Dish Network DVR-921 HD DVR Reviewed 109
cblount writes "The Dish Network DVR-921 is the first home satellite receiver capable of recording and time shifting HDTV signals both from satellite and local Over-The-Air broadcasts. The first comprehensive review has been posted at DBSTalk.Com."
Tivo (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tivo (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Tivo (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Tivo (Score:2)
In all my reading of the tivocommunity groups I haven't seen mentioned on an on going problem; although I have not been there for a couple of months.
Don't put the unit in a closed up tv standad and don't expect to be able tp upgrade the HD without dealing with excess heat.
Re:Tivo (Score:1)
I was referring to all the competition these other services are cropping up, inclu
Re:Tivo (Score:1)
Look out (Score:4, Funny)
Re:You mean wait for HD-DVD, right? (Score:1)
two comments (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:two comments (Score:2)
It was still not loaded by the time I had commented and I'm on a seriously good cable connection that I'm exceptionally pleased with.
That is provided I'm connecting to the right places..
Best of show (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Best of show (Score:3, Informative)
Pics here [cesweb.org]
Re:Best of show (Score:1)
Re:Best of show (Score:1)
Re:Best of show (Score:2)
Oh yeah... (Score:1)
(so hoping it has all the features I heard about, including support for DVI)
=)
Going to read review now...
Re:Oh yeah... (Score:2)
Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:1, Informative)
As you all know, High Definition Television represents a clear and present danger to customers' right to time shift. The so-called "broadcast flag" prevents casual users from exercising their Fair Use rights.
Nevertheless, I watch a lot of television thanks to my TiVo. TiVo lets me skip the commercials, which makes me a "thief" but lets me enjoy the entertainment I deserve. Let's
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:3, Interesting)
HMO is NOT an option for any DirecTV based Tivo. It says so right in Tivo's FAQ.
The 921 DOES run on Linux you idiot. In fact the baby brother PVR, the 721 also runs on Linux. Dish network serves the Linux PVR GNU codebase off an internet attached DVR 721. It's even got the lame X Window screen savers and 6 or so GNU games.
The DVR-921 has "Dishwire"
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:2)
As far as the link, yes, DISH Network is compliant with GNU. They serve the source off of a 721 they have running web services. It's been covered on slashdot for christ sake. How dense are yo
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:1)
And even more that Dush lacks
> HMO is NOT an option for any DirecTV based Tivo
Nor is it an option for ANY Dish PVR, HD or otherwise.
> The 921 DOES run on Linux you idiot.
Ah name calling in all its beauty.
How's Dish PVR hacking going? Adding HD's and things like that? Ethernet ports? Simply basing your product on Linux doesn't make it golden.
Dish's PVR's are shit. I just wasted 15 minutes trying to get my Dish PVR to display a l
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:2)
It's ships with a 120 GB hard drive, has two tuners, Picture in Picture, is actually pretty fast and has a 10+ day guide. And has similar stability to Tivo 1-2 year after introduction.
Hacking on the
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:2)
Re:Bye-bye, Dish. (Score:1)
What about the flag? (Score:5, Insightful)
IIRC, the flag also tells you how long recorded copies can exist for - will this pay attention to that field? Will I be able to time-shift a show, but only by 60 or 90 minutes?
Re:What about the flag? (Score:2)
DVR is the heart and soul of the DBS industry. It's the only weapon they have to fight the higher bandwidth and better security the physical infrastructure cable uses can offer.
Neither Dish nor Direc wants to knuckle under to the broadcast flag, but it's the law and they can't exactly break it at will.
We'll see how this plays out, but the new regulations on this are a hammer blow to the integration of the DVR into the standard home thea
Re:What about the flag? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What about the flag? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What about the flag? (Score:1)
Q. Can I record cable or satellite HD programs?
A. No. All HDTV card "stores" high-def signals in their raw data form and decodes the signal during playback. Since Cable and Satellite services do not use 8VSB modulation, their signals require dedicated tuners, and once decoded, cannot be routed to the input of the HDTV PC cards.
D'oh.
Re:What about the flag? (Score:3, Informative)
for Digital Cable (Score:1)
Re:What about the flag? (Score:3, Funny)
"These are not the programs we're looking for."
