Entry tags:
TiVo questions
So here's a question to the TiVo users in the audience (I know there are a bunch of you out there):
I've got a Panasonic DVR that I'm quite happy with -- the UI suits me, it's got a big hard drive, it makes it trivially easy to burn stuff to DVD, and it doesn't attempt to be smarter than I am. It has only one drawback, but that's a *big* drawback: it only deals with two-digit channel numbers. Given that my cable actually has tons of channels beyond 99 (including all of the premium stations), that's a real limitation on what I can record. This is particularly an issue as I contemplate the second season of Rome, which is going to happen eventually.
So I'm idly curious about whether a TiVo would do better. Specifically, while I think I'd leave the Panasonic in place, I'm thinking of replacing the seldom-used VCR with a TiVo. That would allow me to hard-drive multiple shows at once, which is occasionally necessary. I think it would be worth it *if* it deals with the things that the Panasonic doesn't.
So the questions are:
1) Does TiVo deal properly with three-digit channels? (I suspect the answer is yes.)
2) Will a TiVo control my cable box? This is nearly as important, because the premium channels have to go through the cable box to get decrypted. The VCR (and, indeed, the Panasonic) has a "cable mouse" attachment that will change the channels on the cable box when needed -- does the TiVo have something similar? (This, I'm less sure about.)
Information about these questions (or suggestions of alternative ways I could configure a system that does what I want, including some device other than a TiVo) is solicited from unimind...
I've got a Panasonic DVR that I'm quite happy with -- the UI suits me, it's got a big hard drive, it makes it trivially easy to burn stuff to DVD, and it doesn't attempt to be smarter than I am. It has only one drawback, but that's a *big* drawback: it only deals with two-digit channel numbers. Given that my cable actually has tons of channels beyond 99 (including all of the premium stations), that's a real limitation on what I can record. This is particularly an issue as I contemplate the second season of Rome, which is going to happen eventually.
So I'm idly curious about whether a TiVo would do better. Specifically, while I think I'd leave the Panasonic in place, I'm thinking of replacing the seldom-used VCR with a TiVo. That would allow me to hard-drive multiple shows at once, which is occasionally necessary. I think it would be worth it *if* it deals with the things that the Panasonic doesn't.
So the questions are:
1) Does TiVo deal properly with three-digit channels? (I suspect the answer is yes.)
2) Will a TiVo control my cable box? This is nearly as important, because the premium channels have to go through the cable box to get decrypted. The VCR (and, indeed, the Panasonic) has a "cable mouse" attachment that will change the channels on the cable box when needed -- does the TiVo have something similar? (This, I'm less sure about.)
Information about these questions (or suggestions of alternative ways I could configure a system that does what I want, including some device other than a TiVo) is solicited from unimind...
no subject
The 'expiration' thing was so badly misreported it was sickening. Macrovision requires, in their license, support for analog content protection - including the flags. TiVo has a Macrovision license, and *must* have one. It is required as part of the DVD Forum license for DVD, and they have units with DVD. It was also required to get FCC approval for TiVoToGo (moving shows across a network to a PC). Not having a Macrovision license is simply not an option for them.
And they're not alone. ReplayTV had/has the same license. Other DVD recorders, DVRS, etc, do too. Even PC-based recording software sometimes has the same license - the very same flag bits reported on TiVo have been encountered in the wild with PC-based systems.
Everyone always makes it a TiVo issue, but it isn't - it is industry wide. It is harder to find a system *without* the Macrovision license than with it. TiVo is just the popular brand to it gets press.
On top of that, the flags are *illegal* to use on broadcast content, per the FCC. Every reported encounter so far as stemmed from improperly configured system at the content provider - cable or satellite company, local station, etc. And when it is reported to TiVo they have contacted the providers and had the problem fixed. The bits are meant only for PPV and other premium content.
It has been in the software for several years now, almost 4 years actually, and it was in there for a while before it was 'discovered' and a big fuss was made over it. It has been a non-issue for all but a handful of users. And going with another option doesn't mean you're sure to avoid it - Macrovision is nigh universal.
The slowdown is a real issue, the latest update needs to be optimized. TiVo is aware of the issue and the next update is supposed to improve performance. It is really most noticable on the 5xx Series2 boxes - those have the slowest hardware to start with. If you buy a box today you'd probably buy a S2DT or S3, the two fastest boxes they've ever made and the slowdown isn't an issue. The S2DT has 64MB RAM and the S3 128MB in the main bank, with more dedicated to other things - the S2 had 32MB and a slower CPU. That's why they're hit by it.