

More on the Replay TV 4000 178
boskone noted that Replay TV's site has updated with a variety of new information that will definitely allow the Tivo/Replay flamewars to escalate. Besides the networking capability we mentioned earlier (send shows to friends, or to other Replay's on your home LAN), and the gigantic 320 hour maximum storage capacity, there are more detailed specicifcations. Also notable is the progressive video output port, and the fact that it actually requires ethernet, but doesn't require a subscription! I'd love to try one of these buggers out when they ship.
This looks way cool (Score:1)
subscription (Score:4, Insightful)
Part of the reason early replayTV units were almost twice as much as the same recording capacity was because the subscription price was included.. You do pay for it.
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:3, Informative)
They are around the same. The people that have both TiVo and replay tend to like the 30sec skip a little better, but not all of them do. After you skip the right number of times you normally have to back up a little bit, so it is about as much fiddling with buttons as TiVo, and just slightly less time.
The upside is on the TiVo if you see a commercial you think is interesting you can watch it (at 60x FF the commercial is half a second to a second long, so don't blink!)
Replay's skips are more useful to move around in a TV show, like if you watched about half of it, and then your wife watched the rest, you have to FF for 30 seconds on the TiVo, the reply you can hit a few buttons. Apparently TiVo's 2.5 software will let you skip to the 15min tick marks, so that is less of an issue.
FYI, there is a backdoor code on TiVo's with pre-2.0.1 software, and I've been told 2.5 software to change the "skip to end" button into a 30 second skip.
The only compelling Replay feature (to me) is moving shows from unit to unit. Everything else you can either do (frequently with hacking!) to a TiVo, or just isn't that interesting to me. To be honest you can even currently move shows from one TiVo to another after you hack it, but I'm not expecting that to last :-(
However other people have other priorities, and may be better suited with a Replay. One thing's for sure though, if you watch TV, you really ought to own one of these things. Like now. I'm sorry I waited so long to buy mine (even with the price drop, and larger drives)!
Re:subscription (Score:5, Interesting)
The broadcast networks can only afford to be free if they have income, and if enough people start skipping the commercials, they'll have to do something about it.
So unless you wanna pay a monthly fee for access to the networks and your local stations, you better hope Autoskip stays a niche product.
I DO... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I DO... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I DO... (Score:2)
And it should be pointed out that when cash is tight, shows that are cheap to produce and have a broad audience get made, and shows that are expensive to produce or have a niche audience don't.
So if you want to see Farscape, Dark Angel, Buffy, and Enterprise replaced by sitcoms, by all means get rid of the ads.
Commercials. (Score:2)
Somewhere, we or someone else is paying for the commercials - usually, in the price of products. And commercials don't add value (in advertising, the market is the product, the producer is the consumer. Weird, isn't it?)
Without commercials, we would have to pay for content - using the money that we have saved by not having to pay 20 to 40 percent more for products to cover the cost of their ad campaigns. I can live with that.
Re:Commercials. (Score:3, Insightful)
Wrong. The companies will still pay for advertising, just in other media, since TV will lose it effectiveness.
So you'll pay just as much for the products, AND pay for your TV besides.
It's not a zero-sum game, you'll be creating new income for radio and print.
Re:Commercials. (Score:2)
Re:Commercials. (Score:1)
Yeah, but how much of that 20-40 percent do you expect would actually come back to you in the price? I bet about 10, maybe 15 percent. The rest would pump up cash reserves, or stock dividends ("look Ma, I'm getting 59 cents per share instead of 58! Woo-hoo!")
Jim
Re:Commercials. (Score:2)
I think of advertising as the junk-food of the economy. Empty calories, no nutritional value. Except it doesn't even taste good. Like 8 month old Skittles that you find in your sofa.
Re:Commercials. (Score:1)
quick acronym translator (Score:2)
Btw, I alt-clicked on TANSTAAFL and Atomica gave me:
"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"
Could have figured that one out... doh.
(Sorry, just for Windows and palm)
Re:quick acronym translator (Score:1)
> This is a tad off-topic, but I suppose I'm not the only one wondering what TANSTAAFL stands for.
TANSTAAFL - There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch, came from The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein.
Re:quick acronym translator (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:4, Informative)
Also, what about dual tuners? Having a second tuner is invaluable, as it allows you to record two shows at once. So far, I haven't seen any mention of dual tuners on the RP4000. DirecTiVos have this ability right now.
