Book Review: Hacking TiVo 303
Hacking TiVo: The Expansion, Enhancement and Development Starter Kit | |
author | Jeff Keegan |
pages | 500 |
publisher | Wiley Publishing, Inc. |
rating | 10 |
reviewer | Jason Scott |
ISBN | 0764543369 |
summary | Everything from admining how cool TiVos are to turning them into your home entertainment server. Exhaustive, elaborate, and funny. |
As a relatively early convert to the TiVo way of life, I always found it hard to describe to people who didn't have one why their lives could be changed by it. If I was lucky, I could get friends to visit and with a few short minutes of demonstration, I'd sold another one. If they were farther away, I just hoped they would stop by some day and I'd have another convert. Why was I so intent on this? Because if you watch TV, or even if you don't watch as much as you used to, TiVo can change your life completely. It frees you from the tyranny of watching shows when you're told to watch them, and then goes on to turn your entire television experience from one bombarded with ads and missing all the "good stuff" on scattered random channels, to a true symbiotic relationship where you sit down in front of the tube and every single moment is one filled with shows you want to watch about stuff you're interested in.
A lot of Slashdot readers know what I'm talking about, because they have a TiVo or other PVR in their home right now. So when I tell you that this book will take your TiVo to the next level, I hope you get as excited as I was after reading the dozens of tricks, programs, and hacks this book lists.
The opening chapter describes, in succinct but energetic fashion, why every person with a TV should have a TiVo. Keegan's description may fall towards the evangelical side of things, but he goes out of his way to explain why his feelings are so strong. In fact, this book has an interesting side-effect: converting those who don't own a TiVo. Just a quick browse through the first few chapters will have someone who's heard of TiVo but never used one chomping at the bit to get down to the store. To the TiVo army, this is a powerful munition indeed.
From there, it's a powerful spiral into chapter after chapter of modifications, starting with back doors in the code and moving into opening the TiVo's case (explained with lots of clear pictures), adding storage, and even working with the TiVo's OS (a variation of Linux) to turn it into a web-accessible site or to improve performance.
One inspiring chapter describes the author's experience at a baseball game, having his father go to get refreshments and missing some great plays, and the author pulling out his Palm Pilot with cellular modem to tell his TiVo over the web to record the game's highlights on the news. With that tantalizing trick presented, Keegan goes into the whole involved deal, everything from modifying the TiVo to creating the external server to feed the TiVo information.
As I said, the tricks come fast and furious: TiVo as a way to browse photo galleries. TiVo pulling down the current weather and presenting the radar maps. TiVo printing Caller ID information on the screen when someone calls. By the time you're done with the book, you'll be wondering what there is that you can't do with it. And that, to me, is the sign of a truly great instructional book.
A warning: If you want a neutral voice in the author, this isn't the book for you. Keegan's enthusiasm drips from many pages, written in the tone of the guy down the street with the new toy who simply has take you to the den and show you how cool it is, describing in greater and greater detail all the cool stuff he's discovered tinkering with it. The author's wife, newborn daughter, mother and father make appearances all throughout the book, including a particularly touching description of having his father design an assembly language program to manipulate an LED display. No, really, it's touching. I did a search for Jeff and information on him and I found a photo of him in this costume. Honestly, I'm speechless. The man has achieved what we call "full commitment."
By about halfway through the book it stops being an instruction manual and begins being a full-on reference book, giving you explicit instructions on programming in Tcl, mucking about in Linux, and generally being a hard-core warranty violator. One appendix is dedicated to being a Tcl reference list while another hits you up for some basic Linux training (to be able to work comfortably in the OS).
Keegan has also been kind enough to include a CD-ROM with pretty much all the programs and utilities needed to accomplish what's in his book. It's a telling personal trait that he apologizes for putting it all on a CD instead of enabling readers to go out and search for the programs themselves.
