AdAge Predicts Tivo will Fail 463
geddes writes "Under the obnoxious headline
More U.S. Homes have Outhouses then TiVos, Advertising Age has published an article with a few good points: 1) Tivo/ReplayTV/UltimateTV aren't making any money and their growth is declining. 2) Cable and Satellite TV services are slowly rolling out PVR on thier own boxes. So 3) PVR will become a standard feature for most television users but become as unbranded as programmable VCRs."
Brand recognition (Score:5, Interesting)
But people will still call them "Tivo"s.
It's like in the UK, every vacumn cleaner is usually referred to as a "hoover". Or in the US "Xerox".
You cannot buy that brand recognition. Assuming Tivo themselves don't screw up, they will have a healthy share of the PVR industry for a decade or more.
Re:Brand recognition (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2, Interesting)
In these days of recession people tend to start looking a bit more closely at what they are paying for. Brand name or not, if it is not good people will not buy it.
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2)
I disagree with your point on brand names, the majority of people will favour a brand name over an unknown brand with similar features. All that money spent on advertising had a purpose...
Hoover marketing (Score:2)
That was one of the best advertising campaigns ever... i.e. shopper goes into a store and asks to see the range of 'Hoovers' on offer rather than 'Vacuum Cleaners'.
Ever since Mr. Dyson got rejected (when designing the Dyson) by Hoover, and then when he was successful (Hoover and other companies 'magically' come up with thier own cyclone system) with the Dyson, he bans anyone using the term 'Hoovering' in his presense... who can blame him!
Although I've tried changing the term Hoovering to Dysoning when I help my parents when cleaning the Pub, which hasn't caught on too well... but we've had ours for four years and it is still going strong, the replacement parts we needed were the handle and the bumper (which got too many bumps). When they sent us a warranty renewal form, they still grant us the ability to get a new one if our one needs replacing!
Wow, to think this thread started off on the TiVO subject. I wouldn't have thought us geeks could be so interested in vacuum cleaners... but we need to reiterate just how strong the suction is on these modern cleaners, just in case any cheap thrill ideas (think Austin Powers and his 'personal' collection) turn out to become below waist lipo(and sausage) suction jobs! Careful now!
Re:Brand recognition (Score:5, Insightful)
Picks up tha magic 8 ball... signs point to no
The article states that already Tivo/Replay TV are licensing their products. It is very likely that eventually you will find companies that are trying to meet bottom line prices and will buy PVR from whomever can give them the lowest price. That's business. Tivo and the like companies will most likely become more of a software company than a 'hardware' company, especially with the advent of digital cable boxes and satellite boxes in so many homes. Many people will prefer one box that does everything. I honestly won't be surprised if we see television sets soon with PVR embedded into them (does anyone know if this has been done yet?), say within 3 years. Most cable companies are going digital, and to access all the 'great digital features' you have to have an addressable digital cable box, cable companies will gladly install software that will get people to use their product, especially if they think they can charge an extra monthly charge, or use charge, or even simply offer it as a feature and insert a few extra advertisements at the beginning of the program.
A quick summary. Tivo may still be around, but they might have a much weaker hardware division, or none at all. They may also have to diversify to stay around... (diversify, I had to use a buzzword
Tivo, hardware vs. software company (Score:3, Insightful)
TiVo wouldn't care if someone started giving away TiVo boxes, as long as they were still selling their service, which is their revenue stream.
Most obvious thing wrong with this article: It states that the inclusion of PVR features will be the downfall of TiVo/ReplayTV.
Um, how? DishPVR = rebranded ReplayTV
DirectTV's PVR system used to be known as DirecTiVo - It's no longer called that, but it's still a TiVo system that TiVo is making money off of.
Re:Tivo, hardware vs. software company (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2)
What TiVO *can* do is use the patents it has to strong arm other companies that try to enter the PVR market. Between them and Sonic Blue, I think they basically own the concept of PVRs patent-wise (oblig. rant against patents omitted).
My guess? TiVO will get bought out by some big player... Sony, Philips, or perhaps even Microsoft once its business position slips enough and the shareholders of the comp[any want to cash out.
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2)
True. But not every vacuum cleaner in a UK house is a Hoover and certainly not every US office copier is a Xerox.