I'm not even convinced that Sonicblue can pull off the features they are promising. The "Send Show to Other RPTV User" has so many copyright issues I won't even get into it. Plus, who really wants to spend at minimum $700 on a RPTV when you can find DirecTiVos for as little at $129 with new DirecTV service. Add in the $250 TiVo lifetime sub, and you're still about $300 ahead. Hack your box, and you can have over 120 hours of recording time, and still be underneath the cost for the base RPTV 4000 model.
I'll stick with my TiVo. UTV came along with big promises, and has largely failed. Replay won't have me convinced until they actually get the thing working with all the features functional.
Re:subscription (Score:1)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:1)
TFTI
Re:subscription (Score:2)
The average person doesn't have or want DirectTV, and doesn't want to hack his box.
I'm not getting one of these either, but you and I are not normal.
Re:subscription (Score:2)
They looked at what cable TV cost and DirecTV cost and signed up when they realized cable cost twice as much for the same channels.
Yes, they are abberations. Cable TV far outstrips DirecTV in sales. And the cost difference isn't the same everywhere.
Re:subscription (Score:2)
I should add; in the last three years, I've lived in two apartments and purchased a house in a gated community.
In all three cases, the salespeople made a POINT of telling me I could put a small dish up, and mentioned that a Federal law protected my right to do so. The salesperson for the house even offered the help of the construction supervisor in deciding on placement, if I decide to get a dish. (Which I won't, since I get hundreds of channels and a discount on Time Warner cable since I'm also a Road Runner subscriber, without any of the hassles of dish service.)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
I took a look in the AVS Forum as you suggested (I got all excited thinking this feature was actually still available). I did find mention of this, but not with near the certainty that you expressed:
According to those whom attended the NY soiree, the word that RB used was that
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:1)
You're right to say the networks would be upset if lots of people started skipping commercials, and that something would have to give.
But the idea that people should voluntarily refrain from skipping commercials is unrealistic, just as it would be unrealistic to ask people not to go to the bathroom during commercial breaks.
The technology exists. People are going to use it. It might be bad for everyone if such technology became popular, but arguing that I shouldn't skip commercials for the good of everyone doesn't make sense to me.
Quickskip (Score:1)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
These were not removed - TiVo never had these features (not officially anyway - I think there may have been a hack that let you get the Quickskip functionality, but it was never officially part of the product). TiVo has kept the TV networks in mind from the start, which makes long term sense because without the networks to provide content a TiVo isn't very useful. A lot of networks have actually invested in TiVo as well, probably so that they have a voice in things when features like Autoskip or Quickskip are under consideration.
Personally, I don't think that the five seconds it takes to fast forward through commercials is such a big deal, but I could be understimating how useful Autoskip and Quickskip would be. I know I grossly understimated how useful the whole TiVo service would be when I first got it.
The Prices are: (Score:1)
TiVo = 299 + 10/month.
Shows to computers (Score:1)
Very Close (Score:1)
The specs are killer. Now if we could just get the cable company to send out the guide channel in machine-readable format, I'd be all set. As soon as the price has settled into my range . . .
1Alpha7
Re:Very Close (Score:1)
It's Already Done (Score:1)
It's being used for a few PDA-based TV Guide listers such as PTVL (Pocket TV Listing)
Re:It's Already Done (Score:2)
Hrm..320 hrs.. (Score:1)
wow...as for fair use...as long as you aren't charging for the viewing you can tape and let friends watch...nothing wrong with that...
As for ethernet requirement...
umm...what's this going to do to bandwidth say if I'm on a cable or dsl connection, and my neighbor is also on that cable segment for instance and "sends" something to his friend in alabama...
does this mean I get bogged down big time? Hope not...
Re:Hrm..320 hrs.. (Score:2)
umm...what's this going to do to bandwidth say if I'm on a cable or dsl connection, and my neighbor is also on that cable segment for instance and "sends" something to his friend in alabama...
does this mean I get bogged down big time? Hope not..."
Why would that be any different then if your neighbor was downloading linux ISOs or other large files.. it's shouldn't be an issue..
Progressive output is actually VGA (Dsub 15) (Score:2, Interesting)
Cool!
The _real_ cost (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The _real_ cost (Score:1)
Do you suppose that when you pay the 'lifetime subscription' fee TiVo turns on the top-secret anal-probe privacy-invading feature on your box?
Because apparently you believe there are only two possible business models: monthly payments or screwing your customers while hoping they don't find out.
Skepticism is good. Paranioa is bad. Grow clue.
Yeah, TIVO is in trouble now (sarcastic) (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yeah, TIVO is in trouble now (sarcastic) (Score:2)
More Space for your TiVo [9thtee.com]
But I would suggest adding more space yourself, probably more cost effective.