To say I learned things in this book is an amazing understatement. Just to know that some of these things are even possible with my TiVo guarantee how I'll be spending the next few hundred dollars, buying larger drives, getting a cache card, and wiring the machine for ethernet. And Yes, it tells you how to get the shows off of your TiVo onto your computer's hard drive.
When I ordered this book from Amazon, I found out it was an Amazon exclusive, so that's the only place to get it right now. On the other hand, I was able to get my copy in a very short time, so I'm fine with that ... but I hope that you can get it in other places in the future. Regardless, it was worth the money I paid for it, especially since Amazon had 30 percent off in some effort to push to product. Great for me; I'm glad this book came into my collection and I think any TiVo owner (or hopeful TiVo owner) will agree.
Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Series 2 (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd just like to get bash working on my Series 2 stand-alone with minimal effort.
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
Sorry man, Series 1 DirecTiVo is where its at!
Honestly, The web is the best place for this stuff, and this book is just an organized, indexed reprinting of that information. But then, I've also order the book myself :)
Re:Series 2 (Score:2, Informative)
As for BASH on a Series 2, the trick is to get a trusted kernel to boot, then have it run a hacked kernel. Yes, Tivo added some integrity checks on the Series 2. (Insert DMCA disclaimer.)
The author probably doesn't want to get into Series 2 machines because they are still in a state of flux, and he would be trafficing in a circumvention devic
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
Oh, wait...not everyone did that. A lot of us kept our series 1 boxes specficially because the hacking potential on them was known and understood.
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
Preach it, brotha. Anyone who owns a series 1 probably either
Get with the times, people! If this book has relevant and interesting information for what I can do with my Series2 (besides the known capacity expansion hacks), the reviewer should have noted it.
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
Series 1 vs. Series 2 (Score:4, Informative)
Okay, because you asked for it, here are the major differences between Series 1 and Series 2 standalone devices:
Series 1
Series 2
There are people who've successfully hacked the Series 2 TiVos by replacing the BIOS with one that has the signature-check edited out, but that requires soldering, which is more than most TiVophiles are comfortable with.
In contrast, people with Series 1 devices have added ethernet cards, installed more RAM, installed Apache and a full web-based UI for programming TiVo, etc.
I own a couple of Series 1 standalone TiVos, but don't own any Series 2 standalones. I do own an HDVR2, which is the second generation DirecTV-integrated model. I haven't done anything to it yet.
Re:Series 1 vs. Series 2 (Score:2)
Re:Series 1 vs. Series 2 (Score:2)
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
Re:Series 2 (Score:2)
I'd just like to get bash working on my Series 2 stand-alone with minimal effort.
Maybe you should take a hint by all the hoops they jump through to stop you from "hacking" a TiVo. Could it be they would prefer that you don't hack it? Why is slashdot condoning this hacking activity by pointing to a book on how to do it? If you want to hack a PVR then build a MythTV box.
This kind of info gets stale in days (Score:4, Funny)
-Mike
Re:This kind of info gets stale in days (Score:2)
DMCA (Score:2)
Hardware hacking? (Score:2)
So is how much detail is the hardware hacking? Or are we limited to blinking LEDs or whatever is the basis for the dad story?
Is the hareware hacking really educational like Hacking the XBox [hackingthexbox.com]?
How does this book compare with the other hacking tivo titles?
If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
The Standalone 40 and 80 hours are still running between 200-300 dollars.
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
Otherwise, the $12/month fee is for standalone TiVos. I opted to pay for lifetime service back when the rates were 10/month and $200 lifetime, and my standalone unit has lasted for over three years, well over the 20-month break-even point.
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
How does anyone get by with 40-80 hours of storage? That seems pretty paltry to me. I'm hitting huge issues with my 400GB MythTV setup. I'm seriously at the point where I need to consider setting up a fileserver with at least 1 or 2 TB of space to archive my shows. Don't even get me started on trying to find an affordable backup solution for that much data. I may have to just buy two 1 TB file servers to have the data mirrored.
