RCA PVR Will Use Free Guide+ Program Guide 313
Mark Leighton Fisher writes "RCA has announced (among other CES goodies) a PVR/DVD player for this year that uses the free GUIDE Plus+ program guide rather than requiring an oncoming program guide contract. Once we bring the price down (yes, I work there) I may break down and get one, as I don't like the program guide fee required on current PVRs. (This may be the first no-program guide-fee commercial PVR.)"
No guide fee pvr (Score:3, Interesting)
Fallout. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Fallout. Not quite. (Score:2, Insightful)
Tivo makes their money only on subscriptions.
This *could* put Tivo out of business. I can only hope that this at least makes them rethink their position on selling, effectively, advertising space on their customer's pvrs. (I'm referring to Tivo's policy of taking money to record programs and push them on the customer, with the customer being unable to delete them for 7 days.)
Re:Fallout. Not quite. (Score:4, Insightful)
> record programs and push them on the customer, with
> the customer being unable to delete them for 7
> days.)
Heh, you mean that star menu option at the very very bottom of the menu? The one with the big star next to it so you can see if its there and not even glance in its area to read it if so?
Yes, those shows that only take up space on the root disk where it doesnt use a single bit from the volume the video is recorded to are so bad for me.
I know, lets boycott!
Re:Fallout. Not quite. (Score:2)
I have a refrigerator I'd like to sell you. It has a vertical divider in it, the left half is for your food and the right half is for my food.
It's ok though. My food doesn't take up any of the space for your food so you you aren't losing anything.
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Fallout? Not likely. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Fallout? Not likely. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fallout? Not likely. (Score:3, Interesting)
More or less, that's what this RCA device is setting up with too. Gemstar's Guide+ service isn't free as in speech. In fact it's not free at all. And when you look at the price tag, it's more or less going to line up right next to the Tivo with lifetime service. The only thing this device is trying to add to the mix is a DVD player... but do you think RCA is really going to let you copy that DVD to the HD? Nope, so there goes the only vaulable feature of a DVD and PVR in the same box.
So RCA's thinking they can use a business model that ReplayTV has already tried and retreated from? This is a product failure in the making.
This is great except... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is great except... (Score:3, Interesting)
Past performance is not an indicator or future results...
To be fair though, I'm going to let others be the guinea pigs on this one, and I'll make my purchasing decision based on the subsequent fallout or lack thereof.
Re:This is great except... (Score:2, Interesting)
Unfortunately, they designed the thing to be attached to the metal back with stove bolts, which promptly gouged out the square bottoms of the holes (resulting in the heads just sitting there spinning) long before I could get the nuts tightened down. I would have to have tightened them down another -inch- before they would have been tight....
I ended up sawing off the provided bolts with a hacksaw and replacing them with normal bolts, lock washers, and non-locking nuts just to get the thing put together.
And then there is their assertion that you should set the tilt and never be able to adjust it again. That would be fine except that the various manufacturers can't even agree on how to measure angle of tilt. Had I followed RCA's directions, I would not have been able to get a signal from both satellites. I'm so glad I realized their cluelessness before I used any more of their stupid lock nuts....
It took me less than thirty minutes to install my original Phillips dish, including aligning it. It took me three hours and almost $20 worth of additional parts and tools (hacksaw, etc.) to install my second.
Let's just say that I'll buy another RCA dish when they rip the hacksaw from my cold, dead fingers, and leave it at that.
Re:This is great except... (Score:4, Informative)
China yes...Korea...not any more (Score:3, Informative)
we'll get mod'd down for off-topic but oh well..:) (Score:3, Interesting)
There are many impediments to actually using any of the labor at this time. A prime example is the lack of infrastructure to move goods. Beyond manufacturing, there is also a ready source of low-cost programmers...we just can't get them on the payroll just yet.
The South Korean people are willing to open up, but with so much political sludge clogging the system, there's not much hope for any progress soon. It's a long and painful story
Re:we'll get mod'd down for off-topic but oh well. (Score:2)
This is a guy who has special bread flow in each day for him to eat.
This is a guy who, when presented with the question, feed my people or build a nuke decides to build the nuke.
He is totally off his fscking rocker.
Radio Shack (Score:2)
Did you only look at the RCA products? My impression is all of the products there are shoddy. My expectation is that they demand shoddy from the manufacturer, it's the only explanation I can come up with.
And I'm not trolling here, I'm very serious about this.
Re:This is great except... (Score:2, Funny)
You've got questions, we've got assholes. And quality Compaq PC's with MSN internet service.
But seriously, I walked into radio shack asking for a product that allowed audio to be sent through the house via the already installed phone lines. Great if you live in an apt. and can't run cable. A coworker has this - he bought it at Radio Shaft. He runs audio out from his flat-imac to the line in on his stereo and it sounds fine. When I described it, they looked at me as if I had lobsters crawling out of my ears. After a pause and something that might have been a thought, the guy said, "We never made anything like that. If we did, I'm sure it would sound awful. Can I interest you in a Motorola cell phone?" Well, the other guy tried to sell me a mobile phone plan, but that doesn't really matter here. The important thing was that I had an onion tied around my belt, which was the style at the time.