Branding is good, but consumers purchasing your product and you making a profit is much better.
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2)
then you could say "i really had to take a legal-size shit this morning".
Re:Brand recognition (Score:2)
Obligatory Slashdot vacuum joke (Score:2)
The only thing Microsoft could make that wouldnt suck would be a vacuum clearner. It would blow.
siri
Re:Brand recognition (Score:5, Insightful)
Me: "I got a new Visor."
Them: "A what?"
Me: "A Handspring Visor."
Them: "A Handspring Who?"
Me: "A Vis-err, Palm Pilot"
Them: "OOOhhh..."
Worked for Coke and Kleenex.
Just like cable decoders (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just like cable decoders (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Just like cable decoders (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe it's not "obviously"...
Re:Just like cable decoders (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, TiVO, being a small shit, is easier to target by the TV networks. How will the TV networks sue all the TV makers? That's like all the tire manufacturers suing all the car makers - chicken/egg thing again.
TIVO owns nearly all PVR patents..They will make$$ (Score:2)
Not only that! (Score:5, Funny)
Except.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Ooh...but I like the list of related articles:
"Without advertising, we will damage this country"
"72.3% of Tivo viewers skip commercials"
Then again, this is like MSFT reporting that Linux is pretty much dead.
Re:Except.. (Score:5, Informative)
As said on here many times, though, Tivo is now licensing their software to folks like AT&T and DirecTV, so you will soon be getting a "DirecTV DVR powered by Tivo" instead of a "Tivo". It's a win-win for both sides and will most likely keep Tivo afloat.
bah (Score:4, Insightful)
Give me one tech stock that's near what it was in 2000. I notice the article doesn't say a thing about whether Tivo has actually made money or is making money right now. As it is, they're getting $12/month from me and I'm looking to add another Tivo soon.
Re:bah (Score:2, Funny)
TiVo's problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:3, Interesting)
On the other, Tivo does have a problem with explaining how it works. It's a lot more than saying "it's a really good VCR!". That's where
the existing user base comes in, as it's a lot easier to show someone how it works and what it does than listen to the PFY at BestBuy practically reading off the sales sheet and not know anything more about it.
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:3, Informative)
30 hr capacity (or more)
On screen guide with info for two weeks
Season pass (record all instances of a show, with a number of options like only new shows, etc.)
Thumbs Up/Down of shows, used to record 'extra' shows.
Notification of change in lineup (new or deleted channels, change in number of a channel, etc.)
Immediate access (no rewind)
Record and play at the same time
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Trying to build up a base of paying subscribers may look good on the company's accounts, but shareholders are surely not under any illusions that these subscribers are guaranteed to stay around forever. Meanwhile potential customers (like me) stay away from TiVo because we don't want to pay a subscription for something (TV listings) which is available for free anyway, and the box will become useless once TiVo goes bust or discontinues service. The idea of PVRs is bound to take off, but you can't take that to mean that any particular company will survive.
Just sell the damn things like toasters, pocket the money, and stop making them when it becomes unprofitable. That's all there is to it.
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:4, Informative)
ReplayTV tried to just sell boxes as their model; it hasn't worked well. They had to charge $650 when TiVo was charging $400. Guess who picked up more customers faster?
Arguably, the DirecTV combo units don't really provide a service from TiVo, since they leverage the guide data already being sent over the satellite. (However, I believe this data has been enhanced for the TiVo.) On the other hand, the subscription price for the DirecTV units has been reduced to $5/month, which is the same as the "mirroring" charge to have a second receiver on your DirecTV account. Since the DirecTV receivers with TiVo have two tuners, you get the second tuner free, and pay the $5/month for TiVo service instead, so it's a wash.
If you have two combo boxes, you only pay the extra $5/month for a second receiver, not another $5/month for the TiVo service -- the "mirroring" charge covers mirroring the TiVo service as well. I have a combo box with lifetime service (which is no longer offered for combo boxes), and my $5/month mirroring charge gives my second combo box the benefit of lifetime server, as long as both remain on the same account.
Meanwhile, the price of service has increased to $13/month for standalone boxes, but that's not so unreasonable, considering that maintaining the infrastructure for all those boxes to dial in with modems is quite expensive, not even counting the cost of preparing the data and updating software.
