

The Programmer Who Could Save Tivo 371
Damon Darlin from Business 2.0 writes "We just posted a story on Arthur Van Hoff, the programming legend who now works at TiVo. He was one of the Java geniuses at Sun (has almost as many patents as Bill Joy) and started Strangeberry, which Tivo bought in January.
the story tells how his Strangeberry software will be given away to developers of web content. The next generation Tivos will then be able to recognize web content and direct it to the appropriate home device. This could be the stuff that saves tivo because none of the set top boxes will have this ability.
Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not publish a SDK (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why not publish a SDK (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why not publish a SDK (Score:4, Interesting)
IBM doesn't own most of the software written for the IBM-PC, yet they still make money from that product line from the early 1980s.
You'd think Tivo would be content to be the IBM of the consumer space.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:4, Insightful)
What would save Tivo would be cheaper hardware, cheaper lifetime subcriptions or no subscriptions at all, and the ability for third party add-ons (hardware or software).
You don't want to surf and watch TV at the same time but others do. Some people want a MP3/Video collection manager on their TV. Let them do it.
Enough of this "we want more, more, more, money" shit and more of "we want more, more, more, customers" shit
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:2)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't want to surf and watch TV at the same time but others do. Some people want a MP3/Video collection manager on their TV. Let them do it.
I already access my videos and MP3s (actually, OGGs) via MythTV [mythtv.org]. On top of that, I check the weather, get news headlines, and play games. I can also schedule programs from halfway around the world, via the web interface.
On top of all this, MythTV is free free. I'm not sure what would ever convince me to switch to TiVO or a similarly-limited product.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
On top of all this, MythTV is free free. I'm not sure what would ever convince me to switch to TiVO or a similarly-limited product.
A house? A wife? Kids? Things that take up time you can spend on hacking to get the thing to work?
I'm not saying the above do not apply to you, but they do for some.
My TiVo just works. I have three of them, and have for several years, and it's never crashed ONCE. I screw around with computers enough at work; when I want to watch TV, I just want to watch TV.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Informative)
I got moderated into oblivion for saying this last (Score:5, Insightful)
MythTV is a nightmare to set up, and there's no company out there that I can buy a pre-configured one from. KnoppMyth may work if you have a certain set of hardware, but my time is far too valuable to spend a week researching the right hardware, buying $500 or $1000 worth of computing equipment and a case suitable for going in my living room, and blowing a day setting it all up.
If I could buy a decent looking unit that I plugged in and works, then I'd buy one. Until then, I've outgrown the need to blow days at a time playing with that sort of stuff. I enjoy it sometimes, but I'm just plain too busy.
At $100 for a Tivo, thats maybe an hour or two worth of my time. Hard to compete with that.
Price point comparisons (Score:3, Informative)
Now, with Tivo there is still the subscription price, but the best bet economically would be to go with Tivo. (or other commercial PVR) Of course, if you have many of the expensive components for a PVR already lying around and assemble
Re:I got moderated into oblivion for saying this l (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I got moderated into oblivion for saying this l (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Okay, so I got lucky.
2. No, I bought it pre-built. Did you include in your time estimate how long it took Philips or Sony to assemble your box? No. Of course not. I added an ethernet card to my TiVO and a TV card to my Myth experiment. Its a wash.
3. Okay, so you have 1/10th the features that Myth offers.
4. MythTV is not a viable alternative for 99.99% -- I'm *really* not trying to argue, but I sure hate it when people use that figure. As if you're in a position to say.
5. its not a real option for replacing Tivo until I can order a MythTV box for the same price -- Not a real option for you. Granted.
6. If I was in college and had lots of free time to screw with things, I'd be all over it, too. -- Don't know where that one came from. I'm usually the one throwing the "call me when you graduate, kiddo" line. Maybe you thought I had an extra digit on my UID or something (and forgot that UIDs around 500k graduated 3 years ago). I mean, I respect your seniority, but you only predate me by about a year. Sorry, we're both
Thanks for the dialog. I only hope you see things are better than you remember. I experimented with it. It worked out of the box. I bought the PC to be an ESX Server so I had to blow it away and move on. I guess I am a "one in ten thousand" kinda guy.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Enter MythTV. Although I haven't built one yet, it's only because I was busy getting married this summer. However, MythTV appears to have a very high spouse approval factor, in that next year I do plan on building one. And the wife is not only ok with it, she's encouraging me to just go for it.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:3, Informative)
How user friendly is MythTV? My 3 year old knows how to watch and record shows with TiVo. I think the 6 year old taught him how. The only problem I have is he's filling up the disk.