Re:OT: They were when... (Score:2)
Where do you buy discrete components, radio equipment, test gear and electronics kits from these days?
I can hear the complaints now... (Score:3, Funny)
GUIDE Plus+ isn't Free. (Score:2)
Basically, RCA pricing in a subscription that's roughly equal to TiVo's lifetime cost into the price of the unit itself.
Sorry guys, no great "free software" advance here to report.
Re:I can hear the complaints now... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, suing Grace would be pointless, her bank account is probably about $85.42. Actually it's probably more like $85.42 overdrawn.
And as for suing Will, that's probably not a good idea. He's a lawyer. By the time the case is over you'll be paying him damages.
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question - TV guide patent (Score:3, Interesting)
Hell, if that isn't the most obvious of the many "put paper thing on computer" patents.
Re:question - TV guide patent (Score:2)
GIODE Plus+ is free... another case of a bad
About PVR Guide Charges (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't mind supporting Tivo with a monthly charge, as long as I get service for my money. The program guide itself is worth the cost, and the convenience of Tivo is well worth the initial $200 outlay.
All-in-all, I figure if I can spend $12/month to support my Earth And Beyond habit, I can shell out $10/month for Tivo.
Just my $.02. Different people place different values on different things, so YMMV (your money may vary).
Re:About PVR Guide Charges (Score:2)
Replay did it this way first, then Tivo had to follow suit so their prices "looked" similar to Replay's time shifted prices.
Re:About PVR Guide Charges (Score:2)
That'll all come to a sudden stop if Tivo goes out of business. If Eisner has his way, you'll find one day that you're not paying $12 a month anymore, and you're not recording shows anymore.
If TiVo goes dark, your PVR will too. For the price they want, that tends to scare some people off.
Re:About PVR Guide Charges (Score:4, Informative)
Nope. A guy who goes by the name Tridge (TiVoNet, ExtractStream fame) has come up with a way to feed the TiVo program guide data in a form it likes. Hasn't released it out of respect for TiVo, but if they go under there is a plan B.
Re:About PVR Guide Charges (Score:2)
Yes, the guide, which can also be had for free. I could provide to you for a monthly fee the service of allowing you to talk to me, which doesn't mean that you would find it a particularly good value either. They just wanted an on-going source of revenue from their customers, and charging for The Guide seemed as good as any. They might as well charge you a Protection Fee, or an Value Added Enjoyment Fee, and it would be the same. The argument that TiVo provides a very valuable "service" and so you don't mind paying the fee isn't particularly strong, either. If the government started taxing you for the air you breathe, would you feel the same way? After all, the air is also a pretty handy service. I have owned a TiVo since shortly after they came out, and I do very much enjoy its functionality, but that doesn't mean I don't feel charged redundantly, since I receive that same data from DirecTV also. And no, the DirecTiVo won't do, since I can't get network channels here.
You will all be screwed in the end. (Score:4, Interesting)
Free TV guides just don't excite me somehow. Really free broadcasting, where anyone could put up their content and the user could chose anything anytime, that would be nice. That's what the internet was supposed to be.
OK, I'm having a bad year.
Original replays do not charge fee (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Original replays do not charge fee (Score:2)
Just because the lifetime service fee didn't show up as a line item on you bill doesn't mean you didn't pay it somewhere else.
Re:Original replays do not charge fee (Score:2)
Side note: I see no point to getting a new PVR until one exists that can handle HDTV. My PVR defines my viewing habits now... I am certainly not going to get HDTV gear just so I can drive home on NBC's schedule to watch some TV in HD.
Re:Original replays do not charge fee (Score:2)
Then you'll be happy to get this news [tivo.com], also from the CES front.
As a longtime ReplayTV owner (Replay 2004 and Showstopper), I hope that SonicBlue gets their HD-capable device out alongside TiVo or I might have to move to that proverbial dark side...either that or finally set up a home theater PC with an HDTV card in it that will timeshift that programming for me (unfortunately, that doesn't help with satellite HD).
I don't mind the idea of.. (Score:2)
Here's an idea, why not do something like Pay Per View, only the Tivo unit automatically captures it for you ready to play? (as opposed to having to catch it while it's on...)
The other option is keep me interesting in upgrading the machines once in a while. I don't want to replace the whole box, but I'll always be interested in buying new hard drives etc. Wouldn't it be cool if they used something like Firewire so you could keep adding more units to increase the storage?
This is interesting to me, at least. I'm the kind of guy who likes to watch shows from beginning to end. I'd watch Farscape, for example, if I could catch the first episode and reliably watch the rest of them in the order they were intended for. Problem is, that's a lot of storage if I'm mid-season.
*Shrug* It's cool that they're offering that service, hopefully it'll get Tivo and Sonicblue to reeconsider what you're actually paying for.
