Latest SnapStream PVR App Reviewed 208
martensitic writes "Yahoo! posted this positive AP review of the newest version of a third-party PC app designed to compete with TiVo and Microsoft's Media Center. SnapStream 's 'Beyond TV 3' (sounds like something Fox would produce) allows streaming to standard web browsers for watching on other computers in your home, and promotes automatic commercial break recognition that has been downplayed in other products. (Previously mentioned here.)"
two questions. (Score:1, Interesting)
1) Does your PC have to be in the same room as your TV.
2) Does your PC have to have somebody logged in? In other words can it run as a service under W2K.
Thanks is advance.
Re:two questions. (Score:5, Informative)
2. BTV3 CAN be run as a service. It can also be run in a window, or fullscreen, and can be configured to open on startup as such.
Re:two questions. (Score:3, Informative)
The divx compression is nice, as you can
I've been using snapstream trial for a few weeks now. If I manage to get my ide transfer rates up on this godforsaken nforce board I can start working with mythtv.
So, y
Re:two questions. (Score:2)
I simply can't get the damn thing to enable udma.
Trust me, I was good enough to get the sucker to a command prompt. Everyone else whines and complains as it crashes into oblivion
I'm going to go another round with the box here in a few days... wish me luck
Re:two questions. (Score:2)
Re:two questions. (Score:1)
IMHO, this appears to not be for TV sets. It requires a PC for recording, and a PC for viewing. As shareware, it has a 45-day trial, so if you are someone with a capture card and Win, you can see for yourself..Exciting indeed.
OMG!!!1! I karma-whored by RTFA!Re:two questions. (Score:4, Informative)
"1) Does your PC have to be in the same room as your TV."
Only if you want to watch on the TV. Watching on the computer was fine for me, though. I went on several business trips, each time I had a bunch of shows queued up ready to watch.
"2) Does your PC have to have somebody logged in? In other words can it run as a service under W2K."
Actually I don't remember. I think it does run as a service, but I wouldn't swear on my soul over it. I had a dedicated machine for it. It's not something you want running while you have a game or something playing. (Maybe if I had a dual proc machine for it...)
Frankly, I think there is room for both a TiVo and a Snapstream (or similar) system. The TiVo is great for catching those shows you definitely want to watch within a few days of capturing it. The Snapstream system, though, was much better for archival of shows. I don't expect many would find that all that interesting, but boy I sure did. When I first got the itch to try it, I found out that Quantum Leap was on at 4pm. DOH! I'm at the office at 4! A couple of weeks after I found that out, I noticed that the reruns would be starting over again from season 1. SWEET. So I set up the machine to record at a respectable data rate, then just let it record. When time permitted, I started watching the episodes in order from the beginning. Could I do that with the Replay? Eh maybe. The thing is, though, I don't have a whole heck of a lot of control over how small the files end up being. With the Snapstream, though, I had it doing roughly 300kbits a second at 320 by 240. A little blocky? Sure. A little blurry? Sure. Worse than VHS? Yeah somewhat. You'd be surprised how quick you get used to it, though, especially when the story's so engaging. I could fit approximately four eps per CD. I had a large hard drive so that wasn't an issue. Before long, I had something like 12 gigs of ALMOST every single episode of Quantum Leap. (Got a hell of a lot of MST3K and Enterprise for a while, too..)
The machine was Win2k. Make all the jokes you like about the stability of Windows, but that thing stayed up an average of 3 months, capturing video all the time. Eventually, though, the sound-driver gave up, and I'd have to reboot the machine. Oh well. Linux it is not, but it was more than acceptable, and I had to do very little fiddling to make everything work.
I wish I still had it today. Unfortunately, I just haven't had time to tinker with it. It'll probably be resurrected before too long, though. I'm finding more and more shows I'd like to watch.
Sorry for rambling here. Just brought up some fond memories here. I hope I can figure out how to get a PC talking to the Digital Cable box so I can enjoy the broader content.
Re:two questions. (Score:2)
I have the PVR in my office. TV out into a modulator into house antenna wiring allows the PVR to show up as a TV channel on any other tv in the house. Most modulators are around $20 or so at best buy or radio shack. Mine were a bit more, as I wanted to dictate more than channel 3 or 4 as the output.
2) Does your PC have to have somebody logged in? In other words can it run as a service under W2K.
In short, yes.
http://www.snapstream.com/Community/
Re:two questions. (Score:2)
In short, no you dont have to be logged in.
In short, yes it can run as a service.