It's pretty good -- my wife learned to use it without any 'formal' instruction, just playing around. Of course, getting it set up is a different matter -- but there is good documentation for that too.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:3, Informative)
OK, what about the cost of the dedicated PC? Surely you can't find a PC of the required capability for $99, or even $99+$200 for the lifetime subscription. Or am I missing something?
Nope, you do need a spare PC. But it doesn't have to be particularly speccy; when I upgraded to a cheap eMachines Athlon workstation, I used my old machine as the basis for my MythTV box: 700Mhz Pentium III, 256Mb RAM, Voodoo 3 graphics card. The only outlay for me was the capture card ($150) and the 80Gb hard drive ($60 aft
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:3, Informative)
While the MythTV software may be free, how much money did you spend on the hardware?
If you look at my post here [slashdot.org], you'll see I built my system for $210 -- with the proviso that I had an old computer knocking around to use at 'zero' cost, and I also had a lot of time on my hands. But all in all I still think it was a good deal; I saved a little money, learned a lot, and had fun.
Oh, and my MythTV box isn't a sexy mico-ITX; it's a midi tower with huge HD fans on it, sounding like a small vacuum cleaner. I
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Informative)
$200 for the TiVo itself,
$100 per 80 GB hard drive (2 of them)
$200 for the lifetime subscription
Everyone forgets to factor in that subscription cost. Had I gone with the recurring monthly fee, I would have paid $110 more than the above by now. I expect to have my series 1 TiVo for at least another two years. I figure by then I will be convinced by new features to spring for a new one. Now the new TiVos are $99 each, but I would still have to get another subscription to support it, and that is what keeps me from doing it. Were that fee 1/2 of what it is now, I feel many people would trample their friends to get a TiVo in the house.
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Informative)
Personally my time is valuable enough that I can pay someone $13 a month to help me find shows I will enjoy watching in the limited time I allocate to television watching, plus alert me to things I might enjoy watching that I wouldn't otherwise know about, plus automatically search for shows I want to see that aren't currently on the schedule (my current list includes watching for The Seven Samurai, the musical Damn Yankees! and anyone who decides to rerun Due South), plus the ability to skip through commercials . . . but of course you are the one who is competent to judge what your time is worth, and your mileage may vary.
As for DirecTiVo . . . I'd check into that before I buy, based from what I've read in this article. It might be perfect for you, or you might find that it takes 30 seconds to change channels and you get to pay extra for the TiVo data anyway. (I don't know, I don't have DirecTV and I'm happy with what I have.)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:5, Interesting)
IMDB integration? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:IMDB integration? (Score:5, Interesting)
But then again, I prefer channel Internet. No commercials, watch on demand, and better quality that the shity cable... And then I usually have access to Firefox.
Maybe it's better to spend the money on a plasma to begin with, hooks up to the PC easily
There are so many cheaper alternatives? (Score:2)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:2)
Re:Nice Feature, but.. (Score:3, Informative)
Stupid question... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Stupid question... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Stupid question... (Score:5, Insightful)
Tivo already has a great device, they just need to convince cable companies to bundle them instead of crappy knock-offs.
Re:Stupid question... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sci Atlanta Explorer 8000 Sucks (Score:3, Informative)
The first one we had would record shows, but they would record very choppy. The audio and video would play a half second or so, then freeze for 2-3 seconds continually. Nothing recorded was even watchable.
They replaced that one with a new one. The new one would play back shows ok, but it would reboot itself 10-15 times per day. When you've got two kids under the age of 3 wondering why they can't ever watch their shows, tha
Re:Stupid question... (Score:2)
patents != genius (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:patents != genius (Score:5, Funny)
The defense rests, your honor.
Re:patents != genius (Score:3, Insightful)
if(someone.patents.software > 0)
EngageMode(EHate);
else
EngageMode(ELike);
Besides, I wouldn't use the word genius about anyone who was involved in making java. I don't see what is so horribly hard about making a horrible combination of Obj-C and Smalltalk, two far better languages.
TiVo isn't dying (Score:5, Informative)
Yahoo confirms, TIVO is dying ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Try ARE doing poorly.
5 year stock price chart [yahoo.com]
Salient fact about TIVO : TIVO loses money. Decent revenue stream you say? Continual loses for an easy-to-clone product from an aging Silicon Valley company is bad news. A programmer from Strangeberry who invented Java is not going to save TIVO. Did Java save sun ?