Oh, goody! So tell me... (Score:3, Insightful)
Great! Let me know where I can go to a website and see every Steve Martin movie that is coming up in the next two weeks, with specific channel numbers, dates, and times.
And which website was it where I could go and click on MOVIES, and then type in "Steve Martin", and have it record all of those movies automatically?
That is why I pay TiVo $4.95 a month.
Re:Oh, goody! So tell me... (Score:2)
They've already got it recorded. They'll just ship it to you in the mail. And you can even select what order you want them in. No fussing with who is showing what this week.
Re:Oh, goody! So tell me... (Score:2)
Price wasn't part of the debate. Even if it was, that's a one time cost. If Snapstream goes down, you don't suddenly lose your ability too record.
"And it records to your PC, so you would have to get TV-out cables (and possibly a new video card) to go to your TV."
If you really really want to watch it on your TV that bad, spend "Plus, what if your TV is in one room and your PC is in the other?"
That's a flawed and unlikely scenario. If you're willing to sit at your computer and do work on it, then you're willing to watch interesting content on it. Watching it on a TV, at best, is better because you have a couch to sit on.
"Thanks, but I'd rather have a TiVo and not be required to throw a PC into the mix."
Different strokes for different folks. However, I wasn't making the argument to use Snapstream instead of TiVo. Somebody didn't like my comment about wanting better service for that amount of money, and I very specficially answered that person's questions. I wasn't saying one was better than the other. That was a bad presumption you made.
In using Snapstream, though, I've found that there are some subtleties to it that I didn't expect. For one thing, I can capture an entire series and save it. I captured an entire run of Quantum Leap and have it sitting on a Firewire drive right now. At any time I want, I can start watching the show from beginning to end. That's 5 seasons worth. Also, my home is networked. (not wirelessly) Every member of my family has their own computer, plus I have a laptop. I have no trouble hiding in the room that nobody is in and watching my show at my leisure. Tivo does not have any equal to this.
I have an unusual setup at home. I have dual monitors. Sometimes, if I'm trying to catch up on a show, I'll have it going on one monitor while I'm doing my nightly web surfing on my main monitor. It's a nice multitasking use of my time. I can't imagine everybody'd like that, but I personally think it's great.
I may still get a Tivo or similar device as a compliment to my existing. The main reason is that the Snapstream setup, though wonderful for capturing a Series (as opposed to an episode), it's not so good at getting the random "oh I'd like to catch that!" moment that comes up.
I'll tell you something, though: It's damn cool going on a business trip, staying in a hotel, and having a bunch of shows ready to watch on my laptop. Seems like there's never anything good on TV in a hotel.
Not to say this too many times... (Score:2)
The EyeTV, a USB MPEG-1 PVR for mac/windows also uses a free online guide, so this is not even close to the first PVR/DVR to do that. ReplayTV probably takes that honor, but many have followed since.
Re:Not to say this too many times... (Score:2)
Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:4, Insightful)
You know, this subject comes up every time an article featuring the TiVo is posted, and every time someone gets "+5, Insightful" for whining about the TiVo monthly fee.
My TiVo monthly fee is $4.95. Yes, less than five dollars a month. That's cheaper than the burrito I ate for lunch today! For everything that TiVo gives me, $5 is chump change. Plus, you can do yearly and/or lifetime subscriptions. It's also lumped in with my DirecTV bill, so I don't get a separate "TiVo bill" that I have to worry about paying. What is the big deal?
I get 500+ channels plus HBO, local channels, and TiVo for less than $60 a month. Digital cable would give me the same thing without TiVo for $85/month. You want value? Buy a DirecTV+TiVo. But please, stop whining about the subscription. Every damn TiVo owner in the world will tell you that the $4.95 is money well-spent on a TiVo.
The only people I hear complaining are people who think the TiVo is a glorified VCR. The TiVo is not a VCR with a monthly fee! It is a totally different way to watch TV. It frees you from cheesy "primetime" TV. I told my TiVo to tape every Steve Martin movie that was on, regardless of any channel it was on. Every once in a while I turn the TiVo on to find a Steve Martin movie recorded and waiting for me to watch! I can order and record Pay-Per-View with one click. I have completely foregone Blockbuster (and I say "Good Riddance!") Five dollars a month is worth it to watch every Steve Martin classic, get rid of video store late fees, and give up on crappy primetime TV. (Hmm, the Simpsons was on at 6PM... I think I'll just watch that at 9PM instead of whatever is on now!)
I do not work at TiVo. I do not work at DirecTV. I am, however, a satisfied customer of both. (Oh, and has your cable company lowered your monthly cable bill this year? DirecTV lowered my monthly bill TWICE in 2002. What more can I ask for?)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:5, Funny)
Five dollars a month is worth it to watch every Steve Martin classic
I do not work at TiVo. I do not work at DirecTV
Let me guess - you're Steve Martin.