It ISN'T about the Ethernet card. Software! (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why ReplayTV is better than a TiVo with an ethernet hack. ReplayTV embraces the network connection. TiVo, unfortunately, is too in-bed with corporate sponsors. Here's hoping they change.
Re:It ISN'T about the Ethernet card. Software! (Score:2)
> shell prompt.
How about pulling shows down to you PC and burning them onto VCD or even DVD? Not compelling enough for ya? Once on VCD, they're a heck of a lot easier to share with friends than transferring mammoth video files over slow internet connections. How many of your friends have DVD players versus TiVos/ReplayTVs and T1 lines?
Wow (Score:1)
Never overestimate the intelligence of the individual, and never underestimate the stupidity of the masses.
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Ohh, I'm a TLA whore. :-)
Canada? (Score:1)
Re:Canada? (Score:2)
Progressive output.. HDTV Recording? (Score:1)
Hopefully it can be made to support recording of 1080i (1920x1080) or 720p (1280x720) High Definition TV.
With the interfaces they have listed, the only way this could be done is if the tuner supports ATSC (Digital television). This is doubtful... maybe next version.
Re:Progressive output.. HDTV Recording? (Score:2)
Inverse 3:2 pulldown would also be cool (it would enable higher-quality recording as your framerate falls from 29.97 to 23.976 while your bitrate stays the same), but I don't know how you could detect whether you should attempt it. It would only work for stuff that originated on film...stuff that never hits film, like news, sports, and soaps, would be screwed up if you applied inverse 3:2 pulldown to it.
Re:Progressive output.. HDTV Recording? (Score:1)
Check out http://deinterlace.sourceforge.net
Re:Progressive output.. HDTV Recording? (Score:2)
Open standards... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Open standards... (Score:1)
Apparently I must add more spew here in order to pass the postercomment compression filter. I hope you have enjoyed reading it every bit as much as I have enjoyed writing it.
At what price is it worth it? (Score:3, Informative)
RTV4320 ( Approx. 320 hours of recording time) $ 1,999 *
RTV4160 ( Approx. 160 hours of recording time) $ 1,499 *
RTV4080 ( Approx. 80 hours of recording time) $ 999 *
RTV4040 ( Approx. 40 hours of recording time) $ 699 *
* Plus applicable tax & shipping charges.
Estimated shipping costs within Continental US are:
$25 3-5 business days, $35 economy 2 day, $45 next day
TiVo prices:
Philips HDR 212 20 $199
Philips HDR 312 30 $299
Philips HDR 612 60 $599
I love my TiVo, even if I did pay $400 for it a year ago. $10 a month is pretty cheap. $100 a year isn't too bad either. I loved mine so much I paid the lifetime fee.
Re:At what price is it worth it? (Score:2)
Sometimes it doesn't record sound, records only a few seconds of a show, etc.
Re:At what price is it worth it? (Score:1)
Re:At what price is it worth it? (Score:2)
Out of warranty. "Service" (swapout) costs half the price of a new unit. And I'm probably going to spend my future DVR dollars on that snazzy new Replay with ethernet...
Re:At what price is it worth it? (Score:2)
The PTV 501 had some problems, but from what I've read tht 721 should be feature competitive with TiVO and ReplayTV. It also is going to be an Interactive TV box with games and the like, if you go for that, and reportedly the ability to burn CD's. (Music)
So replay can record up to 320 hours. Big deal, It'll take 320 hours to do it too. This thing can record 70 hours in 35.
Best thing is this thing is preordering for $499 with no commitments to Dish programming (which kicks DTV's ass, BTW), or montly access charges. I was going to break down and get a TiVO, but a dual tuner PVR for under 500 bucks... Can't beat that. I just hope it gets here before football season is over.
One FAQ, I'd like to see answered (Score:4, Interesting)
If I buy a Replay4000, and Replay goes under, will I still be able to use it, or will it go dead when it can't get schedule updates from the Replay server?
Re:One FAQ, I'd like to see answered (Score:1)
Will it work behind my IP Masquerading Linux box - Adelphia has only allowed me 1 IP address...Maybe now that Comcast bought my cable they'll give me a few more...
Re:One FAQ, I'd like to see answered (Score:1)
Besides, it's stupid to have to use a second source for program information when my digital cable already has that functionality in it. Anyone know if Time-Warner Cable plans to integrate TiVo-esque functionality into their digital cable boxes soon?