Re:Yahoo confirms, TIVO is dying ... (Score:3, Funny)
It certainly saved them from having to come up with new buzzwords to tack onto completely unrelated technologies.
Tivo and patents (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't the fact that Tivo can't (or didn't) get patent protection for its business just as strong an indictment of the patent system as all the lame patents we complain about?
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:3, Insightful)
You cant patent "device for recording TV digitally", since those devices have existed since the 50s. You can only patent the method. Someone else can come up with a different method (different looking interface and remote, maybe even a less invasive phone-home spying scheme).
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously, take off your tinfoil hat and shut the fuck up. If you can't see that TiVo aggregates data for your benefit, then you just tell them not to do it.
The privacy policy is exceedingly clear about this. Please come back with you have read it.
http://www.tivo.com/5.11.3.asp [tivo.com]
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:2)
No. The purpose of patents isn't to protect businesses, the purpose is to promote and encourage inventors to share ideas and research rather than keep them to themselves. The incentive to share is in allowing them to recoup some of their efforts from license fees.
The mere fact that Tivo was first does not in any way entitle them
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:3, Interesting)
No. The sole purpose of a patent is "... the right to exlude others from making, using or selling the invention throughout the United States of America ..." That's a direct quote from one of the patent plaques hanging on my wall.
Does a patent force you to disclose your idea? Of course: it's required. But that's not its purpose. Far mo
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:3, Informative)
No, that is merely a means to achieve the purpose I stated. Patents were not invented to merely formalise a 'natural' right exclude others from using your inventions. Patents were recognised to be an artificial construct (and a rather questionable one at that), in which these rights are granted not for your personal benefit, but for the benefit of society as a whole (by encouraging you to share your ideas).
Re:Tivo and patents (Score:2)
Yeah... because then that would be called a monopoly. And we're all pretty familiar with those.
Nice... (Score:2, Informative)
To *really* fix tivo... (Score:5, Interesting)
A huge fraction of Tivo's subscriber base is through the DirecTV tivos-- and despite my great experience with the standalone unit I had, the DirecTV box is so much slower despite 4x the processor speed that I can't even imagine what sort of horrible code is in there. Optimize the UI, *then* add features. DirecTV may singlehandedly turn millions of people away from tivo after they sign up and have a truly subpar experience with it.
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:4, Funny)
He needs to get into the DirecTV DVR code and figure out why it takes 30 seconds to display the guide, a minute to open your "Now Playing" list of shows, and 5+ minutes to sort a 30-entry list of season passes.
That sounds like a job for ... ME! Are you listening, Tivo? You already have my resume.
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
I bet they use Bogosort :)
And if you would like to know what that is, check this out:
Bogosort [thefreedictionary.com]
And if you don't get the joke after reading that, well, congratulations to getting paid for writing the code for DirecTV DVR:)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:5, Funny)
You want to put Windows ME on Tivos?
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
It can take up to a minute to load up the Now Showing screen, but as my TiVo has been hacked and has 147+ hours of programming recorded, I can appreciate that the original developers didn't expect to have to list so much content :)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
I would expect 300 shows to take longer than 20, but I'd expect 20 to take about 1/10 of a second. What can possibly be taking so long for the tivo to do?
Another question-- why are some people's boxes worse than others? Mine is slow, yours is not as slow, another poster says he's got no issue at all. A good
Defensive Blogging (Score:5, Interesting)
You know, someone paid to sit around all day and defend a company's product online in high-profile blogs and review sites like Slashdot, using legitimate user profiles (or in this case, maybe as a marketroid for cable companies looking to slam DirectTV).
Does anyone know if "defensive blogging" happens? I googled for pages on this topic but couldn't find any stories about it, but I'm sure it happens.
Re:Defensive Blogging (Score:3, Informative)
Caveat Lector.
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:4, Insightful)
please, please, please fix that (Score:2)
I had this happen, and it would take 5 minutes to bring up the list of recorded shows and hours to reorder the season passes. Now THAT is shitty programming. The tech support said there were only two ways to fix it: either wipe the drive clean or go through the process of deleting shows manually (10 minutes to do per show).
I can't un
You can fix the EPG slowness now (Score:5, Informative)
* Go to your guide,
* Hit the "info" button on your remote,
* Change the style from DirecTV grid to Tivo Live Guide.
The Tivo style guide is better (IMO) and super fast. I'm guessing that they had to include the DirecTV grid for some contractual reason, but really want to folks to use their EPG.