ATi (Score:1)
How does this compete with Tivo, I mean it's just software. The hardware still needs to be supplied.
Re:ATi (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ATi (Score:2, Informative)
And the AIW doesn't have hardware MPEG encoding. I presume you could use SnapStream with an All-in-Wonder card, but the hardware requirements for the PC would be much higher since it'd be using software encoding.
If if I were going to set up an HTPC with SnapStream, I'd probably get a Hauppauge PVR card for video capture and get a cheap 8MB AGP card for VGA.
.net? fuck that (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:5, Informative)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:3, Informative)
Mod parent up. Seriously.
People seem to have all these spooked-out misconceptions about
As the parent (basically) said, you can consider it just a new API for windows, comparable to the VB runtimes or, more accurately, an extention to the idea of "Win32", which includes (as the name would suggest, thought not entirely based on) quite a lot more inbuilt support for network-oriented tasks.
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:3, Funny)
I'm old at heart and I just got used to VB
The feeling wears off after a few days. Don't worry, it will pass.
Pretty soon, you will crave
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:4, Funny)
I can understand why rites management may be not welcomed in certain circles :-)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:5, Funny)
I thought you were trying to make him less scared
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
From the end-user's perspective there really isn't all that much of a different between the
The
Sun's JRE clocks in at 15Mb.
The JRE is bundled with most PCs in some form or another, or it's required for alot things normal users do (ie Applet
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
"This 200kb program requires
OK, no problem, I'll go get
".NET framework download is 22MB and will take approximately Umpteen Bumtillion minutes on a 28.8k modem to download"
Hmmm... 1 hour.... just to run program X to try out on a whim... 1 hour... nah.
I know, it's one off, but still the one-off stops a lot of non-broadband people in their tracks. And there's more poor modem saps out there than you think.
Even I go, "Hmmm. 5 minutes at 50K/s, to run program X
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:5, Funny)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:.net? fuck that (Score:2)
Yeah! Billy's getting his tentacles everywhere! Well not HERE!!
There, that should recover some of my karma lost for that untimely Mac joke I made earlier.
Beyond TV (Score:5, Insightful)
Second, I have beyond tv 3 and have really enjoy it. I am never home and it records all my tv shows. That way, when I do have time to watch tv, I can skip the commercials (it dog ears the commercials so you can skip forward) and watch only what matters to you.
Even when I am unable to get to my computer, I can break out my treo 600 and program to record any tv show.
The only problem with it is the security model is a bit lax. You can always find people who have their setups wide open (port 8129) on google thanks to the web interface. People really need to starrt locking that down.
Re:Beyond TV (Score:4, Funny)
I want to watch what everyone else is watching...
Re:Beyond TV (Score:2)
I know this is slightly oftopic, but folks really need to come to terms with what slashdot REALLY is. I know the tagline is "news for nerds. stuff that matters". But it's just a discussion site. It's a forum for people to discuss news, topics, and PRODUCTS which are of interest to nerds. And obviously, with the number of PVR stories on Slashdot and the number of meaningful posts they all get, people are interested. I read sl
Better yet, it saves shows in a standard format (Score:5, Informative)
WinPVR card, 200 GB hard drive, a DVD burner, and Beyond TV.
It saves the shows in a standard file format, and I can use other software to convert to a more compressed format and archive to DVD.
At one point, I had problems with it frequently crashing, but downloading the newest update solved that problem.
I still use my TiVo, but I am slowly switching my TV viewing to the Beyond TV system.
Heh. (Score:2)
WinTV-PVR 350, 200GB HD, DVD burner, but for software I'm running MythTV instead.
I'm surprised Slashdot would mention Beyond TV without mentioning Myth, which is just as good (if not better) and runs under Linux.
Re:Heh. (Score:2)
For example, MythTV is completely hamstrung by its dependance on XMLTV. There is simply no way to know if a show is a re-run or a first-run using XMLTV, which is a serious pain in the butt. BeyondTV wins here, as it licenses the Tribune TV data (the same data that TiVO uses, the same data that is used to create zap2it.com, but zap2it only displays about 1/3 of the available data.)
BeyondTV h
Too bad it sucks (Score:3, Informative)
It is a damn shame, but this is not the Tivo you are looking for.
Re:Too bad it sucks (Score:4, Insightful)
Then I started playing with the settings...
Bottom line: Mikey likes it. I haven't played with everything yet, but on a very high setting grabbing a recent movie on HBO from my digital cable box the video quality is nearly as good as a DVD. Certainly much better than sending the S-Video directly into my monitor (I have a high-end Mitsubishi).