Re:One FAQ, I'd like to see answered (Score:3, Insightful)
But I don't think we'll ever see it. Clearly Tivo isn't going to do this, they want to sell the service. But I suspect that Replay won't do this either. Why? Because what they also want is the data that they download that tells them what you watched and when you watched it. They want the information about what programs interest you. They want the data about which commercials you skipped and which ones you watched. They want to know if you prefer the sports replays that the tv networks generate or the one that the PVR generates. They want to know who/what/where/when/why you watch TV.
Think about this. How can Tivo/Replay/Microsoft provide a service that needs to run forever, without corresponding income that gets generated forever? By selling the information gathered from the service to program providers, or advertisers or ??? Think this isn't a viable business model? Think of it as the same service that Nielson sells, but with tv viewers paying money to participate.
So with program guide going across an ethernet now, I imagine it's only a matter of time before the protocol is reversen engineered... unless of course, it's encrypted. And then it's only a matter of time before someone tries to hack the box to get the encryption secrets. And then it'll be only a matter of time before Replay/Tivo/et al, sue under the DMCA.
This will be an interesting next few years in the PVR world.
Rock on, Commander! (Score:5, Informative)
ReplayTV PROMOTIONAL CODES! [avsforum.com]
Some are geared at existing ReplayTV customers. Others are for 'people in the industry'. But they were freely given over the phone. I worked with this guy and got some codes corrected, so they now work properly.
I took the $100 off and no payments. (That'll make it easily financable over a few months.) Note! Most of these promo codes are for all but the most basic model.
Isn't 320 hours of recording time overkill ? (Score:3, Insightful)
When I go on a trip for several days
When some channel broadcasts a bunch of episodes of something I like in a single day (a something-"marathon" they call it)
But even if I could record all these things and keep them in memory, I'd never be able to watch them all anyway. I hardly watch everything my mere 30-hour Tivo records already.
The thing that I'd really really like to see appear in PVRs is a second tuner. Very often, choosing between two programs is the real bother, not the amount of memory. The only reason why single-tuner PVRs work nowadays is because interesting programs are so diluted in an ocean of crap on TV. Come to think of it, that's also probably why 15 hours are enough, because there aren't enough interesting programs per day to fill it up.
Second tuner (Score:1)
Re:Second tuner (Score:2)
Re:Second tuner (Score:2)
Re:Second tuner (Score:1)
Installation of a dual LNB solves the problem. One LNB receives the clockwise polarization while the other receives the counterclockwise. You can connect 3, 4, or more IRDs to a dual LNB and all of the units may be tuned independently without causing a conflict.
DBS providers are currently using secondary satellites to provide local network and foriegn channels. The so-called "quad" LNBs are really just two dual LNBs each of which are directed at different neighboring satellites. The newer "egg-shaped" dishes have two foci for the reflector, allowing the single dish to receive from two adjacent satellites. Each focus for each satellite requires a physically separate LNB. These are generally dual LNBs which receive both polarizations simultaneously.
Re:Second tuner (Score:1)
Originally I was fed the same line about needing a LNB per tuner per television. Worked out to three dishes (2 with 2 LNB's and 1 with 1). Yea right.
Further digging revealed you can use a special splitter with 1 LNB. It was for the Dish Network cost $400 USD at the time (about 2 years ago) and fed 4 tuners off of 1 LNB. Which meant I could get by with 1 dish, 2 LNB's digital splitter and 5 tuners. Upfront cost, before subscription would have set me back about $1200 USD. I dislike the cable company (Adelphia) as much as the next guy, but unlimited televisions at about $35.00 USD a month and no hardware cost kept me with cable.
Perhaps when I'm down to 1 or 2 televisions I'll give Sat. another look.
14 hours adequate for time shifting? (Score:2)
What if the service ends?? (Score:1, Insightful)
Let me guess (Score:3, Funny)
Are they going to include a spell-checker for you WebTV users?
Replay is still around? (Score:1)
well, I wonder what the TV folks will think about this sort of thing, will we start to see more crack down on TV program copying since you can move the show to a divX formate and put it on a CD? how cool would that be for Star treck: Enterprise?
p2p? (Score:1)
Re:p2p? (Score:1)
Group of friends/geeks/etc living in large house pool funds to buy $1000 replay.
Unit goes on home LAN. Recorded shows get sent across home LAN and cached to disk. Someone hacks together some kind of online control, so you can schedule recordings from a browser. Archives go either onto VCD/DVD-R/vhs tape.
If you helped pay for the unit initially, then watch or borrow material recorded, it's still fair usage..
