802.11b on your Tivo 120
Otto writes: "Those who don't regularly read the Tivo Community Forums may not know that a 802.11b wireless adapter for the Tivo, called AirNet, is in the works. It's being made by jafa, who also created the TurboNet card, a similar device to the TivoNet adapters available at 9thTee but faster. Long story short, he's auctioning off 4 beta boards of the AirNet adapter for the Tivo and giving the proceeds to the Elf Foundation, a group which brings Home Theater to ill children by setting up mini-theaters in children's hospitals nationwide. Good fun techie geek stuff, and for charity too! You can't beat that. The auction is here on ebay." Looks like the guy's home page is silicondust.com.
Oh great, (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Oh great, (Score:1)
MPAA (Score:1)
Re:MPAA (Score:2)
Re:MPAA (Score:1)
Re:MPAA (Score:2)
Re:MPAA (Score:3, Funny)
"Your honor...don't let their ventilators, bald heads and palid complexions fool you...those children represent a huge menace to society."
I'm not sure even a lawyer could say that with a straight face.
Once all sold.... (Score:2)
Does this mean.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Does this mean.. (Score:4, Funny)
Under the DMCA: Probably Not
Under the Geneva Convention: Expressly Forbidden
Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:3, Informative)
Can anyone who knows a bit more about the Tivo enlighten me?
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1)
The only good use for this that I can think of is porn. Just put a computer with an 802.11 reciever in the bathroom and you're set.
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:2)
Two, it allows you to access data stored on your tivo from other PCs in your house.
Three, it's just plain cool.
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:2, Insightful)
So I have two choices... use one of those horrible "add an extention" plugs that plugs into a power socket, or use 802.11b capabilities.
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1, Insightful)
First, the programming updates can be done over a broadband (or dialup I guess) internet connection rather than phone lines. Good for folks who don't have phones, have a broken modem in the tivo, or have to dial long distance to get the data.
Second, you can put a web server on the tivo and schedule recordings, see what you have recorded, etc. Good for geeks who want to show off.
Third, you can extract video from the tivo in an mpeg-2-like format, convert it to mpeg-2, and then do what you want with it. Personally, I extract movies that I like, convert them to divx, and put them on cds. Good for folks who like to store lots of video.
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:5, Interesting)
#1 - No more phone line needed. The TiVo can get it's next 14 days worth of programming via the 802.11b card and PPP.
#2 - You can install a web server on your TiVo and browse through the TiVo's menus over the web. This includes scheduling show recordings while you're at work, for example.
#3 - You can backup shows on your TiVo to your computer rather than to VHS. You can also stream the shows to your PC to watch them there, rather than on your TV.
I'm sure there are plenty more, but those are the biggies.
Great stuff!
Don
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1)
The things you talk about doing with this, has the software already been written for these tasks? I already have cat5 behind my tv for an MP3 player, and eventualy my XBox, so I really wouldn't need to wait for the 802.11b solution. Is there somewhere I can go to read up on this stuff (other than digging through that message board for weeks)?
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1)
Personally, I want one because there's no easy way to get CAT5 to where my TiVo sits. I've been dreading cable-snaking through the walls. This solves my problem nicely.
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1)
A new one, made by the same guy who makes this new AirTivo, is now shipping called TurboNet that's a 100Mbps card. TurboNet stuff [attbi.com]
The software to support web services and everything all exist as well. ExtractStream [9thtee.com], a video extraction piece.
Your best bet to keep up on all this stuff is at the Underground Playground section of AVS/TiVo Community's [tivocommunity.com] message forums.
Hope that helps!
Don
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:1)
Re:Okay, so maybe I'm being stupid but... (Score:2, Informative)
This guy is considered a deity over there because not only has he managed to produce an 802.11b (good grief, I hate the WiFi brand name) card adapter for the TiVo, he's also managed to produce a 10/100-base-T ethernet card (not just an adapter, an original card from scratch) for the TiVo - all within the span of a few months.
Adapters for the TiVo existed to allow one to plug an ISA NE-2000 NIC into one's TiVo, but they were only OK because they were a 2 piece unit (adapter and card) which adds an additional point of failure, not to mention they were only 10-base-T and used an NE-2000 driver for that card that only worked so-so.
I'm pretty sure if you come up with an idea card that can plug into the diagnostic slot on the Series 1 TiVos, and can seriously explain how it could be useful, this guy could make it.
Wireless Tivo (Score:1)
Cable Relay, Perhaps? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cable Relay, Perhaps? (Score:2)
Look out your window, bud. Do you see the black car? That's the FBI. They'd like to speak to you.
Soko
Re:Cable Relay, Perhaps? (Score:1)
It's Mpeg2 video by the way. And how exactly would he provide cable for everyone? He could give them access to the shows on the Tivo's drive but I don't thing the 50Mhz PPC in the Tivo is going to be up to streaming more than one at a time.
Re:Cable Relay, Perhaps? (Score:1)
Home theatres for ill children? (Score:4, Insightful)
Isn't this charity kind of frivolous?
<sarcasm>Forget homeless/starving/victims of war, we need to make sure sick american kids can watch "dude, where's my car?" in surround sound.</sarcasm>
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:3, Funny)
You're right...we definitely need charities to help homeless/starving/victims of war watch "dude, where's my car?" in surround sound too.
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:1)
Isn't that how wars get started?