It's definately worth fiddling with if you want a high-quality feed. It was not and is not pain free, but if you're willing to endure then I believe it will pay off for you.
TW
Re:Too bad it sucks (Score:2)
Commment 1003
Re:Too bad it sucks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Too bad it sucks (Score:2)
Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:5, Interesting)
I realize that stable PC-based PVR software has existed for a few years now. But nothing designed for your typical non-geek Windows user. Snapstream has managed to take the idea of "I already have a PC, why should I but a TiVo that basically contains a PC, rather than using what I have" to the mainstream masses.
For anyone who says "just use Myth", you've totally missed the point. I agree, and personally would recommend any geeks use it. But for those who have only heard of Linux from IBM's ads, and who need their nephew to come over every time they accidently change their homepage... This product has a LOT of potential.
And kudos to them for sticking to the idea of end-user rights (at least those comparable to a standard VCR)... Not wavering on the "skip a commercial" feature by calling it something like "30 second advance" or making you activate it by a special hack, they put it right out there as a selling point. And sending the encoded media to any PC on your LAN, rather than requiring you to physically swap out your HDD to get the content off a semi-proprietary box. I sincerely wish them well in their impending string of lawsuits from the MPAA.
Re:Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:3, Interesting)
I see that SnapStream sells TV-input stuff bundled with their software, but a $160 usb TV-tuner is steep, most people are gonna be using cheapola cards. Requiring a hardware based video compressor would also make sense, not being able to play Doom III because your wife's soap is getting recorded sucks.
Elgato o
Re:Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:2)
Re:Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:2)
My livingroom PC goes out to the TV - Really simple setup. I literally just plugged the TV-out into the SVideo port on the TV, and enabled TwinView in the video setup. Nothing more, and it just worked.
Now, I really only use that for dumping Flash content to the TV. But it works just as well for playing DVDs. Though, unless you have a pure DVI card-to-TV connection (currently still fairly rare), only an idiot would us
Re:Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:2)
Nothing really bad, but for example, you can't do progressive scan video over anything less than component (which my video card lacks, though I'll admit I really should upgrade to one with DVI), so you'd have to drop the quality to 480i. Still good, I'll grant, but particularly for action sequences or small text, you can easily spot the difference once you know what to look for.
As for HDTV, you must be something wrong if you're stuck with a 4:3
Re:Great idea, wish *I'd* thought of it... (Score:2)
No reason to buy 3 DVD players, 3 vcrs.
Tried the wireless video distro systems, about 4 of them, none of them were good enough to leave installed here.
By broadcasting back into the antenna wire, we already have an infrastructure for distribution.
Another good one... (Score:2, Interesting)
It did not mention any automatic advert skipping, although I wonder how efficiently such a feature could be implemented (how would it detect the difference between adve
Re:Another good one... (Score:2, Informative)
Digital TV? When, dear god, when? (Score:2, Informative)
The first company to produce decent software that works with all current digital TV cards, even if it's only the dvb-t standard used in Australia, will make a fucking mint.
At the moment people are waiting with baited breath for some decent windows software to come out, and are willing to pay money for it. So why the fuck isn't anybody writing the software?
I'd happily buy this if it supported digital TV, but like most of the oth
Re:Digital TV? When, dear god, when? (Score:3, Informative)
MythTV has a half-decent solution, which is to allow you to send a command to your digital cable box, either by serial port (if your digital cable box supports such a thing), or by using an IRBlaster (the solution that TiVo uses, if I understand correctly). Then again, I use two
Re: (Score:2)
If you're looking for an ATI MMC replacement... (Score:4, Interesting)
I am currently using ATI's buggy MMC v8.9 for now for my Radeon 9800 All-In-Wonder card. Please post a reply if you know any other PVR software that you know will work with these requirements:
1. Can I install this program with ATI MultiMedia Center (MMC) v8.9 installed? Or do I have to uninstall MMC due to conflicts?
2. Can I watch scheduled TV shows in Timeshifting mode? Basically, I have the recorder program record an hour TV show from 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM. I come home, and I already missed the first 15 minutes. I want to be able to jump into the TV show from the beginning (recorded already) and catch up to the live TV feed (include skipping commercials). This is like TiVo. I don't have to wait until the program finishes recording. MMC is annoying without this method.
3. Can I record with captions? ATI's MMC VCR video format can, but not DivX, MPEG-2, etc.
4. Can I watch my recorded shows and Timeshift recordings (in progress) on my TV (TV out fullscreen overlay) and still use my computer on primary screen (monitor)? If so, then can it show captions if available?
