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Echostar 'PocketDish' to Playback Video from DVR

Trip Ericson writes "Echostar has released its PocketDish, a portable multimedia player that will store audio, video, and images. Coming in up to 40GB flavors, with varying screen sizes up to 7 inches, the real news is that it allows for the transfer of content directly from a Dish DVR onto the player. From the article: "The PocketDish can download content from Dish Network digital video recorders (DVRs), enabling users to watch TV shows on the go. An hour of content can be transferred to the PocketDish's hard drive in about five minutes." Looks like Echostar is trying to beat the long-rumored iPod Video before it even hits the market."

4 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Does anyone actually use these? by hb253 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Perhaps mass transit isn't used much in Montana or the Nevada desert, but in the NY/NJ/CT metropolitan area hundreds of thousands of people use mass transit on a daily basis. Actually, I'd be interested to find out the ridership figures for the metropolitan region compared to ridership in other major cities.

    I commute into NY from NJ via commuter rail and then take the PATH subway to my destination. I see a good number of people watching movies on portable devices. The potential customer base is huge.

    --
    Self awareness - try it!
  2. Re:Repackaged Archos? by andytuna · · Score: 4, Informative

    As the summary states the real news is the integration with the PVR, and: "An hour of content can be transferred to the PocketDish's hard drive in about five minutes." This makes it a lot easier for the average consumer to use...

  3. You must not have children... by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...or if you do, you don't take them on long road trips. There's nothing like having a stash of Dora the Explorer or a disc full of Charlie and Lola to keep them entertained for boring parts of the trip. (For those who do not have children, and/or have forgotten what its was like to ride for a couple of hours in the car as a child, the "boring parts" would include the time from when the key goes into the ignition until you actually get out of the car at the destination. License plate games, I spy, and all the rest are boring...just not as boring as sitting quietly.)

    I've captured a bunch of stuff off my DirecTivo (via analog capture) and reauthored it onto disc. It not only helps on long car rides, but also expands the number of shows available when we're at home without filling up the TiVo needlessly.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  4. Re:Does anyone actually use these? by Soaps · · Score: 3, Informative

    I live in the chicagoland area, the CTA (Chicago Transit Authority) is the mass transit for chicago and 40 surrounding suburbs. Buses provide about 1 million passenger trips a day and the elevated trains 'L' serve 500,000 passengers a day. this is just within the Chicago system. We also have a Metra rail system that runs out of 2 different stations in Chicago that bring commuting riders in from as far away af 50 miles everyday on 9 different tracks. They are forcasting about 78,437,000 passenger rides in 2005 with passengers riding over 1.7 billion miles total. On my own experience, when I took the metra before moving to chicago, i spent 47 minutes each way if i was lucky enough to be traveling on an express train. If i did not get an express the 27 stops it made took over an hour and a half. Would I use one? Hell yes. and i imagine there are hundreds of thousands in just chicago who would. Imagine New York Atlanta, ect and all of their public transit riders. Just my thoughts though.