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
The discounted price is really worth it because I need about $100 in equipment to hook it up...
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure about your setup--I live in a condo, and hence the dishes I use are multi-dwelling units, and so my signal comes in via a single stacked and diplexed coax line. I need to destack it, re-diplex it, and then feed both the odd and even transponder signals to the DTivo.
When you say your basement only has one input, does that mean just one coax drop? If so, you'll either want to run another
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
Re:If anyone's interested in picking one up... (Score:2)
I also went out and snagged one at lunch. The receipt does say something about being a "new DirecTV customer," but the salesdroid swore up and down there's no new-customer-only requirement. He did say that if I didn't activate it within 30 days, they'll hit my credit card for another $150, so I'm guessing the 12 month activation hit is the big deal here.
BTW: For anyone curious about DirecTV's 12 month commitments, they are not cumulative. This means you can buy a DirecTV and get it installed free, buy
All in Wonder (Score:5, Informative)
Re:All in Wonder (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:All in Wonder (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, but can your $150 videocard:
People who haven't joined The Cult Of TiVO think that TiVO's just some kind of overglorified VCR that automates tasks they could do themselves anyway, were they so inclined. Nothing but experience, I've found, can change their minds. It takes real talent and engineering skill to design a system as rich and powerful as the one the people at TiVO has created.
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
It's also so well integrated you forget it is even there. I have yet to see a home built PC solution get anywhere close to the integration.
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
Not really. Besides all the software capabilities the TiVo has that do no exist with the All-In-Wonder (the weak point is the quality of the guide data available). The main difference is in the quality of the MPEG encoding, especially in the case of the DirecTivo. When I record using DirecTivo, I'm getting the material already compressed by DirecTV, using their super high-end MPEG2 compressers at the
Re:What a stupid comment - Let me rephrase... (Score:2)
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
See . Scroll down to 'What is a Personal Video Recorder (PVR)?' [titantv.com]
TitanTV is free, btw.
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
Hardware MPEG2 record and play needed (Score:2)
I'm actually quite surprised that nobody has managed to build a card that will do MPEG2 record and play in hardware as well as assisting conversions to/from MPEG2 *and* sold it for under $1k. Whenever I've looked for one I always end up in the
Re:Hardware MPEG2 record and play needed (Score:2)
Hauppage's USB-connected WinTV-GO does MPEG2 encoding and costs less than $50.
How do I know it does MPEG2 encoding when they haven't released the specs?
Because it lists the CBR MPEG2 versions supported, and notes that CBR's higher than 6 Mbps must use USB2 for transfer... 8Mbps is the highest USB1.1 transfer rate for
Hodge-podge cards are *JUNK* (Score:2)
The 350 I got wouldn't even work at all on my system until I called Hodgepodge technical support and downloaded all new "beta" drivers and firmware. Even then it was appalling -- on a P3 1.03Ghz box, CPU was pegged at 100% during recording and playback, rendering the apps nearly unusable.
The MPEG2 files created by the 350 are not compliant with DVD players, none would play on another s
Re:Hodge-podge cards are *JUNK* (Score:2)
The bottom line is, I think, YMMV. FYI, the MythTV and freevo guys are both working on compatibility with the Hauppage PVR lines, and getting pretty impressive results out of them.
Re:Hodge-podge cards are *JUNK* (Score:2)
The hodgepodge hardware may do well when someone writes better drivers and software for it, but AFAIC under Windows it was a joke.
Re:All in Wonder (Score:2)
Not recording commercials (Score:2)
Re:Not recording commercials (Score:2)
I think eliminating the recording of commercials is something that TiVo (the company) would be leery of doing especially since they want to stay in business.
Re:Not recording commercials (Score:2)
Re:Not recording commercials (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not recording commercials (Score:2)
ReplayTV [replaytv.com], on the other hand, does have automatic commercial-skip on playback (it still records the commercials, but it will automatically skip over them when playing back, if you want it to).