Jonathan
I'm already using the Tivo guide. (Score:2)
Original TiVos are slow too (Score:2)
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
I'll see if anybody's got aftermarket RAM for the units-- but I think it's solde
Re:To *really* fix tivo... (Score:2)
This has been tried before (Score:3, Interesting)
People won't flock to a technology because it infests their computer with all the same advertising they see on TV. People will run screaming the other way, but grab the nifty hardware on the way out.
Re:This has been tried before (Score:2, Informative)
All so you can put ads for the same products being advertised on TV on the screen...
What was the thing where they'd broadcast URLs with the programming? I remember WebTV for windows could snag those URLs, and I though
Media extenders for Windows Media Center (Score:2, Informative)
How about this generation (Score:5, Insightful)
And an easy way of deleting channels - with a thumbnail that shows what's on it?
And the prevention of third parties removing all sorts of useful features like home media option, networking, ect. (DirectTV, you dirty SOBs).
Admittedly, these are the big 3 things that annoy me about my Tivo - I don't know if they are common to standalones, but IMHO DirectTV has really wrecked something good
Re:How about this generation (Score:2)
"an easy way of deleting channels"
Standalone TiVos do these with ease. I guess you'll have to complain to DirecTV about these issues.
Re:How about this generation (Score:3, Informative)
For something that cost so little, it kicked ass in the functionally department.
After sitting and trying to remember what's on a channel by its 3-4 letter name (and having no easy way to flip to the channel to see what's on it) so I can delete it, I want to go to Direct TV and kick some ass in their Department of Functionality. I really don't w
More /. advertising? (Score:5, Interesting)
Damon Darlin from Business 2.0 writes "We just posted a story on...
Wow - I guess advertisements no longer need to be camouflaged at all.
whats this mean? (Score:2, Funny)
TiVo is a victim (Score:5, Interesting)
of their own success. Basically, TiVo replaces a standard VCR, only more effectively. It can record shows while playing back, it can let you skip commercials more effectively than a VCR and it's a cool device.
But a "generic TiVo" leased from cable and satellite television companies does the same thing exactly. They all enhance the television viewing experience with high-quality instant playback for "timeshifting." What none of these devices do is allow you to permanently record television in a removable device.
Want to (temporarily) save TiVo? Add a feature that will take a certain segment of the recorded video to an on-board dual-layer DVD recorder. Let the viewer have the option of cutting out the commercials, starting the recording at a certain spot and ending at a certain spot, pick up recording when the actual program restarts, etc. Once you are all done, you have a DVD for your collection.
The reason why this is a temporary save is that the generic models will immediately try to do the same thing. Hey, competition sux sometimes.
I don't use my computer while I'm watching television. I do know that there are some people whose only access to the Internet, e-mail and the Worldwide Web are through devices like "WebTV" but I can't see that (small) market really hustling out there to get a TiVo. Bill Gates is correct; the television viewing experience is really different from that of working on a computer. The only possible likeness is playing games.
Were TiVo able to enhance a game-player's experience, they'd really have something. Perhaps one possible enhancement would be the creation of a shared on-line experience for console games that do not allow networked game play, but that sounds unlikely to me.
Re:TiVo is a victim (Score:2)
Why? Because the content producers would scream COPY-RIGHT INFRINGEMENT faster than Tivo could build the first one - even though the VCR companies already fought and won that battle.
TIVO's competition has strong connections to that industry, many of them are depenedent on them so would not follow too quickly, if at all.
Re:TiVo is a victim (Score:5, Informative)
What, you mean like the Pioneer DVR-320-S and Pioneer DVR-520H-S?
Okay, they don't have editing out commercials capability yet, and I doubt they are dual layer. So it's not totally there. But they do have Tivo+DVD Recorder.
Competition (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Competition (Score:3, Interesting)
Forget first run movies, forget the hundreds of specialty channels. Give me the regular gammut of channels, put all the specialty stuff on On Demand. No need for 5 "home improvement" channels, if I wanted to watch some episodes of "this old House" where they tackled a project like my own, I could.
But I never paid to watch it on PBS, and if I was going to pay to watch it, I'd o
Re:Competition (Score:2)
Whatever (Score:5, Informative)
TiVo's wealth of advantages are it's software. Season Passes, rating show thumbs up/thumbs down getting other shows based on your ratings, etc. I've used them since 2000. With the recent price reductions in the monthly charge it's well worth it. I've got one on both TVs and use my wireless network to connect for the updates/transfer files between them.