How are you getting it for $4.95? (Score:2)
Re:How are you getting it for $4.95? (Score:2)
See, stand-alone Tivos have to get their data over a nightly telephone call, which of course costs Tivo money. Their fees went up to $12.95.
However, DirecTV users actually get most of the data over DirecTV's satellite system. They still need to call in for software updates once in a while, but their calls will always be shorter since they don't need a nightly update of the TV listings. So, Tivo cut their fees to $4.95/mo. In fact, though their partnership with DirecTV people who subscribe to the highest programming package (which is already $72/mo.) don't have to pay extra for Tivo at all. Also, users with multiple DirecTV/Tivo units only have to pay the fee once for all their devices on the same DirecTV account, users with the stand-alone boxes get no multiple unit discounts.
Makes sense that since Tivo would rather people convert to the DirecTV combo units, they'd set the fees up to encurage that behavior.
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
The big deal is that they require the subscription. What if I don't want those features? What if I don't want to (or can't) hook the machine up to a phone line or even the internet?
I almost bought a TiVo a year or two ago, but couldn't because I didn't have a landline in my apartment. Things are different today, but now I'm worried that Tivo will a.) Go out of business or b.) Get sued to the point that their service is restricted, and that $200-$400 lump of metal and plastic I bought is suddenly worthless.
I understand that it's worth $5. I'm not complaining about spending the money, but I am worried about Eisner having his way.
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:3, Interesting)
Then don't pay. You TiVo will still work to record live stuff, pause live stuff, etc... without the subscription.
You'll just end up with a list of dates, and that's it... And have to start playine each to know what it is. But hey, you didn't want to pay for the subscription to the guide, right? You don't want the extra features, right?
Once you've used one, you'll understand why it's worth it. Give a TiVo user the choice between a 34" HDTV, 200 channels and never the option to use a TiVo; OR... TiVo, just half the channels, and a smaller 27" normal TV. I'll bet over 70% (or more) would take the TiVo option.
Follow for a minute if you will, a computer is cool. Pull the hard drive out, and it's still fast... You can spend tons of money on it, and have a kick ass system. Save yourself $100 by not putting in a hard drive, and what do you have, money for a faster system or bigger monitor?
Now, you can boot from CD or floppy, you can save files on floppy, you can even burn CD's and open files. You can run a web browser or all your programs, all you have to do is switch disks every time you want to use something else. You can surf the net for hours never needing to use the hard drive.... But, do you REALLY want to live without a hard drive?
A home entertainment center without a TiVo is like a computer without a hard drive. If you haven't used one ever, only floppies and CDs (or video tapes), then you really just don't know what your missing....
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
If this is in a contract that Tivo never changes, it'd be great. I dont trust them to not send a kill down the line and render a Tivo useless.
What I want is a simple and easy way to take the shows I recorded and place them on CD as VCDs.
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
How could they if you don't plug it into a phone and you don't want the subscription? Assuming your parinoid enough to buy the stand alone tivo not the directv one (the directv one is useless for anything else anyway, because it doesn't have an encoder, since directv is broadcast in digital. But I would much rather have the DirecTiVo anyday over a stand alone [tivocommunity.com] even if it doesn't have an encoder.
Or, if you are worried and do subscribe anyway, just use Tiger's TiVo tools and make a backup image and save it on your PC or on a CD or something.
If your not subscribed, the worst part is that you will have a lot of emails/messages that say "need programming data, dial in soon" that you have to delete. Probably the result of a cron job...
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Is that your experience? Do you have one? I'm not challenging you nor accusing you of spreading falsehoods, I'm asking you because when I went shopping for one I was informed that I had to have a landline.
If you're credibly telling me that's not true then I withdraw my complaint. (I apologize in advance, I didn't know a more tactful way to say that.)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Oh sure Tivo fans all say it's still a viable box but I'm doubtful.
You already *have* what you pay extra for (Score:2)
I own a DirecTivo myself, and I agree that it's the best deal in TV. But I find Tivo's explanations of their pricing sadly dishonest. It does not cost near $5/month on the DirecTivo or $13/month on the standalone to provide the programming info. The true story is that they sell a $350 machine for $100 and take the $250 in fees over the years instead.
So my complaint is not about the money but about the phony explanations. And whether you agree with that or not, it does in fact scare away a lot of customers who perceive it as sneaky.
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, and the same amount or TiVo lovers try to downplay or put down every other PVR as if they are threatened by them personally or afraid to admit the the technology is getting more common and the earlier TiVo's might someday be made obsolete by a newer product.
You start your post with "whining about the TiVo monthly fee" and "That's cheaper than the burrito I ate for lunch" as if cost means nothing to you and then follow it up with three paragraphs of money figures talking about how much money you save with the your current setup as if money does matter to you?
Oh yeah, every advantage you gave about the TiVo can be had with ANY PVR, maybe even ones from RCA with no monthly fee..
Mod me away as everyone knows that the non bandwagon followers always seem to be marked as trolls..
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:4, Insightful)
First, mine is $12.95. That's several burritos in your currency. I wish I could make do with DirecTivo, but I can't until I get network over DirecTV.