Link to product line (Score:4, Informative)
Dish Network DVR product line is here:
http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/product
Re:Link to product line (Score:1)
Time Warner (Score:3, Interesting)
Sounds great (Score:1, Interesting)
The 721 is pretty good (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm sure the 921 will have some quirks too, but if it runs the same core PVR application, it should be pretty good.
I'm not planning on getting a 921 as I already watch too much TV as it is, and there's not enough HD stuff being broadcast yet to warrant the expensive display I'd need.
Re: HDTV adoption (Score:1, Troll)
This is exactly the kind of attitude that holds back technological progress in HDTV. I mean, without an audience, how can we expect broadcasters to pony up the dough required to send HDTV signals. The advertisers won't want to pay the premiums for HDTV slots that nobody watches!
It's up to the general public to adopt technology, or important innovations (like wasting time with TV) will never happen!!!
(tongue f
Re: HDTV adoption (Score:1)
They can up-sample any content to HD res, but without the bandwidth to make it look nice it will look horrible.
What we will have when HD is mandated in 2006 or whenever is a whole bunch of pixellated high resolution channels.
The whole thing is a complete waste of time before the carriers are ready.
Re:The 721 is pretty good (Score:2)
Re:The 721 is pretty good (Score:2)
That being said, the 921 will have firewire to archive HD material to DVHS, HD DirecTivo will not. Which pulls dish ahead IMHO.
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www.hometheaterescapes.com
Unfortunately for Dish (Score:4, Informative)
If any of you have ever used the 721, or really any Dish PVR... you'll know how pathetic and bug ridden dish PVRs.
One of the biggest issues with the 721 and 921 is the fact that they totally and utterly lack any sort of Name based recording. Every other PVR on the market, Tivo, Replay, UltimateTV, etc... all have name based recording, but Dish saw fit to leave this critical feature off.
This makes the 721 and 921 nothing more than a glorified VCR. The whole point of a PVR is to make recording easier and to handle the mundane, day to day tasks so you don't have to. Leaving off name based recording makes you search through the guide on a daily basis, hoping to find the programs that you want to record, instead of telling your unit to "Record anything with XXXXX in the title/description"
I switched to Dishnetwork from my UltimateTV and Tivo boxes, and was never sorrier I took the plunge. I always liked Dish over DTV, due to the superior customer service, but after this fiasco with these jokes of a PVR (which I paid far more than a Tivo with lifetime for) and it's just a VCR with a hard drive, I want to cancle my Dish service just out of spite. Unfortunately, I'm under a contract, and I hate DTV more than I hate Dish, so I'm pretty much stuck with Dish for the time being. As soon as Voom comes out with an HD PVR, I will be signing up for Voom.
As far as the 921 goes, I suspect it's going to suffer from many of the same bugs as the 721 does. Such as random reboots, crashing to the X desktop (requiring reboot), misfiring timers, timers recording until the HD fills up for no explicable reason, unit not responding to the remote, etc... I could go on and on with the problems on the 721 (and by extension, probably the 921) that are never addressed by the Dish developers... problems I never had with Tivo or UTV. They are very easy to fix some of these problems, but they just won't do it, because it would cut into their profit.
I never realized how much I relied on my UTV box to "do the right thing" until I got my 721, which was suppose to be superior. Now I come home at night and wonder if my programs will still be on my PVR after some wierd crash... I watch shows when I really don't want to, because I'm afraid that if I don't, I'll lose them. These are things that I never even thought of with my Tivo or UTV box.
Dish is also charging an outrageous and ridiculous price for the unit... $1000? Come on, you are gouging people because it's the only HD PVR on the market, plain and simple. I guess you gotta charge it while you can.
The bottom line is, if you've ever used another PVR, you'll hate the 921 (and the 721) because of all the bugs and total lack of features and brain dead UI. If all you've ever had is a VCR, then you'll like the 7 and 921's, because they ARE better than a VCR... but when compared to the PVR competition, the Dish PVRs are an utter and lasting joke... a travesty to the PVR buying public.
Realisitcally, if Dish would just add NBR, I would be less critical of the other flaws, but since that one glaring deficiency is being refused by dish to impliment, I have no sympathy for the company. NBR is the defining feature of a PVR, and Dish DOES NOT HAVE IT. All they have are glorified VCRs with a misleading lable.
Dish still has the best pricing plans for satellite service though, so it's a big plus in their favor.
