireless) and configure the box accordingly. TiVo makes it fairly simple, but this really needs to be enabled out of the box (Series 3?).
Now if I just knew what the killer app for TiVo is going to be...
Wanted: witty unique signature. Must be willing to relocate.
No monthly fees for satellite PVRs might be nice, but that's not my thing (and I had to pay 350$ cdn for mine). My sat PVR records shows with no quality loss whatsoever, including 5.1 audio if it's there. Even if Tivo didn't have monthly fees, there's no way I'd trade my sat PVR for a Tivo. Analog captures just don't look good enough (besides that cable here is really poor compared to sat quality in the first place, and sat has a better lineup and better prices).
///<sig
"I have a TV and a place to watch it(recliner), I have a desk and a computer to do information processing... How can I use these to best advantage?"
By using InterCast.
The most logical service at this point in terms of what to add, that would be a leapfrog over just about everyone, would definitely be a distribution service based on something TIVO's already mentioned with the outside world.
Share-a-show Technology.
Basically under the concept of 'networking' and community. It's already been established that with Tivo-To-Go, it's expected you'll share shows with your family and friends.
NOW -- Take that a step farther. Suppose I get 50 people who all like Trek. Each person can share a particular trek episode with 6 people. So, you decide how many of the six 'burned' copies of Trek Episode 5 you're going to want to distribute among those 50 people who watch trek. If 9 people out of that 50 want to share, you've got more than enough copies of trek to go around. How do we get our very own copy to view? Well gee, I connect my tivo to the trek community. What do I get back? A list of every single Trek episode I can now download.
This beats HBO on demand when you don't have HBO. Of course it might be restricted by what you're subscribed to via your cable/satellite company but you'd basically be able to download off broadband your favorite shows. Things your single tivo just couldn't get because you could only tape one or two things at a time. Your favorite shows, any show on demand just so long as their Tivo (or computer) was online, was on broadband and had some distribution tokens left.
"Love is like pi - natural, irrational, and very important." (Lisa Hoffman)
It's trivially easy to remove the tivo drm and playback on linux. I'm sure a nicely packaged utility will come out for doing it soon.
South of the shared border, you can use a DirecTV receiver with dual tuners which records the raw signal to hard drive. There are people on your side who use them. The risk, so I'm told, is your cops keep an eye out for the dishes. There are some very nice dish covers but I'm not sure spheres to cover 18" dishes exist.
DTiVos run around $50-$100 each. A USB2 NIC should run around $20 and you can always drop in a large hard drive if you want.
Your PVR records the actual data stream or is there an analog portion? The vast majority of so-called digital systems have an analog portion. It's very rare to find pure digital.
I think everything should be routed through my pc that is digital. Down with these so called television units, they are oldschool. Let us have all the power through our PC so we may control it and possess all media simultaneously and back it up for later generations.
[cx]
All I want from Tivo is for them to fix the recent software upgrade that they sent everyone that had a series 2 box. The pro is that it gives you Tivo-to-go. The con, and in this case the con is much bigger than the pro, is that now when you're browsing menus and selecting items its *extremely* slow. This results in you sometimes making the wrong selection when you're trying to do something.
What TIVO should do is sell a PCI TV card. It should come with an external USB Cablecard/Smartcard reader so we can get HDTV broadcasts. And they should do it fast before the Flags shut down the fun!
If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
Made here on /. but I can't be arsed to find it...
/home or a simple 'backup to CD' option for root.
TiVo could roll up a Linux distro with all free software, managed images, and (and this is the clever bit) either dial up backups of the contents of
How cool would that be? They have the technology...
J.
You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
I'll just continue to the DirectTV offerings that are currently $4.95/mo over the $12.95/mo TiVo cost.
It's just that simple.
As long as it does not morph into Foxtrot's MomVo!
"Can there be a Klein bottle that is an efficient and effective beer pitcher?"
When I first saw that headline I thought maybe TiVo was considering creating a Linux Distro -- something that, on first blush, sounds weird. However, they do run Linux on their boxes; so, they might have the staff to handle such a thing. Maybe they should consider their own distro and bundle this potential new offering with it.
TiVo users are pretty tech savvy people, in my experience. It could actually find a market and put some profit into their sagging bottom line. They might even be able to do it on the cheap if they simply struck a deal with someone like SuSE to simply create a TiVo brand of their distro.
Some people have a way with words, and some people, um, thingy.
And I have a Tivo (including the $1K HD model) and like it a lot.
But I have to say you give are not a credit to TiVo fans. You have just plain wrong answers, and also misinterpret the other post many times just to make your own points.
I'm shocked a post this poor can get modded up.
Couldn't this just be an expansion of their desktop software for managing TIVO content from your PC?
For example, here is their Max OS X version.
If he owns a Dell that *works*, he has some expertise, if only from reattaching all the piecs that fall off . . .
hawk, delled twice by the university
Tivo is inexpensive, unobtrusive, quiet and good at recording and playing shows. It's also good at presenting multimedia content stored on PCs. It belongs in the living room; your PC doesn't. (once you rise above a dormroom lifestyle, that is )
Ideally, there would be one size Tivo to choose from. I imagine this would allow Tivo to save a lot of money on production, packaging, and support. Believe it or not, there are many people who don't have or want a home network (luddites! ) so I imagine a variety of Tivo models will continue to be available.
The point is, Tivo should get out of the business of selling hard drives and let the PC take care of storage. The 40 hour model would be perfect for those who have PC power to spare.
The PC would also be a better choice for scheduling. A complicated change to the schedule can result in a torturously long wait. I'm guessing a P4 could crank through it a lot faster.
Also, as good as the Tivo interface is it is limited by the resolution of television and the Tivo remote. I would love to be able to drag-n-drop my shows in an iTunes-like interface. You would make all your changes on the PC and then upload the schedule to Tivo.
Tivo could also use the PC to provide tie-ins to things like television and movie information, related merchandise purchases, customized news services, etc. This could all be easily managed from the PC and served up, in limited form, to Tivo for comfortable access from the couch (or the 17" LCD mounted on your excercise bike ).