Second, any one single service that you pay a monthly fee for isn't much by itself, and might very well be worth it. What is a big problem is that the TiVo fee is very endemic of the direction marketing seems to be moving. Everyone wants a piece of your monthly budget. Not a one-time lump sum, because once they have that and have given you their product, that's the last they're likely to get from you. No, they want to have an intimate relationship with your wallet, so that--amongst other things--they can readjust periodically how much their product is worth to you, AFTER they've tied you in. First you pay a monthly fee for the phone. Then the cell phone. Then the cable/satellite. Then the ISP. Then the TiVo. Then the NetFlix. Soon the music you listen to, then the software you use, then the washing machine/dryer/oven/coffee maker/fridge/handshake-from-the-friendly-neighbor
That is what I hate about the TiVo business model. It's funny how large numbers are made up of many little numbers.
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:2)
Re:Sick of hearing this whining. (Score:3, Insightful)
A TiVo is as much a VCR as a spreadsheet is a calculator. Sure they both do calculations, but they are WORLDS apart in how they work.
No analogy is perfect, and the best I can play this one out is... The TiVo will do sooo much more than a VCR, but won't do long term storage (Spreadsheets do way more than a calculator, but require a computer to use them). It sort of falls apart there, but at least people understand "recording" is to "calculating" and just getting the answer doesn't always mean my $5 generic one is as good as your fancy high tech thingie...
things to ask for (Score:3, Informative)
tv that stays on when it rains?
seriously - i had directv for two years, the dish was mounted on a 6x6 pine post sunk 4ft onto concrete (barn beam), with all the mounting bolts tightened till the metal was distorted, and the reciever would still lose the satellite lock if the winds were gusting more than 30kts. i live on the ocean, so that's a bigger problem than it sounds. dense cloud cover, that made for some interesting jaggies...and fugeddaboutit in the rain. this with a signal booster on ~75ft of cable no less! i'm happy with digital cable - i get almost as many channels as dTV, really everything except the sports package, the same image and sound quality, and my tv stays on 24x7! even in the rain!
thunderstorms and rainy days... (Score:2)
Better than our local cable company was during calm sunny days.
My wife works from home and ends up watching a lot of TV. First year we lived here, cable was *constantly* going out - often for minutes or hours at a stretch, with no adverse weather in sight. In a one month period we had about 20 hours of down time *that we knew about* (might have been off at 3am - who knows?). On average, we had about 2-3 hours of noticeable downtime per month with cable. I think we've had about 5 hours total in the past 3 years of DirecTV. Oh, and the cable company 'upgraded' since then and telemarkets us to come back, even though they still apparently don't have some basic channels we really want.
So, no, directv isn't perfect in bad weather, but it's still miles better than our cable ever was.
Who pays $600 to save $13 per month? (Score:5, Insightful)
RCA expects an MSRP of $600 for this product.
TiVo charges $150 for a 60 hour unit right now (see http://www.tivo.com)
RCA doesn't charge a fee for guide info.
TiVo charges $13/mo, or you can get a lifetime subscription for $250.
With that price difference it would take 3 years before you broke even on the RCA purchase. And if you bought the TiVo lifetime subscription you'd have $200 with which to buy TiVo's new Media Center software as well as a nice region free DVD player.
Or you could just buy the Toshiba DVD/TiVo device that was also announced at CES.
Sorry, but RCA sucks and you can have my TiVo when you pry it from my cold dead fingers.
Re:Who pays $600 to save $13 per month? (Score:2, Informative)
That's for a refurbished model without a DVD player. A new 60 hour model is $299. Add the life-time subscription and you have $549. Add $100 for a DVD player and you have $649. And that's without tight DVD/PVR integration. At least compare apples to apples, and don't tell me you already have a DVD player either.
Re:Who pays $600 to save $13 per month? (Score:2)
Re:Who pays $600 to save $13 per month? (Score:2)
Well, that's a sacrifice that the Content Cartel is willing to make.
When PVRs are outlawed, only outlaws will have PVRs...
Guide Plus only gives you part of what TiVo gives (Score:3, Informative)
I bought one for xmas (Score:4, Insightful)
I mostly chose it for two reasons. It is a DVD player in addition to a PVR, which is great if you don't already have one as with me. I have no complaints about its DVD playing functionality whatsoever.
The other reason is, as the article points out, that it doesnt require a channel guide subscription. I didn't want to add another monthly bill to my family's life, nor pay a lifetime (of the unit) fee when the companies' lives may be even shorter than the average electronic appliance. My family pays the local cable service about ten bucks a month to have nice reception of local stations plus TNT, CSPAN and the other junk they throw in. Thus our situation as far as channels go, may be unusual, but it is an issue. The guide is flaky! When told we don't have cable it gets quite a few broadcast stations that we dont receive and associates some of the ones we do with the incorrect channels. When told we have cable it only gets the listings for TNT and the Food network consistently correct, though there was one day, since christmas that the listings seemed pretty complete across the board. I havent put a whole lot of time into figuring it out since you only get the new listing after leaving the unit off overnight, but I'm pretty sure we're hosed as far as the guide goes. That sucks, but it would be OK if the thing were reliable for doing scheduled recordings ala a vcr. No such luck! Instead of recording the scheduled show it sometimes (maybe 30%) goes to the menu and says "an error has occured". Maybe these are simple software problems that will go away with the next revision, but guess what!? the firmware is not updatable.