Re:Unfortunately for Dish (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Unfortunately for Dish (Score:1)
DTivo is under $200, why would anyone go with Dish?
Re:Unfortunately for Dish (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, you can change the UHF frequency used by each receiver. I don't remember the exact number, but there are at least 12 channels available so that conflicts as you describe can be avoid
Re:Unfortunately for Dish (Score:1, Flamebait)
Dish does not want to implement it, because it requires effort.
Before you reply and tell me I'm wrong, go find the patent. It doesn't exist (I've looked)... if you can show a patent number, you can prove a lot of people wrong, and redeem E*'s reputation at the same time. Sadly, though, Tivo does not have a patent on Name Based Recording.
Like I said, it's the Dish PVRs are the ONLY PVR's on the market today t
Re:Unfortunately for Dish (Score:1, Flamebait)
Name Based recording wouldn't hold up in a court. Many people, like you, have tried to claim the patent defense, but none of them can back it up... so don't speculate on things you can't back up. Just give the facts or conjecture you can back up with facts.
Older Dish Network DVRR has Faulty Firmware (Score:2)
I can crash it, requiring a power up, just by hitting things too fast on the remote control. Whenever it decides to reload the program guide, it loses the ability to schedule a recording by hit
Re:Older Dish Network DVRR has Faulty Firmware (Score:1)
I think I have a rebadged one of these (Bell ExpressVU Model 5100 - I think they are made by EchoStar) and agree the software quality is bad. It has gotten better, but still has a few quirks.
Mine would have trouble playing back recorded video as if the MPEG was badly corrupted. It took 2 calls to Bell and reseting the smartcard to fix that one.
Even with that fixed I still sometimes get corrupt screen displays and guide entries.
Re:Older Dish Network DVRR has Faulty Firmware (Score:1)
There are a few other bugs in the system as well, but not many. In damn near every case, I get perfectly recorded shows.
Considering the price of the 510, particularly compared to the other models and TiVo, I am quite happy with it. Like a lot of other Dish Network customers, it was free for me. Well, okay, I pay $5 more a month, but I'm pretty sure that's for the enhanced program l
sorry to rain on the parade but.... (Score:4, Interesting)
With Rupert Murdoch taking control of DirecTV shortly, expect a price war against both Dish Network AND the cable companies. I believe there was a speculative article linked to Drudge the other day about that.
I myself am tired of Comcast. Here in Sacramento, they are raising our rates again, with the pathetic excuse for them to recupe their investment in expanding pay-per-view. I don't use PPV and I believe it would've been a wiser investment to offer set-top boxes with TiVo built in. Now if DirecTV would offer a decent broadband service using leased space over the cable lines, that would be the winning choice...
Re:sorry to rain on the parade but.... (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the link to the DirecTV HD TiVo:
http://www.cesweb.org/shared_files/innovations/
Oh well (Score:1)
Time Shifting Over-the-Air NON-HDTV? (Score:1, Interesting)
Are there any Dish DVR which can also record over the air broadcasts other than this one? (Non-HDTV)
Fair use and right to copy (Score:1)
There is a chance they could try to take away our fare use...
The argument of timeshifting would have been answered... even if we couldn't extract the video for archiving...
Re:Fair use and right to copy (Score:1, Insightful)
Ooh, nifty. (Score:2)
I want one... It's important to archive The Daily Show for posterity.
Dish PVRs Suck (Score:4, Informative)
I was all set to switch to DTV when their HD TiVo combo comes out... Problem is DirectTV may be owned by Rupert soon. Yech! Hate the idea of feeding money to that monster. Support The Evil Empire, or buy (vastly) inferior tech. Arg.
If only Dish would use TiVo instead of torturing their customers with their horribly inadequate PVR skillz.
Still waiting.... (Score:2)
Oh, and it better be under $500 if they expect Joe Public to buy it.
Re:Still waiting.... (Score:1)
Total Video Storage on this thing? (Score:1)
So in other words, you need basically an ENTIRE STANDARD TIVO's worth of storage allocated for just one hour. So if you want t
Re:Total Video Storage on this thing? (Score:1)
http://www.vssll.com/pvr921.html
It uses a 250 gig drive to store up to 25 hours of HDTV. However I beleive this is 25 hours of 720p or 480p, not 1080i.
The 35 gig per 1 hour of uncompressed 1080i figure I got from somone at SONY who's been working on similar technology.