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Sony DVR Useless After Rovi Stops TV Guide OnScreen

New submitter speedlaw writes "Rovi has just announced that they are stopping the TV Guide OnScreen service as of April 13th, 2013. This was announced via the service itself. This is an on-air listing service that provides listings over the air, as part of an OTA TV signal. Many devices, notably the Sony HDD 250 and 500 Digital Video Recorders, will no longer function without the clock-set data this stream provides. When other companies decide to stop supporting something, they don't make older systems useless. Worse, Sony never came out with another DVR in the U.S. market. Why do we have to rent them? How do we get Sony or Rovi to provide at least a software patch to set the clock so the DVR can at least retain 1980s VCR functionality? Sony admits there is no fix. A thread on AVS forums has a bunch of information on TV Guide OnScreen. The TV stations who broadcast the data have been ordered by Rovi to disconnect the data inserters and ship them back. I have a TiVo, and yes, I know all about HTPC, but this data stream was 'lifetime listings' like TiVo has 'lifetime listings' — now that Rovi is looking to cut service, my two DVR units are about to become useless."

12 of 321 comments (clear)

  1. What do you expect? by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hello...it's Sony. You should be surprised that it worked this long.

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  2. rms is right by MadTinfoilHatter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is why proprietary software is a bad thing and we should avoid products like this.

    1. Re:rms is right by Onymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In particular, this situation indicates why tivoized systems are a bad thing and why the GPLv3 was necessary. Not that this system had GPL'd software in it necessarily, but if it had, it would have needed the updated, v3 license to allow customers to run their own mods to make the hardware work for them.

      Oh, wait. Are the Sony HDD 250 and 500 DVR systems digital signature-locked to prevent modified software from operating?

  3. Re:lifetime doesnt mean your lifetime by xlsior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So a lifetime warranty means it's warranted until it breaks down?

    Pretty much, yes.

    "Lifetime product warranties" typically cover the 'reasonably expected' lifetime of the product the product in question, not your lifetime.

    If anything, 'lifetime warranty' can be a much worse deal than a predefined number of years, since it's so vague. It's often used in sales since it sounds like a great deal to the uninformed buyer, but in reality it's pretty much the ultimate weasel-word.

  4. Re:What are the channels doing? by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It probably violates someone's copyright or patent. Or that's what they think may be the case. Better be safe than sorry, consumers be damned. They're anyway supposed to just consume the advertising with intermittant fragments of some mildly entertaining show, instead fo recording it and remove the ads.

  5. Re:Normal End of Life cycle by guttentag · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dude, Sony discontinued this product 7 years ago. I'm sure you've gotten your money's worth out of it.

    Think about it this way: If it died of hardware failure instead, would you be so upset? Likely not.

    The appliance that heats my home is 50 years old. The manufacturer has been out of business since before I was born. Thank God they didn't have this mentality or I'd be in big trouble right now. Remember that the next time you're considering a Sony product. I do. I grew up with everything Sony, but ever since they took functionality away from my PS3, over and over, I make a conscious choice not to buy their products. Even if I don't see a suitable alternative (which sometimes does happen with mid-range headphones), I'll leave the store without buying anything. Every time. You might say I got my money's worth out of the company, so I'm done with it.

  6. Re:Normal End of Life cycle by SpzToid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, I think this should ding Sony's 'green rating', because of a too-short lifespan and no little-to-none recycling-to-keep-in-use options. Is everyone expected to suddenly buy a new TV set every now and then? Gimme a break. All Sony has to do is allow user-mods to happen. Imagine if a classic car owner was not allowed to 3d-print the broken dashboard controller-thing just to keep it alive. I dunno, something like a plastic turn-signal lock doo-hickey which otherwise makes the car illegal (except when hand-signals are used). Same difference.

    http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/campaigns/climate-change/cool-it/Campaign-analysis/Guide-to-Greener-Electronics.

    Admittedly I am biased because I see an old PC, and I think, 'will it run linux?'

    But then again, this is Sony that refuses even the U.S. Military the right to run linux on their paid-for playstations. Apple lost its soul a long time ago, and Sony continues to show them the way.

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    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
  7. Why accept this? by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do you so readily accept electronic end of life as being normal?

    My SEGA Mastersystem still works.
    My SNES still works (and you can still buy controllers for them too).
    My sound system is much older than 10 years.
    I still have a working CRT TV, and a working VCR.

    Incidentally my grandma has several working pieces of electronic equipment from World War 2.

    Why are you so quick to accept that electronics need an end of life, and especially one so short? This is not the death of the medium which the DVR uses like say the move from analogue to digital TV was. This is a piece of gear with a really poor design flaw that for some reason depended on a proprietary 3rd party signal to work. Why would you accept that this 3rd party should decide when you can no longer use your electronics?

  8. Re:What are the channels doing? by _xeno_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These days? Because if they did that, then people could record the shows, and skip the ads. And that would be terrible.

    At least if you're a TV network who wants to milk the most ad money you possibly can. Don't forget, getting up to go to the bathroom during the commercials is theft.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  9. Re:What are the channels doing? by peragrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you think this is bad wait a couple of more years for smart tv's to start needing these kinds of updates.

    People expect their tv's to last 10+ years without a simple software update some of those tv's won't be working right.

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    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  10. Re:Bashing onwards by bfandreas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Rovi (corporation) used to be called Macrovision.

    That snippet alone would have explained about eveything. Why was this omitted in the submission? So basically Sony built a system that relied completely on a service provided by Macrovision and the customers got completely screwed over?

    I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.

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    20 minutes into the future
  11. Re:What are the channels doing? by segedunum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you think this is bad wait a couple of more years for smart tv's to start needing these kinds of updates.

    I know. I'm wandering around various stores laughing at these 'Smart TVs' with stuff like YouTube and Netflix on them and thinking to myself 'What happens when this needs a major update in a couple of years, someone changes their interfaces or Netflix goes bust?'. It'll also be a cold day in hell before I plug an ethernet cable into a TV and give it access to the internet. I hate to be cynical, but us technical people always know this crap goes badly wrong.

    If I want this shit I will plug my computer into the TV. In the meantime just display the damn picture on the screen.