TiVo and Replay offer no-fee PVRs for same price (Score:4, Informative)
The new feature is that the RCA box is also a DVD recorder, which may justify the extra cost for some buyers. But making a 40 hr PVR for $600 up front with no per-month free is nothing new.
Not the first (Score:3, Informative)
(I was the third employee of Replay, which was originally Pacific Digital Media and has since been acquired by Sonic Blue.)
Unfortunately, not a long term solution (Score:5, Informative)
Their problem is that they spend a lot of money to consolidate the tv schedules - and they offer it free on their site using the advertising model. When people scrape it for their own use, they're subverting the ads, and zap2it loses money instead of making it (bandwidth, servers, staff, syndication). It's a much larger problem because of the way XMLTV scrapes - hundreds, if not thousands of pages must be retrieved and parsed to get the complete schedule.
Now before you all scream anti-corporate statements, realize that if enough people "steal" their content, they'll simply shut it down, as no company (and no one) wants to lose money.
For an interesting previous thread on this very topic, check here [slashdot.org].
Re:Unfortunately, not a long term solution (Score:5, Insightful)
About XMLTV: Zap2it makes their listings freely accessible. As far as I'm concerned there's no contract where I agreed to view their ads as well as their content. They're free to implement technical measures to prevent people from scraping their listings, but until then I see nothing wrong with it. The one thing that concerns me is the bandwidth, I wasn't aware that the XMLTV grabber gets hundreds of pages. I might not want to put that much load on their servers.
Let's not get it in our heads that this is stealing, though. Anti-leech has the same philosophy, they consider it theft if you block a site's popups, view a site's HTML, or copy a site's download links. The same applies here, I never agreed to make sure that my browser functions a certain way or that I wouldn't do certain legal things with the information I found on a web page.
Re:Unfortunately, not a long term solution (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe the solution is to make the scraper fake a click-through on the ads every once in a while, so that the advertisers still pay them...'course, then you're screwing the advertisers, but there are more of them, and they probably have more money.
Re:Unfortunately, not a long term solution (Score:3, Informative)
And I don't think there's any reason to expect this not to be a long term solution.
Hurray for RCA!
Guide+ (Score:5, Informative)
This television was only bought a couple months ago, but hopefully RCA will improve the software before they bring this PVR to market. It's not such a big deal that the software's buggy in my case, because the TV itself is fine; I just don't use the Guide Plus function much. With a PVR, it'd be a much bigger problem, I think.
Re:Guide+ (Score:2)
Not just "bigger." I don't think it would be hyperbole to change the word to "devastating." Simply put, if the guide ain't workin' then the PVR's 'cool' factor goes right out the window and it becomes a glorified VCR. There are [relatively infrequent] times when Tribune (the company providing listings to ReplayTV and TiVo) will have listings that are either incomplete or just dead wrong and, to me at least, it grinds everything to a halt if that information relates to a show you want.
For example, I decided to enjoy some Drew Carey reruns recently that play at 11:30 p.m. on a local station. Obviously, being a ReplayTV owner, I set the thing up and let it go it's merry way. After one week, much to my chagrin, I noticed that I had missed two days of the show. I looked at the guide and it showed "To Be Announced" in the spot that Drew Carey had occupied previously - since I had not requested the box to record "To Be Announced" I lost out on those days of the program (which I found, after I *did* set up to record TBA, was still Drew Carey). This situation, again, comes up relatively infrequently but it is still a big annoyance.
I can only imagine that with a free service (mine is free but it's the same data that others with new Replay units are paying for) the error rate would go up for the simple fact that they wouldn't feel the urgency of satisfying customers who are paying good money for the service.
If they don't make the service work properly, the word will get out and they'll have a lot of unsold boxes sitting around waiting for a software update or waiting to be dismantled so that their components can be put in something useful (more likely, they would simply drop the price like a stone and focus on the DVD recording ability).
Personally, I would avoid RCA unless the product they offered was so compelling and/or cheap that it blows other products out of the water. For example, had they announced the same product with the same timeline but with HDTV, that might be compelling enough to buy. As it is, other companies have better, time-tested products already on the market, either cheaper or similarly priced.
Nice but not the same (Score:4, Interesting)
My father has an RCA TV with Guide+, and the data is not very complete (there are quite a few channels on his cable that they don't list). It seems to be more focused on ads. Without more complete data, using Guide+ for a PVR will be frustrating (I've got one channel that Tribune and TiVo don't have full data for and that is highly annoying; not having any data for a number of channels would be a show-stopper for me).