When I wanted to upgrade, I get a new one for $199 - $299 or whatever and keep paying the $12.95 for the first / $6.95 there after makes more sense than the $299 up front because I've yet to keep a TiVo for two years due to upgrades, change in whatever, etc.
that's because it's not the killer app (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, if you're a sports fan, TiVo is worth its weight in gold. No commercials, no halftime, you can blitz through "plays under review", and, at least for football, you can even blow through the huddle. I've watched every play of an entire game in about an hour. Basically, TiVo gave me most of my Sunday back.
Oh, and we have two Series 1 TiVos from about 5 years ago, and they still work fine. They're a little small compared to the new ones, but we don't usually fill ours up anyway.
List of patents (Score:4, Informative)
lots of patent.. (Score:3, Insightful)
it is not necessarilly a factor in "genius" in my opinion, it is however a factor in "covering of the buttocks" in a hardened and cutthroat television device busines..
tivo's weak competition will save tivo (Score:3, Insightful)
TiVo has the mindshare and still remains the best of breed PVR out there, both in terms of technology and UI. Geeks might not think UI is important but it really is; jJust examine this account [boingboing.net] of what goes wrong when the technology is there (sort of) but the UI is not.
~jeff
What would save Tivo? TV Napster (Score:2)
TiVo and dual tuners (Score:2)
The lack of a wired link for remot
Re:TiVo and dual tuners (Score:3, Informative)
What you are probably referring to is the TiVo stand-alone unit. The problem here is that TiVo has to encode the analog signal, something that the DirecTV or HDTV units (or your generic digital cable box) don't have to do. Dual tuners in these analog TiVo boxes would li
Ads (Score:3, Insightful)
there may be cheaper clones but... (Score:3, Interesting)
I hate this digital video recorder: Scientific-Atlanta Explorer 8000 [boingboing.net]
As much as I like making my own homebrew alternatives to TiVo, and think competition is a good thing... UI-wise TiVo still has the lead (hopefully they won't blow it)
e.
Does TiVo need saving? (Score:3, Insightful)
I heard someone say recently that TiVo is the Macintosh of PVR's. They were talking about ease of use, not market share. As far as I know, TiVo is pretty much the Microsoft of PVR's in terms of market share. Or at least the Dell.
If TiVo is having financial issues, I don't think it's because of lack of consumer interest or difficulty in selling units. It could well be due to regular, difficult, business issues, like having too many irons in the fire or having to worry about Microsoft's nefarious tactics. I'm sure that the cable companies are trying to horn in on TiVo's market with their various video on demand services, but they tend not to work as well as TiVo anyway.
But really, TiVo is a great device/service that already does exactly what I want it to do. They don't need to turn it into something else.
Didnt know it needed saving??? (Score:4, Insightful)
I am very concerned that moving forward TiVO and HD will be largely incompatible.
The movement of video enthusiasts to HDTV is a massive looming problem, as Tivo has little possibility of distribution of HDTV without a carrier deal, and their only existing one (DirectTV) is a tenuous one at best.
It has already been regulated that HD signals will be flagged for copyright and all hardware manufacturers will be required by the FCC to honor it by not recording HD flagged with it, which could cast a long shadow over OTA HD recording.
Cable companies are moving forward with making money off their own (likely lameass) HD cable box PVR solutions, and seemingly have no intention of opening their HD boxes to TiVo access.
Strangeberry is a solution i search of a problem.
The problem is HDTV. IMHO, PVR is more important than HDTV, but I sure am tired of watching TiVo programming on my 16:9 42" HDTV - its not pretty, even in Extreme Fine Quality mode.
Making Tivo a better PVR will save Tivo (Score:4, Interesting)
Instead of adding a bunch of "intraweb" integration, why not make it much more featureful at what it primarily is *for*?
Re:what does that mean? (Score:4, Funny)
DVD rips to the closest TV
Spam to skillet in kitchen (yumm!)
And holographic programs to the nearest holodeck..
Re:what does that mean? (Score:3, Informative)
Personally, I'm not so sure about the idea. Television works by turning your brain off. The Internet works by turning your brain on (or at least the semblance of a brain that some people seem to carry). As with most situations where things are mixed, I fear you'll end up with the wors
Re:what does that mean? (Score:2)
Re:what does that mean? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It means this (Score:2)
Re:It means this (Score:2)
Re:Moderators Often Smoke Crack (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Genius? Any clown can create a language (Score:3, Insightful)