As much as I like the idea of a big juicy network that has every episode of any given show (cough*limewire*), it will still be faster bandwidth to use physical media to move things around (the station wagon of DATs driving cross-country theory).
-mj
Hidden "features" like spyware, rights management? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hidden "features" like spyware, rights manageme (Score:1)
Where's the DVD recorder? (Score:2, Interesting)
For Those Comparing To Tivo (Score:2, Informative)
For those of you comparing prices with Tivo. Here's [www.enhancedtivo.com] a comparable hacked Tivo unit with 250 hours of (lowest quality) recording time for $925.
It will send to other ReplayTVs via ethernet... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It will send to other ReplayTVs via ethernet... (Score:1)
Security, anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)
So, are we talking a gleaming new attack vector into the home network with a guaranteed propagation strategy as user exchange content, or has security been taken seriously? I do not see anything in the specs or FAQ.
I would probably let a M$ box onto my network first.
One more thing I'd like to see (Score:1)
I want this feature for archival of cancelled or rarely aired shows (Tales of the Gold Monkey, Family Guy, Starblazers, etc.)
Are there 320 hours worth recording? (Score:2)
Even 40 hours may be an overkill.
Maybe it would work well as an archiving tool. It would be nice to have all Babylon 5 in one place: 5 years * 52 * 50 minutes ~ 217 hours, leaving plenty of space for everything else. Unfortunately Bab is history now.
Re:Are there 320 hours worth recording? (Score:2)
As long as we're feeling anal retentive (Score:1)
And don't forget the pilot episode!
So (5*22)+1 = 111 hours
Flamebait: But why would you want all 111 hours of B5 anyway??
Dubious (Score:1)
The features they advertise sound great. I hope they actually ship them.
Do it yourself? (Score:1)
listing of top notch open source PVRs? (Score:1)
I currently have partial use of the PlanB video chipset on my Powermac 8500 on Linux, and I would like to use it as a PVR. I'll either use my large RAID or get a faster CPU to compensate for PlanB's lack of realtime compression.
Thanks!
What's Up With Progressive Scan and Digital Audio? (Score:1)
Can you say GIGO?
Networks can opt out of file sharing!! (Score:2)
One of the replies to my post makes the creative suggestion of using a VCR to pass the information through to make it appear on a different channel (3 or 4) to trick the Replay into sharing stuff it shouldn't-- but this will only work if everything on channels 3 and 4 (according to the unit's guide data, I would assume) is blocked from sharing too.
I'm sure somebody will figure out a way around it, but then we're right back to having to hack it together yourself.
Re:Networks can opt out of file sharing!! (Score:2)
Consider a company who wants to let people share shows but doesn't have the cash to go through a couple dozen major lawsuits. This company could release a device that allows show swapping, let the networks opt-out, but conveniently make it very easy for the end user to hack the box to share anything. This shifts the blame to the users and turns the box into a cult-classic to people like us.
Face it: These boxes have been a hacker's thing for a long time. They were made to be hacked. There is a whole community dedicated to doing neat tricks with a Tivo. Maybe ReplayTV wants a slice of that enthusiasm? The show sharing and the ethernet port (they know someone will write an app to let you copy the shows to your PC - it's got to be painfully obvious to the people developing this box), if easily hackable, will sell a hell of a lot of these.
I worry also that they will get stopped (Score:1)
If the law does not allow the video being shared, this will not be allowed. And if anyone is thinking of creating a napster for this, you might want to add a few lawyers into your business plan - right or wrong you will need them.
Re:I worry also that they will get stopped (Score:2)
Technically? No.
It is much closer to burning an extra second copy for your friend. This is the slippery slope that Napster went down.
Big Media considers it a pain when you say that you have several million friends you want to share extra copies with. We've been through this before.
Don't forget those essential copy protection features!
Re:It's not going to last long (Score:2)
Of ocurse, tehre are other things that limit sharing as well - first is the cost of the box - it's not exactly soemthing your average consumer buys on a whim, and even with high speed access the bandwidth limitations would prevent massive show swapping.
Microsoft's terra server (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Replay Legal Issues (Score:1)
I don't understand how anyone could claim that this should be illegal. The design mimics the capabilities of a VCR, and adds no new additional risk to copyright. A video tape can be played on anyone's VCR, and a replay data file (or whatever that may be) can be played on anyone's ReplayTV. I don't see any new infringement here.
I do agree, however, that the shit-eating MPAA and their cock-sucking fascist lawyers will probably lie to the courts and the public about the amount of money they lose due to fair use. Frankly, society should fuck those little bitches in the head with a chainsaw.