Guide+ is something that RCA has pushed but pretty much everyone else seems to have ignored.
It sounds like RCA is going to make something competitive to an original TiVo series 1 with the original software; nice, but three years out-of-date.
Re:Nice but not the same (Score:2)
That's the real reason why cable systems and DirecTV work so hard at pushing hteir own guide data streams.
Monthly fee (Score:3, Insightful)
And the total is probably about the same or less than the price of the RCA box.
Re:Monthly fee (Score:2)
I will only buy a PVR if and when it lets me choose a provider for the data. It's OK if some of the provider charge money - I might even pay for it (although $1 or 2 per month, preferable as a yearly fee format - is more of my taste). I want a choice, and I want competition. Until then, no TiVo for me!
But I respect your choice/opinion.
Re:Monthly fee (Score:2)
This is the same argument that people have been using against TiVo and ReplayTV since their inception. And since that time, people have had their units and even bought replacement/multiple units and the services are still there.
I've had my Showstopper (Panasonic-brand ReplayTV) for years now (I'm bad with time, but it has been since the month Panasonic put them out) and I'm still going strong. Assuming I paid an extra $150 for the unit (with its "free" service), I've paid less than $5 a month for that service and it keeps going down every month I have the box.
It's all about the interpretation you put on the word "lifetime." For a PVR you look at it several ways:
1. You can expect the service to exist for the next 40-50 years so that you can really get your money's worth. This is an unrealistic, and frankly stupid, expectation.
2. You can expect it to last the lifetime of the unit - say 10 years at the outside (probably with at least one new hard drive), barring replacement because of cooler tech. This is more reasonable and, unless the Supreme Court really goes crazy, it's realistic.
3. You can simply amortize the lifetime payment in your head and decide that if you get at least two years worth of service, you've saved money over the monthly fees. This is the route I took, meaning I'm very satisfied with what I've gotten so far.
4. You could buy a used ReplayTV/Showstopper (no fees) cheap and avoid the whole service fee issue.
5. You can just decide that PVRs have no chance, that the services are going away within the next year, and just avoid the whole thing. This is pure pessimism, IMO.
I haven't seen any indications that either TiVo or SonicBlue is going out of business, so this argument just continues to get weaker and weaker. If you're cheap, that's cool...lots of people are. Just admit it and move on. If you just don't have the interest in or need for a PVR, that's also fine. But bringing up what seems - more and more as time goes on - like FUD is just pitiful.
Good News for Canadians... (Score:4, Interesting)
Not quite the first (Score:2, Informative)
Not really.
Pace Twin Tuner Digital PVR [pacefreetoview.co.uk]
They are running a little bit late with production though.
Still, Thanks, but No Thanks (Score:4, Insightful)
I also realize that everyone buying these are bringing the cost down, but as long as there are 150 channels of crap like "Just Shoot Me" available, I don't want it if it's $1.00
Personal Strap-On Aircraft for Auction on eBay [xnewswire.com]
Re:Still, Thanks, but No Thanks (Score:4, Funny)
I call bullshit. Your post was made at 9:24 EDT. Because of your mention of 'Just Shoot Me', I'm assuming you are in North America. Given that you were interested in Tivo, that means you are in the US. Worst case scenario is that it's about 5:30 when you post this. So, you ain't datin' shit.
If you are on the East Coast, you are in the prime dating hours, but you're still on your computer. If you are on the West Coast, maybe, maybe you're still at work.
Sorry, if you're trying to look like a cool, slashdot hipster with no TV *and* dating potential, you're going to have to cover your tracks a bit better next time.
GUIDE Plus+ *totally* sucks. Very inaccurate. (Score:5, Interesting)
You get what you pay for. Want to record that Simpsons episode and get half of Jerry Springer instead? Guide Plus+ will make it happen!
No joke.
Re:GUIDE Plus+ *totally* sucks. Very inaccurate. (Score:2)
Another cause of problems is the fact that the ATI software downloads its data a whole week in advance, while TiVo calls in for the latest information nightly.
BTW... Guide Plus+ isn't free as in anything. It's just that Gemstar is willing to make a blanket license for a line of products, and willing to provide its data over an open Internet server. So let's not let the FSF folks too excited over this one...
Guide Plus+ problems (Score:4, Informative)
1. It's only 48-72 hours worth of data (varies per channel). So forget about changing something for anytime far in advance.
2. For my TV at least, the Guide Plus+ data is often wrong. If the TV show is right, the description is inaccurate or incomplete.
3. AFAICT, the data doesn't contain anything more than title + description. So forget that Stanley Kubrick wishlist..
4. Finally, Guide Plus doesn't seem to make it outside of my digital cable box. So how is this PVR going to get the data?
Dish Network's PVR has no program guide fee (Score:3, Informative)
Free GUIDE Plus+ vs. Replay with a one time fee. (Score:2)
PVR History (Score:2, Informative)
Then since Tivo sells cheaper (with a monthly fee or life time free seperate), Replay now plays the same way. The Units are "cheaper" but you either have to pay the fee or get the life time contract.