Ultimately, if TiVo can get over a million subscribers, they should be profitable by that point. Right now, they're more than halfway to that target, and still losing money, but it was part of their business plan from day one. You'll probably see TiVo turn a profit by 2004 or 2005.
As for what shareholders think, I am a shareholder, as well as a customer, and I don't have a problem with their subscription model. Most of the subscribers will stick around indefinitely, once they've got the hardware. TiVo is very good at what they do, and it's a killer product. It's just hard to market because the true value of the product is hard to convey. TiVo's greatest asset is word-of-mouth from their enormously loyal, extremely satisfied customers. Meanwhile, I'm going to buy as much TiVo stock as I can afford while it's still cheap.
One more thing -- if buying a subscription offends you so much, why don't you just buy the box and spend the extra $250 for lifetime service? Then you don't have to pay the subscription cost, and you can treat it as if you bought it at the combined cost.
You can't get lifetime service with the DirecTV models anymore, but so what? You get a second tuner in the combo box for the same monthly cost as a second standalone DirecTV receiver would cost you, so if effect it doesn't cost anything. More importantly, the combo boxes record directly from the satellite with 100% perfect recording quality, because you watch the EXACT same stream of MPEG2 bits live as you do when you play back a recording. Better yet, it's also much more efficient in disk space usage. The combo boxes thus have better recording quality than "Best" mode on the standalones, while using similar amounts of disk space as the "Basic" mode on standalones, which is said to be roughly the quality of VHS EP (6-hour) mode. The only real downside to the combo boxes is that you can't record from other video sources, only DirecTV. But with DirecTV's improved local coverage, that may not be an issue for you.
If you already have DirecTV and only watch the satellite, the "DirecTV receiver with TiVo" combo box is a no-brainer. If you use cable, it might be worth switching to DirecTV for the advantages. If not, you can buy a standalone (with lifetime service if you don't like subscriptions).
Regardless, if you like TV, get a TiVo -- preferably the DirecTV combo version. It's worth it. You'll never watch TV the same way again, and you'll wonder how you ever lived without it. And that is why I bought the stock; very few products have such an impact. My wife hated the idea of getting a TiVo (more gadgets) and it took 3 months to convince her to let me buy it. Within a few weeks, she was no longer mad about it, and within a couple months, she was extolling the TiVo's virtues to everyone she could. She had her mind made up to hate it, and it still won her over. If TiVo can do that, they can do anything!
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, the Tivo service is NOT something you can get for free by looking the listings up on TVGuide.com. It does a lot more than just matching up the listings to what you want to record, it also figures out what you like to watch, and recommends shows that maybe you haven't heard of by (anonymously) collecting the viewing habits of others like you, and correlating the data. Personally I really like this service, as although I sometimes get some whacky programming (I don't speak Spanish, but my Tivo sometimes thinks I do) I also get many shows which I never would have watched otherwise, but which turn out to be shows I really enjoy.
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:2)
While I'll agree that TiVo does have a fairly narrow market, it's not nearly as narrow as you say. And the narrowness of the market can mostly be overcome through marketing. Take it from a techie that has been building PC's for friends and family for years, I'd always recommend TiVo over any home-built DVR box. I've owned TiVo for 3 years and did actually experiment with a self-built box. You just can't match TiVo unless you sink over $1k into hardware. I even had one of those MS Media Center PC's for a month in their beta program, and after using it for a couple of days, it collected dust while I continued to use my 2 TiVo's daily.
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:2)
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:2)
Re:TiVo's problem (Score:2)
Over here in the UK, TiVo has a real battle to get any market share thanks to BSkyB's own PVR - which is endlessly advertised on - BSkyB.
The Sky box is superior in some ways to the current TiVO box in the UK - it has twin tuners and can record Dolby 5:1, but it looses out on the software and build quality.
Unfortunately I think TiVo have pretty much given up on the UK, I haven't seen a print advert in almost a year and the few retailers that are stocking the boxes have them hidden in corners gathering dust.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Control (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is who controls the content? Will cable companies remove features, like the ability to skip ahead 30 which they feels gives users the ability to skip commercials? Probably. Given the choice between pleasing consumers, or pleasing advertisers and shareholders (which they're leagally bound to do!) the companies always stay with the advertisers.