5. Is the low volume a problem since I have a SB Live! card? MMC's recording result very low audio volume.
I hope this helps for other ATI Radeon AIW users who are looking for a MMC replacement.
Re:If you're looking for an ATI MMC replacement... (Score:2)
Re:If you're looking for an ATI MMC replacement... (Score:2)
I hope that answers your questions.
Great product but some limitations (Score:3, Informative)
However although it advertises that it can also 'stream live tv' this functionality doesn't work with some very popular PVR cards (the WinTV 250/350 series) that do mpeg2 encoding in hardware.
This functionality is promised for a future version, but its something to consider if you own one of these cards.
MythTV IS better, but try installing it.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:MythTV IS better, but try installing it.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:MythTV IS better, but try installing it.... (Score:2)
Phillip.
Re:MythTV IS better, but try installing it.... (Score:3, Informative)
Mythtv is better, but it is also very hard to use, and there is a very good reason for that, it is still in development. Isaac and the rest of the mythtv guys are interested in people using it and providing useful feedback and bug reports, but they have very lit
Snapstream? (Score:5, Informative)
And besides, my (here we go again) MythTV box does the same... and also lets me:
- Play my giant MP3/Ogg collection
- Have a slideshow of all the digital photos I've ever taken.
- watch DVD's and rip them if they're any good.
- play about 40G of movies on command,and share them on my local network.
- Have a nice auto-updating weather display, with forecasts and satellite photos.
- Read a bunch of RSS newsfeeds
All of which is accessible from my remote.... and free, if your time is worth nothing
Seriously, first person who makes a 'standard' mythTV box for under a grand (AUD) will make a killing.
Re:Snapstream? (Score:2)
Re:Snapstream? (Score:3, Informative)
What? Dependencies? Databases? ah,crap
Re:Snapstream? (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again, I have 3Mbps downstream on my cable modem (thank you, Comcast!), so the downloading doesn't take that long. Using apt-get handles all of the dependencies, and the RPMs are setup with most of the default p
Re:Snapstream? (Score:2)
Now, granted, I don't use all of the features of MythTV, but I use the TV/recording, DVD/VCD playback (MythDVD), weather (MythWeather) and MythGame (for MAME only) modules on a regular basis only, but I have in the past tried out the music and video modules as well.
Like I said in another post, setting up MythTV used to be a real pain, but if you have hardware similar to that which Ja
missed some things (Score:2)
My myth box can also play emulated games
Troll? (Score:2)
Only on slashdot would a lighthearted comparison between a Microsoft product and a linux product get modded down as Troll. Way to go, my ub3r-l337 brothers, how's life in your parents' basement treating you? Gotta go - I think I hear your mum calling for your laundry.
You may not be too happy (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You may not be too happy (Score:2)
Also, Happauge's MPEG2 streams drop straight onto DVD, whereas ATI's had some compatibility issues.
Dude, what's wrong with your system? :) (Score:2)
Avermedia M179s go for about $80, and OEM PVR-250s (somewhat different than the retail ones, it's the "Media Center" version) can be found for $88 on eBay pretty often.
My PVR-350 is some of the best money I've ever spent on my machine.
Re:You may not be too happy...or you might (Score:2)
I had tried to get linux set up as a living room PC, but it was just tak
Cutting ads out... (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, the numbers are not high enough now to have that effect, but can you imagine having to pay for every channel the same way you do for HBO and Showtime? Or, maybe the marketing people will become more savvy and include marketing in a way we can not skip over. Like web pages with embedded marketing (product placement)...
This is more interesting to me than the ability to save the movies in the first place. The question in the end for the business, is where does the money come from. These machines change that dynamic. What are /.s willing to put up with in terms of advertising that would not be deletable to continue to have TV that is "end-viewer" discounted. Since the reality is that the ad dollars are paid for when you purchase the products, could the masses have the vision to see moving those dollars from product purchases to content and delivery fees?
InnerWeb
Re:Cutting ads out... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Cutting ads out... (Score:2)
strangers having access (Score:2, Insightful)
It's fairly simple to enable security so strangers don't have access to your television signal or recordings.
Oh dear, we mustn't let others have access to free media.
Warning for PowerVCR users (Score:2)
It worked so-so with my capture card, but I wasn't too impressed with how it did MPEG formats. I decided to uninstall. From then onward, PowerVCR never worked again... it would begin a recording and freeze the entire machine within a minute. I've yet to bother re-imaging the machine, and just switched to WinDVR instead.