Of course, replay had some financial trouble, partly because of lawsuit
Re:Not recording commercials (Score:2)
TIVIO stinks. Try mythtv (Score:2)
DVD player/ripper
image gallery/slideshow
game frontend (xmame, snes, nes, pc)
music player
generic video player
my weather forcast
and a web page to controll it by.
Who wants to own a device that requires a monthly subscription to work to its maximum potiential. Does any one know the cons to the guide + service?
Re:TIVIO stinks. Try mythtv (Score:2)
Indeed, I bought my $200 standalone at a time where both Circuit City and TiVo were offering $100 rebates, so I got the unit for the $200 lifetime service fee. On top of that, since the lifetime service fee has since increased, I can probably sell the thing for a profit
You don't reaslly have to spend $21+ to learn... (Score:2, Informative)
Tivo Community Forum [tivocommunity.com]
Deal Database Forums [dealdatabase.com]
Tivo Web Project Home Page [lightn.org]
I found it to be really enjoyable to sift through many different forums for instructions on how to mod my TiVo. I learned more by reading more than one persons account on how to do things, and was able to get help by posting questions.
There's a ton of info out there if you're willing to searc
Series 2 is significantly different... (Score:2)
doesn't anyone read guidelines anymore? (Score:2)
I just got a series 2, and this book is supposedly on its way, but I'm still thirsty for more information. At this point, I'm this close to sending it back and getting two used series 1s.
Somebody please correct me if I'
Home Media Option Hacking (Score:2)
I know they have TiVoGuard, which is used to protect the signal as it moves across the network. Is there any information on this, specifically, is their a non-encrypted option to transport data.
The reason I wonder is I have a bunch of DivX encoded movies that I'd like t
When will HDTV be supported? (Score:2)
The TIVO website mentions that HDTV may be supported in the future. Is there any word out there (unofficially) for when?
Hacking Dish Network PVRs (Score:2)
I'm a tivo convert, whose converted away from tivo (Score:4, Interesting)
Currently, I'm using SageTV [www.sage.tv] It's a PC based DVR software package. With it, I can currently;
- Record two standard def stations, and a high def station at the same time while watching a fourth video of any type. (Obviously, this requires having two tuners and an HDTV tuner.)
- Record standard TV to MPEG-2, MPEG-1, or just about any other format. This makes it easier to make VCDs, DVDs, or just play the program back on a standard PC.
- Playback using Dscalar to deinterlace the video.
- Play DVDs
- Play DivX
- Record shows as favorites (just like season passes) or let SageTV record things based on my past viewing habits (much like tivo's suggestions only I don't have to bother with thumbs up and down buttons)
- Do all of the above with an integrated schedule, which is free. No need to pay a monthly fee.
- Play and manage my MP3 library (I think you can do ogg, ape, etc. with some tweaks to the config)
- Stream video and audio to another PC over my LAN.
I'm sure I'm missing much more. This thing does way more than any tivo, even a hacked tivo, and it's constantly being expanded. It surpasses TiVo and ReplyTV in every way. I've even found it to be more flexible than MythTV and Showstopper (though they do have a few benefits in some areas.)
Re:I'm a tivo convert, whose converted away from t (Score:2)
Yowza. Sounds good. Out of curiosity, what was your cash outlay for the hardware and how long did it take you to get it running in it's current (assumedly perfect) state? Can you write up some documentation so my parents can set one up in an afternoon?
Re:I'm a tivo convert, whose converted away from t (Score:2)
You can flag a show 'don't like' but unlike tivo, you don't have to use the thumbs up. Merely watching shows will tell the software that you like it. This intelligent recording doesn't record related shows, or shows with a similar word in the topic, so I don't get things like 3 hours of 'house & home' on the shopping channel because I watched 'this old house.' It's much more intuitive than
Can Tivo do stuff that Freevo can? (Score:2)
Still, last I checked it it was $250 for a tivo and $250 to use it and $100 for the net card and $50 to use it, so it might be cheaper to build my own. But I'm lazy...