Cire
Re:Control (Score:2)
You don't own a TiVo, do you?
Re:Control (Score:5, Interesting)
And therein is the biggest problem in the media industry: content providers are too lazy to adapt to changes in technology, so they fight innovation to maintain the status quo.
Record companies and file sharing. Cable companies and PVRs. Et cetera.
I own a PVR (not a TiVO, but a higher-end satellite receiver with PVR built-in). It's fan-frickin-tastic. My VCR has been collecting dust for the last year and a half.
And yes, I skip msot commercials. But why do I skip them? 'Cause most of them suck.
There are commercials, however, that I do watch. And often rewind and watch again. And call my wife over to watch with me. These are the funny, intelligent, clever or bizarre commercials. Like the IKEA lamp. Like one for Tourette's syndrome. . Like the Mini and Nissan ones (just 'cause those songs are infectious).
If companies just made better commericals, I don't think people would skip them as much. They skip them because they are boring
At some point (and we've probably reached it), advertizing becomes so ubiquitous that it stops working. People tune it out. Advertisers think the solution is to put up more ads, in more places, in unexpected places. It's only going to piss people off more.
The solution is to make better ads. Why don't they realize this?
I considered buying a TiVo (Score:2, Interesting)
Bad shows on during YOUR viewing period you mean. (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course it'll become un-branded (Score:4, Insightful)
Everything useful eventually becomes brand-less.
Take PC's , they used to be called IBM compatibles. But now they're just so DAMNED handy and ubiquitous that now nobody REALLY cares what the brand is.
Comparing outhouses to Tivo? (Score:3, Interesting)
However... (Score:4, Funny)
More Slashdot Editors and Users have Tivos than know how to write a grammatically correct sentence.
Re:However... (Score:2)
3 Steps... (Score:2)
2. I'm married so I already got the lady.
3. Profit!
Of course it will fail (Score:2, Interesting)
I would much rather get it from my cable company for $10 extra a month and no upfront costs. Even if the features aren't as good as TiVos.
Re:Of course it will fail (Score:2)
As for the upfront costs...it only cost me $99 to get a Dual LNB Dish, DirecTiVo and Installation. Sounds good to me!
Re:Of course it will fail (Score:3, Interesting)
As far as TiVo from your cable company goes, there are a number of such services available from companies like nCube, and don't expect them to sell for $10/mo, because storing everything at the headend means bandwidth limitations greatly restrict the number of people who can use this service, so it'll be expensive, and probably be billed at rates similar to impulse pay-per-view movies.
More likely is that more cable companies will follow the lead of DirecTV and AT&T, and create settop boxes that license TiVo's technology, so TiVo will prosper, even if they're selling less hardware direct to the consumer.
Re:Some cable companies are rolling their own (Score:3, Interesting)
For better or for worse, the costs are being offset by revenue generated by targetted advertising (the SA8000 PVR stuff can do personalized ad insertion), and selling your viewing habits. If you'd prefer to pay $10/mo forever in order to receive targetted advertisements, that's your decision, though I tend to think that a one-time $250 payment is a much, much better deal.
Re:Of course it will fail (Score:2)
Me too... I like the idea of the digital cable box being integrated with the PVR.
Even if the features aren't as good as TiVos.
That depends on how good the PVR is. I'll keep my TiVo if it sucks, which is unfortunately what I've read in usenet regarding the TimeWarner digital cable PVR being released soon.
Re:Of course it will fail (Score:2)
Hmm...you have to pay outrageous prices to get a free service. Does that make any sense to you? Did you stop to think that maybe the service is "free" because you pay for it up front? You can do that with TiVo too if you want, $250 for the lifetime of the box. BTW, the TiVo service is far more than "channel listings."
Death of TiVo, film at 11... (Score:5, Insightful)
Will TiVo fail? Possibly. Will it become useless? No. Due to their open architecture, people can and already have hacked the TV guide info, and if/when the day comes they go under, hackers will be able to take up the call and keep the service going.
I hope that day doesn't come, since this well designed hardware and software.