BeyondTV is th
Tvtime + VCR (Score:4, Informative)
Beyond Media in beta (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Beyond Media in beta (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Beyond Media in beta (Score:2)
Recommended Settings (Score:2, Interesting)
here's a more compelling article (Score:4, Insightful)
Like the author of this pondering, I would prefer to see Apple make a media-centric Mac with the same footprint as most component consumer electronics items like DVD players and tuners. It would be awesome. Stack it and place it in your components cabinet (hopefully an open aired one for good ventilation). The machine would hook up to your plasma or HDTV. That's the problem with Windows Media Center PC's. They do not complement an audio/videophile's components. By using the plasma and/or the HDTV screen, the Media Mac would take charge of all the other devices yet it would still retain the media-ness of the whole system. To have iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie and iDVD along with timeshifting in your living room with the help of a wireless mouse, keyboard, and friendly remote control would simply rock.
This looks great (Score:2)
Once I have the money I'm going to buy one of the SnapStream bundles and get rid of this card for good. My recommendation is don't buy Leadtek.
All this work (Score:2)
This software is crap (Score:4, Interesting)
Why did this happen? Because Snapstream's servers went offline. That's right, if the software can't 'phone home' (even when it's THEIR FAULT), you are automatically considered a pirate, and your BOUGHT AND PAID FOR software stops working.
Supposedly, they're 'fixing' it, but they've been doing that since the first time it happened back in December. It's not going to stop 'checking in', only that if it can't connect it won't revert to a useless expired trial.
And forget about 'official' support. They do have forums with some very knowledgeable people (users), but if you want to get a response from anyone officially connected with Snapstream, you'll be waiting forever (if you're lucky enough to get EVER get a response).
Putting all that behind for a minute, the software is buggy (sometime just forgets to record, blue-screens for no reason, jittery recording and playback). Of course, the first thing they'll blame is your hardware, or other software you have installed. The same, exact system (which exceeds their recommended hardware specs considerably) has no trouble running other apps like SageTV or myHTPC with the TV plugin.
Bottom line, there is VERY little positive to offset all of the bugs, and I have a serious problem paying for software that is rendered useless whenever their servers crash.
SageTV -- an alternative to TIVO and BeyondTV (Score:4, Interesting)
Features I liked in SageTV:
1) uses TV cards with hardware encoding cards only. Cards using software encoding need not apply.
2) low CPU requirements, since the the encoding is done by the video card.
3) handles multiple TV tuner cards automatically -- I use two Hauppauge PVR-250 cards. BeyondTV supports only one card. (The wildest SageTV setup I've read about included two PVR-250s, one PVR-350, four of a USB variety and one ATI E-Home Wonder.)
4) free TV schedule/guide. They use Zap2It for those, and I was already using www.zap2it.com for my TV watching plans.
5) ability to use directories across the network for recording or serving shows
6) ability to stream mpeg2 video to a SageClient on another PC. (BeyondTV can't stream mpeg2 -- either record in a Windows Media format or spend your time decoding/re-encoding to make a copy you can stream!)
7) ability to watch live TV, effectively as if it was already a complete recording (start late, jump around, etc). BeyondTV does this if you record in mpeg2, but it can't stream that file to another machine!
8) ability to automatically control SageRecorder (optional related program) on another networked PC that has its own TV card.
9) full-featured, time-limited trial versions of SageTV, SageRecorder and SageClient.
10) does not require or use
11) does not require DirectX9
12) open beta program -- beta installs over any registered copy.
The most commonly used card is the Hauppauge PVR-250. SageTV has out-of-the-box support for Hauppauge and another remote, and support for third-party IR receivers.
While I write this, I'm watching mpeg2 video streamed to a window to this 650MHz notebook. SageClient is the remote client version, which receives and displays the streamed mpeg2 shows and also lets you control the recording schedule remotely.
I'll stick to my DirecTiVo (Score:2, Interesting)
As a customer and user...mixed feelings... (Score:3, Informative)
If you are thinking about buying, take the time to read the user forums on snapstream.com.
The end user helping end user support has been considerably better than the official answers in some cases.
I wanted the new features of 3.4.
I ended up reverting to 3.3 to have the system work. 3.3 runs with no problems. Love the program.
My concern is that currently a released version (3.4) filled with problems and the company's answer is "want to try the beta of 3.5?"
No, I do NOT want to try a beta on my dedicated video server to resolve the problems in your RELEASED application.