Tivo freed me from TV altogether (Score:5, Insightful)
I got tivo four years ago and instantly fell deeply in love with it. That love continues to this day, but has changed form. About a year ago, I realized that my giddy passion had given way to serenity, by which I mean that I realized that I just didn't want to watch tv any more, even on tivo. It was tivo that got me to this state of mind. It started by seeing how intrusive commercials were, and how much better tv was without it. The next phase for me was the realization of how manipulative the networks were with their program timing and scheduling; how wonderful to be free of that too! And then last summer I found I had dined at the table of paradise enough. I had actually watched enough episodes of The Simpsons, Futurama, Friends, Seinfeld, Frasier, and tons of other shows. To borrow an analogy from another slashdot writer, it was like the weekly trip to the hardware store after you've bought a new house, where one day you get there and you realize that you just don't need anything else, and you turn around and leave.
This has been a profound experience for me. And I don't think I could have gotten here without Tivo. Maybe I would have and it would have taken longer, but I like to think it was tivo.
Now I keep tivo around for the kid (Sesame St, etc).
Re:Tivo freed me from TV altogether (Score:2)
Now I am gradually finding that I have caught up with S
Re:Wish I had some mod points (Score:2)
I have to say I share his experience. It was the constant deluge of un-interrupted TV shows that poured from my (former) TiVO that convinced me of how much crap the idiot box really has to offer. After realizing that no, there really isn't anything interesting on, I gave up my TV (and the TiVO along with it) for good.
Being free from the electric teet has totally improved my free time.
Art? (Score:2)
So.. Buying a book, then following steps 1 through 10 is considered art nowadays? I guess putting a mod chip in an Xbox is art, too. How about installing a new hard drive in my PC? Does that count?
Save your money and go to a site like
Re:Art? (Score:2)
The best feature of Keegan's book is that it functions both as an instruction manual and reference manual. While the first half generally has both excited-sounding paragraphs and stories, it quickly hunkers down into both step-by-step instructions (for those of us in the "get it done" mode) and reference lists (for those of us who want to get "arty"
Amazon Exclusive? Are you sure? (Score:2)
Well, I saw it at a Borders last Friday (10-October), so perhaps other Borders have it, too?
Milalwi
best pvr... (Score:2)
Most Tivos are Series 2 instead of Series 1, which means a lot less flexibility
There are DirecTivos for cheap but they require a DirecTV subscription
You can build your own and install MythTV (free) or Sage ($$).
There's also ReplayTV which last I heard is pretty good.
What others are there that are good buys?
Re:best pvr... (Score:2)
Is the Philips DVR7000 series 1?
Bookpool is a better deal... (Score:2)
The book is still in pre-order state from Bookpool, but they'll ship it to you when it hits. You can check the details at this link. [bookpool.com]
Answers from the author to some FAQs (Score:3, Informative)
Q: I'm confused.. Where can I buy it again? :)
A: Only at amazon.com [amazon.com]. Anyone who's ever written or knows a writer knows how little writing pays, so if you'd like to give more at no cost to yourself, use that link.
Q: Can't I get all of this for free elsewhere?
A: Absolutely, the hacks talked about are all out there. What this book does is bring them together in one place, walk you through them with a consistent voice, and start you off on what's needed to write your own hacks (for example, with a description of the internal APIs TiVo has to access their proprietary MFS filesystem, etc). I've had many friends who are competent developers who wanted to try implementing a few ideas in their TiVo, but didn't want to play the catch-up game of reading through thousands of posts to try to gleam what collective knowledge we've all accumulated. Re-inventing the wheel might be fun, but it's not as fun as creating something of your own using the creations that have preceded you.