Re:Death of TiVo, film at 11... (Score:2)
Re:Death of TiVo, film at 11... (Score:2)
Film at 11? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Death of TiVo, film at 11... (Score:2)
I agree (Score:2, Insightful)
Quite frankly since the PC is a commodity and and priced at very low levels so anyone with any technical saavy can build their own TiVo with a copy of Gnu/RedHat, some Radio Shack cabling and some common open source software tools. I've personally built prototypes of these units for a large client who shall remain nameless and I was able to come in under $200. Plus it's all open and non-propretary and thus I can charge my client to go back and make any mods they want as they go forward to the next level in the future.
I'm generally not a big fan of open source and anit-capitalist solutions but this is the perfect one where "The Shoe Fits" as it were.
Warmest regards,
--Jack
Re:I agree (Score:2, Funny)
Your obvious knack for user friendliness has made me want to hire you, however, your domain name can't be resolved. I guess I'll have to find someone else to take us to the "next level".
Re:I agree (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh, and don't forget to package it in a nice little black (or silver) box that fits within my entertainment center.
We won't even get into DirecTiVo here. Mmm, Dolby Digital.
Re:I agree (Score:4, Insightful)
Call me cynical, but I don't believe for a second that you can satisfy all the above requirements for a $200/box flat fee.
Not sure (Score:2)
- Auto recording of your shows while you're away, allowing you to watch TV at your convenience (just tell Tivo you like TechTV and it'll archive every episode automagically)
- Ability to pause live TV and play them back time-delayed when you return (great for bathroom and junk food breaks whenever you need one)
Yes, maybe a decade or so down the road these will be commonplace, but for the next 7 years, I wouldn't ditch my Tivo
Unconvincing (Score:5, Insightful)
All the more better. (Score:2, Insightful)
Too bad that TiVO may not be able to recover their investment or may have to morph into a PVR system software developer/consultant. But their name will live forever has the few OpenSource ventures that 'changed the world'. And that ain't so bad.
But the providers are rolling out "their own"... (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe people just like crapping outside more (Score:2, Insightful)
TiVo allows you to fast forward over ads, although legal pressure prevented TiVo from skipping ads altogether.
Predicting or causing? (Score:2)
Anybody can make anything sound bad by lining up the negatives.
patents (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:patents (Score:3, Informative)
You'd be assuming very [uspto.gov], very [uspto.gov] wrong [uspto.gov]. Not that any searching [google.com] would have told you this [slashdot.org]. Nope.
These are just the three most recently granted patents. TiVo has others. Between TiVo and Replay pretty much every function and capability of a PVR is patented.
Of course it will fail (I love it) (Score:5, Funny)
I loved my Amiga....
hated AOL...
I should hire out as a consultant :)
They Wish (Score:2, Redundant)
If you consider
DirecTivo has been re-branded "DirecTV PVR" (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a DirecTivo, and love it. I couldn't imagine life without it. Recently, I got a letter from DirecTV that from now on, my DirecTivo service was going to be referred to as "DirecTV PVR" and the monthly charge was going to be cut in half.
OK. The service hasn't changed. It's still Tivo software and interface. The monthly cost is half of what it was. The only down side is it records more "Special Preview" nonsense from DirecTV. Tivo still gets paid, and DirecTV has more reason to sell this great technology. What's the problem supposed to be?
Re:DirecTivo has been re-branded "DirecTV PVR" (Score:2, Interesting)
The Tivo/DirectTV partnership means that Tivo should be around as long as DirecTV is. Not that that is a sure thing (hear about the near extortion by the NFL for next year's Direct Ticket licen$ing?), but I can't believe that Satellite TV won't exist even in today's pro-cable-monoply climate.
Furthermore, that "Special Preview" promotional stuff exists on a portion of your hard drive separate from your recorded programs so it doesn't "take up any space." So like you say, what's the problem?
And in other news buggy whip manufacturers predict (Score:3, Funny)
2003.
Of course adworld hates the Tivo, it is the best way to circumvent their revenue model.
There are probably less Bentley automobiles and Lear Jets than outhouses too... is anyone
predicting their imminent doom?