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:1)
Also, being happy and enjoying yourself can help in the fight against disease.
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:2)
That EFF charity thing seems kinda frivolous to me too, in light of war, hunger, suffering... much more important stuff than YRO.
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:2)
Forget homeless/starving/victims of war, we need to make sure sick american kids can watch "dude, where's my car?" in surround sound.
Yeah, who cares if terminally ill children have fun before they die, anyway?
But that drunken bum who's starving because he spent his last 50 cents on a bottle of Schlitz -- yeah, I think I'm gonna help him out.
P.S. I give money to bums if they are physically or mentally challenged.
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:1)
Re:Home theatres for ill children? (Score:1)
Elf Foundation (Score:4, Informative)
They accept donations here [avsforum.com].
(Because I had no idea what is was either.
Re:Elf Foundation (Score:1)
Ethernet-802.11b (Score:3, Interesting)
Is this just an impossibility? Am I the only one who thinks this would be a hot seller? I want to buy a new ReplayTV 4000, but I have no desire to run Cat5 to it. I want to eliminate extra wiring hassle from my home theater.
Ah, well - probably just a pipe dream.
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
Okay - I have a base station, but it is hooked up to my internet connection - in another room. I guess I just never thought about using an entire base station to give a single device access to my internet access base station.
So I could buy another bridge and make it use the Airport network as the internet connection instead of using the WAN port? I stand corrected, but it seems a bit much to buy a full featured bridge for every device that needs an internet connection.....
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
Well, if my home is not wired, and it would mean running a wire from one room to the other where my Airport Base Station is located, I would prefer not to run a wire. I'm not trying to hook up a physical network to a wireless network. I am trying to hook-up a single device to a wireless network.
So, the correct answer is I need a bridge to connect the 1 ethernet device to my already existing 802.11b wireless network. Right now they are all expensive and targeted at hooking up a whole network of wired computers to a wireless network. I will probably have to wait until they a)come down in price and b)they are some models more targeted at getting single old, legacy, wired devices on more prevalent wireless networks.
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
One or the other (Score:2)
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:2)
Not much more than good WiFi card. Look at the linksys WAP11.
and if you think about it, if you've got a wire and all anyway, why not just run it to the hub?
There's a difference between a wire that's 1' long, and a wire that's 80' long to reach my hub across the house!
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:5, Informative)
There is now a product from Buffalo Technology which does this, call the Airstation Bridge [buffalotech.com]
A lot of people are using these with our ethernet MP3 player [slimdevices.com]. Everybody says the Airstation works great, and it's only about $160. I can't say I've used one yet, myself.
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
Sounds like some people are doing exactly what I want to do - hooking a single device up to a wireless network with a bridge. Maybe as more people do this, a more elegant (and spacesaving) solution might become available. At least I am now, on the right track....
thanks
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
http://www.orinocowireless.com/template.html?
ftp://ftp.orinocowir
Re:Ethernet-802.11b (Score:1)
Somewhat Offtopic (Score:2)
I don't know about you guys, but the idea that something faster exists and should be accessible is what's keeping me from buying anything wireless right now.
-kwishot
Re:Somewhat Offtopic (Score:1)
Just wait until 802.11g is commercially available. It will be backward compatible with a and b, and will provide the throughput and distance of a, with a cost more akin to b.
Re:Somewhat Offtopic (Score:1)
Well, 802.11a fills me with horror, as it is not backward compatible with 802.11b - now 802.11g (IIRC - maybe f) will be great - and will be backwards compatible. That's why it's not off the ground yet - g is not yet available, and while I think a is could be available, it has many problems (scaling back speed, reception distance, and backward compatibility) which will hopefully keep it grounded.
The DWL-650 they are using is not a good card (Score:1)
Carl
Re:The DWL-650 they are using is not a good card (Score:1)
Mike
external antenna? (Score:1)
Hmmmm... My audiotron arrived today and I've been thinking of how best to get network to it. We're also thinking about a TiVo. Altho 802.11b is a neat idea, I think the future is having a 4 to 8 port hub/switch at the home entertainment center tied back with 100BaseT.
These products will need decent bandwidth and I just can't quite seeing juryrigging aerials and pringles cans looking something like tin foil on rabbit ears...
802.11whatever (Score:3, Interesting)
Another option (Score:2)
WAP11 [linksys.com]
Damned Phone (Score:1)
Re:Damned Phone (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, and Jafa, if you ever read this, I like your design skills, but why the rj45 on the card itself? A 10 pin male header, so that you could move the jack off the board via ribbon cable would have been ideal. Snaking cat5 into the chassis is just tacky.
Re:Damned Phone (Score:2)
I think you might watch too much TV.
Extending the RJ45 jack (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Extending the RJ45 jack (Score:2)
Re:Damned Phone (Score:1)
I'd love to avoid all this work, and get the TV programs I want on DVD, but they're mostly old series that will never come out on DVD anyway...
TiVo and ripping..... (Score:2, Insightful)
My other concern is the TiVo's total lack of security, with my wired network card in my TiVo I can have it behind a firewall or direct linked to my system, wireless TiVo would let anyone and their brother into it.
1337 H4x04Z watchin' ya 1984 like (Score:1)
Re:Operating Systems That Are DYING! (Score:1)
hold on, let me pull one out of my ass too! hehe.
Re:Operating Systems That Are DYING! (Score:1)
MULTICS LIVES!!! (Score:1)