Also, many of the sites that used to host various TiVo hacks have disappeared because the authors have moved on to other things. I wanted to make sure these hacks were collected in one permanent place (on the CD-ROM for the book).
Q: Does your book cover Series2?
A: Yes and no. Series2 users can use the book and accompanying CD-ROM to add larger hard drives to their TiVo, and to mount Series2 drives. As for describing how to get a bash prompt, that I don't describe, for various legal reasons (the exemptions granted under the DMCA aren't as nice as my publisher would like them to be). Once you've gone off to find out how to do that (via the BASH_ENV and 2-kernel-monte exploits described at places like dealdatabase.com), much of the book still applies.. (even though I don't ship series2 binaries for everything, my descriptions of the tools and the development talk still applies and makes for interesting reading).
Q: Does your book cover Series1 DirecTiVos?
A: Yes, although again for legal reasons there's one step where I tell you in the book that you need to look elsewhere first (obtaining a bash prompt by flashing your prom). If you purchase a TurboNET card (as I'd imagine you will if you have a Series1 DirecTiVo) then the software on the TurboNET site will flash the prom for you so you can move on. Once that step is done, the rest of the book applies to your DirecTiVo completely (with the exception of video extraction).
Q: Hey, yeah, video extraction.. Do you cover video extraction?
A: Yes, I cover video extraction (and insertion), for Series1 standalones only. Series1 DirecTiVos scramble video by default, and though there is a simple hack out there to disable this scrambling, I'm prohibited legally from talking about it in the book. I don't cover Series2 extraction either.
Those are the main five I get asked most. I spent many months on this, and I'm glad that people finally have a chance to read it. I hope everyone enjoys the book! More than that, I hope this attracts new developers to this great platform.
Speed (kinda OT) (Score:2)
Anyway, can anyone tell me whether increasing the storage space would slow it down even fu
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
This is vague -- last I heard getting shows from a TiVo to a PC was a pain, and streaming recorded shows to a PC was impossible. Does anyone know if this problem has been solved yet, and if so please point me to a relevant tool such as DVArchive [sourceforge.net] for the replayTV series (which does all of the above).
And please don't start the TiVO/Replay religious war here; I'm not trolling for it, I'm really curious. I'm in
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:5, Informative)
Telnet to the tivo, start TyServer.
Launch the TyServer client on my windows machine.
Select the shows I want. click "grab"
They are pulled down as seperate streams, one for audio, one for video. You can directly import these files into several DVD creation programs, that automatically recode them to the DVD spec, or you can edit the files with a program such as TMPEnc to remove commercials and such. Re-ecoding such files gets a bit tricky, I'm still trying to find the best parameters to fit about 4 hours of acceptable quality video onto a 4GB DVD-R
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
I assume there's still no way to stream shows from a TiVO (as in begin viewing immediately, as opposed to downloading first)?
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
Some quick googling turned up the O'Reilly tivo hacking book as well.
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:3, Interesting)
Is your reference for a Tivo Series 1?
I'm curious...is this book only on series 1 or does it go into detail on the series 2 boxes? I know you can get into the 2's now...but, still a bit of a hassle if I remember what I last learned....
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
Re:Keep 'em coming! (Score:2)
It can run in a distrubuted client/server configuration and is capable of recoding the files to be moved to other PCs or written to DVD or VCD.
It is a very cool peice of Open Source software, but not for the feint of heart, as it is a hefty configuration task. But if you can get it installed and running, its an awesome PVR design and implementation.
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:3, Insightful)
Empires rise, empires fall. History's full of examples.
America won't always be the world's only superpower. And when that change happens it won't be as obvious as you'd imagine.
Until that time, I'm sure y
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:2)
There's a player moving the pawns.
Just keep that in mind, pawn.
You know, there's a reason why you're posting as an AC. It's because you know how moronic you sound and you don't have the balls to stand up and say "this is me, this is how dumb I am".