-------------
That all being said:
Athlon 1.4
1 GB RAM
Windows XP SP1
Nvidia FX 5200
ATI TV Wonder
200 gb of storage
Snapstream 3.3
The ATI does the capturing with the NVidia handling the TV/Out. The output is run into a modulator that allows me to feed the media server into any tv connected to the antenna wire on channel 4. I have ripped all of our DVDs to xvids, so the kids no longer get an opportunity to scratch them up. Drop them into one of the directories that Snapstream knows about, and they are available for the kids to watch on demand.
I really like the ability to set up recordings from the road. Using the web interface and coming back into the system from a remote location lets me check recordings, setup new recordings, and even download/watch recordings.
During the Womans World Cup last fall, my daughter and I were in DC for 6 games. We took a side trip to Philly for 2 games. At the time I was playing with the 3.1 or 3.2 trial version. We would hit a wifi hotspot in the evenings, eat some dinner while we downloaded games that we had recording from other venues.
System will also allow you to watch a live stream through the web interface. My father who is overseas, occasionally wants to watch sporting events or other shows. He comes in, sets up an event, and watches.
I'm not regretting buying the application. The version I thought I was buying didnt work as promised. The previous version DOES run as promised, so it is functioning quite well for me.
Where's Support for the PVR350's with OSD? (Score:2)
From what I understand you can get this to work with MythTv but you have to find a X Driver for IVTV module [lycos.fr] and everything isn't a 100% stable yet (again from what I understand)
I guess I can only hope that the support of the OSS community continues and improves and makes a product that surpasses the propietary one...
e.
Satellite ? (Score:2)
Re:Satellite ? (Score:2)
As you noted there are two main ways to do that. Hook up a serial cable between your PC and your satellite set top box and use a software widget to let the PVR software change channels that way. DirectTivo bundles with a serial cable to control DirectTV boxes this way.
OR
Use an IR blaster... an Ir blaster is nothing more
Re:Satellite ? (Score:2)
or you could (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:or you could (Score:3, Informative)
Re:or you could (Score:5, Informative)
However, now that Jarod has put up his excellent website [wilsonet.com] on setting up MythTV with Fedora Core 1, and Axel builds RPMs, it's a no-brainer. And, at least for me in the United States (California), XMLTV hasn't broken in months. And, thanks to the crack programmers, there's an option to check on the status of the last XMLTV grab (and MythTV e-mails you also).
Now of course, if your hardware deviates from the website, then you might have a problem. But, for the most part, it's still pretty easy.
-- Joe
Re:or you could (Score:2)
*shrug* if you haven't tried KnoppMyth, it might help you (if you aren't an uberLinux geek) get over the initial install/dependencies/setup hump... YMMV
e.
Re:or you could (Score:2)
16 hours? I'm sure it doesn't take anywhere near that long to emerge xmltv and answer a few simple questions. (Been there, done that.)
Re:or you could (Score:2)
He at least TRIED it...
Re:or you could (Score:2)
Re:Cool (Score:2, Insightful)
At first it probably will. Until studios start complaining about it and how it takes away from the sales of the Anna Nicole Show on dvd. It may be just me, but i feel that recording shows onto your computer is no different than recording them on vhs. We pay for cable and the channels, should we not be allowed to make a backup for our enjoyment?
But something like this has probably been debated just like downloading music. It's rea
Re:Cool (Score:5, Informative)
If you record in MPEG2, you can use something like TMPEG to drop it onto a DVD without re-encoding.
What's funny is that the review didn't mention the coolest feature, which is the remote scheduling through snapstream.net. It's just a regular TV listings page, and a free account comes with the software. You can click to record a show, and the PVR checks in every ten minutes or so for additions, and adds them to the schedule. It's just an outbound HTTP connection, so it works through a firewall without exposing anything.
The net result is that if I'm away from home and hear about a show I want to record, I can set it up it in seconds from any web browser on the 'net. Try that with your Tivo.
This was a fairly shaky product in early versions, but it's really developed into something useful. I'd never go back to a VCR.
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Re:Not a direct TiVo competitor (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not a direct TiVo competitor (Score:2)
Are you sure you have your figures right? I own a ReplayTV 2020 (very old, it doesn't even record captions!), and it records about 1 GB per hour. The 20 GB drive it came with was good for 20 hours, and I swapped in an 80 GB drive a few years ago and can now record 80 hours (I rarely need more than that, I've watched a lot less TV since about 2 years after owning it, which seems to be a fairly common occurrence).
Any