Tivos are a luxury item that threaten the status quo, what's funny is adworld feels the need to
denounce them now when market penetration is so
light... methinks they doth protest too much.
Word of mouth (Score:3, Insightful)
TiVo is an example where word-of-mouth should be working. Whenever we have friends over they're curious about the TiVo, but they don't really understand why it's good. We let them test drive it, and invariably they go away impressed; sometimes it's pausing live TV when the phone rings, sometimes it's looking at "Now Showing" and seeing your favorite shows waiting for you to watch, sometimes it's looking through the Season Pass Manager or the search for programs features or the suggestions or the interactive program guide. Regardless, TiVo presents an impressive package and our friends go away impressed.
We have DirecTV with TiVo integrated; the integrated package really is nice and simple. My wife is anti-TV and anti-technology, but she loves TiVo because it makes the small amount of TV she does watch simpler and more flexible. We find the service easily worth $10/month (and the price recently went down).
People at TiVo must be scratching their heads since they have such a great product and people just don't get it; word-of-mouth and trying it out seem to be the only ways people get it.
Media Bias (Score:2, Insightful)
Can TiVo be profitable? (Score:2, Insightful)
Licence (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Licence (Score:2)
What might have confused you (gah that sounds awful, sorry, don't mean to be rude!) is that BSkyB does some of the marketing for TiVo in the UK and also handles customer service.
This just in (Score:2)
If the VCR is being replaced by DVD as ABC said (Score:2)
Where are the generic PVRs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Or is there something in the DVD agreement that prohibits this?
Re:Where are the generic PVRs? (Score:3, Informative)
And as the Tivo zealots continually remind me, it's not the recording capabilities of Tivo that are so great, its the guide and other advanced recording options of the service that make it worthwhile.
Even without the DVD player/recorder integration, you'd think that an HDD-based recorder with VCR-type functionality wouldn't be too tough to make, although I have a hard time seeing it selling for less than $300 -- maybe closer to $500.
I own three TiVos (Score:2, Interesting)
I declined to buy lifetime subscriptions to their service since I didn't expect them to be around that long, and it was the lifetime of the individual TiVo box. There is a reason I have a TiVo that is just for parts.
Both of the working ones have web access, network cards, and two huge drives. I plan to add the 4 drive adapter in the near future.
It was a cool idea. But with several open source projects to build a PVR out of commodity parts, and the potential to tie several homebuilt ones together in a PVR cluster, I really don't see what TiVo has to offer to the people that are most likely to buy a TiVo. Especially since you can get TV guide information with any of the ATI TV tuner cards.
It is a shame that TiVo (the company) got to spend all of that money showing people what could be done, only to be trampled by all of the cable box and satellite decoder manufacturers running out to implement the "TiVo" idea.
Such is life.
The Reason Why (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the reason is simply price. I would love to be able to use the features of these 2 products, pause live tv, skip commericals on playback, very easy recording of tv shows. But the truth is, this type of convenience is not worth the $400, $500, $600, or more that they charge for the unit. That's in addition to the monthly fee.
For approximately the same amount of money, I can take my whole family camping every weekend thru the summer and have a lot more fun!
Also, I don't think it helped ReplayTV when their units began requiring broadband access in order to download the program guide and software updates. Most people in the country still don't have broadband access.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Tivos in Outhouses? (Score:2, Funny)
Tivo owns patents on nearly ALL PVR technology. (Score:2)
Then can have my TiVO... (Score:5, Funny)
Blinking 12:00 (Score:2)
Tivo simply not superior (Score:3, Insightful)
Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but there is a limit to the amount of space you can store programs on a TiVo. What happens if I want to see an episode of Alias I recorded three weeks ago, or the Laverne & Shirley christmas episode I caught on Nick at Nite last year, or "All You Need is Cash" I happened to catch five years ago?** I'm pretty much stuck.
While the commercial skip feature is nice, it's not so much better than the fast forward button to warrant an additional expense. (Plus as an added bonus you can pop in an old tape from several years back. Commercials make fun nostalgia.)
Plus with a VCR, I can tell my friend, "Hey I missed Buffy last night, did you tape it?". Again, I could be wrong, but I don't know if TiVo offers such a feature.