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:2)
Is strange about your comment is that now that I have obtained a TIVO I often have found myself standing in a shopping mall, etc. watching something interesting in life unfold before my eyes.
And I swear I go into TIVO user mode unconsciously and find myself wanting to hit the rewind 10 seconds button (a capability in TIVO) on the situation in the mall. It is so strange.
I often find myself just wanting to pause real life also.
But your comment of speeding past those thirty seconds of life's unwanted
Re:I wonder if you Americans realise... (Score:2)
If that wasn't a troll, seek professional help immediately. You do have problems.
Re:Or... (Score:2)
news flash: You don't consume the TV show. The TV show delivers you (product) to the advertiser (consumer) for a price.
Re:canada (Score:2)
Re:Its easy (Score:2)
Now that's easy, but of course it only works with replayTV.
Re:Just to save bandwidth, (Score:2)
5) Since I'm not rich, or good looking, or smell very good, I needed justfication to be an arrogant snob. Not watching television has opened new doors for me.
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:2)
Can your VCR note that you really like The Simpsons, so find it on various channels at various times, when you're not watching/recording anything else, and record it for you?
Can your VCR note that you really like The Simpsons, and therefore would probably like Futurama, and record that for you to watch if you so choose?
Can your VCR pause whilst you're recording something?
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:5, Insightful)
Comparing a TiVo to a VCR is kind of like comparing a computer's word processor to a typewriter. Sure, you use both of them to type letters and documents and whatnot, but the only people who would ever say that the two are the same are those who have never used a word processor, or for some maniacal reason like to use white-out on their mistakes.
Took a week's vacation recently. When I got back home, there was 22 hours of new programming for me to choose from.
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:2)
Fumes?
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:2)
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:2)
The point is that it's many times easier to do desired actions. Record from one videotape to another? How often do you do that? TiVo lets you sit down and in about 20 minutes select all the TV shows y
Re:So TiVo is a really big VCR (Score:2)
Re:I haven't bought a Tivo yet... (Score:3, Funny)
Ah I see you are speaking from years of ignorance.
Re:Don't Do It! (Score:2)
Re:Don't Do It! (Score:2)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/014
Re:DVR help (Score:2)
As far as programs, there's MythTV [mythtv.org], which is open source, and is supposed to work well under Mandrake, which means it should be able to work well under anything.
The other option would be Sage TV [www.sage.tv], whic
Re:DVR help (Score:2)
Here are a few data points:
codec using 480x480 capture resolution. This does not allow for live TV
watching, but does allow for encoding video and then watching it later.
encode two MPEG-4 video streams and watch one program simultaneously.
Re:Are there legal issues? (Score:2)
(Modified Winston Churchill Statement)
Re:Are there legal issues? (Score:2)
DirecTV TiVos won't do anything in the way of recording unless you pay for the $4.99 a month TiVo fee. But then, if you're not going to use a DirecTV TiVo as a TiVo, then what's the point of buying one in the first place?
BTW: That $4.99 a month covers all the TiVos you connect to your dish (up to 8). Each additional TiVo only gets charged the usual $5 a month "mirroring" fee that you'd pay for any DirecTV receiver.
I do love my RePlay (Score:2)
I have a 5060, from back in August when Amazon was running a promo with a $50 rebate and a $50 Amazon gift certificate with purchase. I bought the RePlay over the Tivo because of the deal, as well as the fact that it has built in networking (I use my roomate's DSL but I don't have a phone line, I'm all cellular). My roomate has one too, and it's great being able to send shows to him or watch shows from his over the network.
I'm not all that impressed with commercial advance though - it works well some of
Re:DirecTivo? (Score:2)
Those USB ports are practically useless.
Rumor has it that DirecTV will finally roll out the 4.0 software and the Home Media Option sometime before the end of the year or in the first quarter of next year.
Keep in mind that nothing's official here, and all bets could be off the minute Rupert Murdoch gets his grubby fingers on DirecTV.