Either way they all cost about the same $400+ (that is with the unit and a year or two of service).
XMLTV (Score:2)
Guide+ I remember that..... (Score:2, Informative)
I was going to buy an RCA tv with it, but before I did so I made a trek to my parents house and messed with it on their big screen, it totally sucked.
The guide data was unfixably out of whack all the time, it's channel list was screwed even after I set it up and messed with it for hours, far too much work.
So I bought a TiVo, then I bought one for my mom. I entered my zip code, the type of connection and that was it. The guide data is consistantly correct, as long as the network change is more than a day away. It has not screwed up except a few times when the change was made on the day of the program airing, and then it usually catches this on it's early am phone home.
The best thing isn't that it tells you what time something's on, it's that it carries enormous amounts of info on each show, a small plot summery, the main actors, the director, and various other goodies that let you know what you're watching before you watch.
The guide+ system sucked for it's content and reliability with data. I don't believe the problems I saw had anything to do with actual implementation in the set, just that the data that was being sent was not accurate.
Not a fee for guide data (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Paying only half price up front is easier for consumers to stomach.
2) Cost of inventory is signficantly reduced for merchants who carry the products.
#2 is the more significant reason - it was prohibitively expensive for merchants to stock ReplayTV's so they stopped until Replay figured out that halving the inventory cost made it feasible to get themselves sold at retail again. It is only with the 4500 and the 5000 where Replay changed this policy that they were able to get BestBuy and CircuitCity to start carrying their product again. The fact that the 4000 was direct-purchase (and later drop-shipped from Amazon) wasn't because Replay wanted to be "elite" they just couldn't convince any of the b&m merchants to carry the inventory.
Re: sick of this whining (Score:2, Interesting)
Notice to TiVo fanatics: Comparing prices between competing models isn't "whining". It's "capitalism".
I want to find something that offers the features of a TiVo, but I don't have to pay for every month. That doesn't make me "cheap", it just makes me a smart consumer.
Guide Plus+ is "free" with ATI All-In-Wonders (Score:2, Informative)
I have a couple of ATI All-In-Wonder cards of various vintage and they've always included a PC-client version of Guide Plus with no monthly fee as well. Works very nicely - you do a once-a-week download of program info, tailored to your local service. There's an app that lets you scroll through this info, similar to what you see at tvguide.com, but better actually since it's local data - you can very quickly scroll through times and days in the 1 week range.
The All-In-Wonder includes PVR functionality, although I must admit that even with generic installation, it seems to work quite poorly for me. The GuidePlus+ app works very nicely - if you want to tell the PVR to record something, you just select it in the TV grid and you're happening.
There are also include a number of other interesting functions that fall out of doing this on a computer. The TV view overlays the program title as you scroll through the channels - nice to be able to tell which Tremors movie you're seeing when you flip to the Tremors Channel - oops, Sci-Fi Channel.
ATI even includes this free GuidePlus+ functionality in their standalone TV Wonder tuner cards. These cards only run $50, so it's clearly a steal.
I do a lot of videotaping and have a couple of Sony VCRs that include GuidePlus+ and it's a really good thing - a huge leap in friendliness over VCRPlus+. Had I realized that this feature would disappear from all VCRs (along with all quality VCRs going away!), I would have bought more of them. On these VCRs (Sony SLV-M20HF), the GuidePlus info is also provided for free and is delivered to the VCR when it's turned off in the blanking interval of some channel.
First, in the US maybe but not in the world. (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe it's 'cuz of the DMCA, which doesn't exist elsewhere. (And they wonder why OUR economy is in the sh!ts)
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"You can't get blood from a turnip" - My dad back when I was a kid asking him for money.
Re:other products (Score:2)
And if it was made by the same software idiots that made my Apex DVD player it would read: "The vast hard drive in the RCA LYRA Audio/Video Jukebox can accommodate up to 100,000 JPEG images, of which only the first 200 can be displayed."
Re:other products (Score:3, Funny)
Re:other products (Score:2)
I do. But then again, I'm an IE user and I'm not very good at cleaning out my temp folder. Instead, I just buy a new computer whenever the one I have gets slow.
Re:Also on the page (Score:5, Insightful)
What? What the hell do liberals have to do with this? Manufacturers and the media I can see, but liberals?
You live in the country that has a Conservative government that wants to create Total information Awareness while issuing press releases that read like a cheap Tom Clancy cover - "We have received threats... from undetermined location and an undetermined source..." etc etc. If that isn't capitalizing on September 11th and fostering a climate of fear I don't know what is.
They're trying... (Score:2)
They're busily creating a market. That's what the "star" is all about.
Re:Guide Fee (Score:4, Funny)
On a related note, I am going to get rid of my computer and replace it with an infinitely long strip of paper [bath.ac.uk]. My frame rates will suffer, but I will save a lot of electricity.
My local police department will also be replacing their firearms with rocks.