And one argument I've seen in like half-a-dozen posts is how "bulky" VCRs are. Is 3 square feet of shelf space really that precious?
Now I'm not saying Tivos are bad. I'm just stating VCRs are good too.
** Feel free to make fun of my recording choices
Re:Tivo simply not superior (Score:5, Informative)
Yes... and there's a limit to how much space on a VCR tape too. Or your computer's hard drive. TiVos are upgradable (and if you don't feel comfortable doing it yourself, there are companies that will do it for you now and give you a warrantee on their work and/or the unit). We have two TiVos. They came with 30 GB HDs, and we could store about 24 hours of video on them in medium resolution. We did occasionally run into problems with space, since a couple week vacation could cause older programs to be deleted.
I upgraded both with 80G drives, giving them 110G total and roughly 100 hours of video. I have never had anything deleted before I could watch it now. I have programs that are over 6 months old on my TiVo still. My wife has stuff over a year old (or maybe we finally dumped it to tape, I don't recall). Heck, I still have 6+ pages of "Suggestions" recorded by the TiVo, which is over half the storage space.
And if I ever wanted to dump something to tape, then I can - TiVo has a "Record to VCR" feature that makes this easy. But I'd be more likely to rip the video out to my PC and store it on SVCD or something. Which you can't do very easily with a VCR.
Plus with a VCR, I can tell my friend, "Hey I missed Buffy last night, did you tape it?". Again, I could be wrong, but I don't know if TiVo offers such a feature
I can, and have, dumped stuff to tape from my TiVo for friends that missed something - even friends with a TiVo. With Replay you can just send them the episode via Internet. You can, theoretically, do the same with TiVo, but it's not officially supported or condoned.
Yes, that means you'll need a VCR too. I have to dig mine up and pray it still works when I actually need it.
While the commercial skip feature is nice, it's not so much better than the fast forward button to warrant an additional expense
Commercial skipping is really one of the lesser features of PVRs... it's hard for people to get this, but it's true. I'd be deeply annoyed if it wasn't there of course. The real feature is that a TiVo frees you from having to watch TV except when you want to. You don't have to worry about when shows are on - TiVo takes care of it. You don't have to worry about having enough tape in the VCR - the HD records more than any tape. You don't have to label tapes because TiVo has the program guide data already. Watching something live? Phone rings? No problem, hit pause. Or maybe you missed that last line - hit 6 second rewind. And everything's instant.
About the best comparison I can give you is how much better CDs are compared to tapes. Instant access, cleaner, faster, better.
Commentary (Score:5, Insightful)
2) If you don't own Tivo, you don't understand. I have a DirectTv/Tivo system. I can record two things at once, program wish lists, record something after it starts (I'm watching it, decide the wife would like it, so tell it to record the whole program). it records stuff in free space, based on what I watch, some of which I actually watch.
Shocking... (Score:3, Insightful)
An advertising journal predicts that a piece of technology that lets you skip ads will fail? Well I'm shocked, deeply shocked I must say... its not as if they have an axe to grind, is it?
Al.No, outhouses then TiVOs (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Grammar? (Score:2)
Re:Cable box-tivo will fail too (Score:3, Insightful)
No matter who is in office you are going to have the same problems. The democrats bow down to big business just as much as any other party. If they were in power, the cable companies would just "pressure" them the exact same way they do now. Power corrupts. Don't make this into a political pissing match when it has noting to do with politics.
Re:Cable box-tivo will fail too (Score:2, Insightful)
If you really believe that (let's say AOL just to avoid flaming) AOL has innovated as much as it would have in the face of real competition, you just kidding yourself and have a limited imagination. It's only now that other providers are starting to eat into AOL share that they are getting back on the innovation wagon. And it's only because the other provider has deep pockets that they can afford to toss money at the issue (If quality matter, they would have been gone a lonnnng time ago).
Re:Cable box-tivo will fail too (Score:2)
As an example look at the phone company. Before the Bell breakup they made plenty of money and produced probably nothing innovative, at least nothing that benefited the consumer. Innovation requires a push from government in the form of anti-monopolistic policies.
Re:Who needs TiVo?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
PVR technology may become integrated into cable boxes, but when that happens TiVo will clean up on the licensing.