Microsoft Takes on TiVo 295
CatsCradle writes "The Seattle Times has an article about Microsoft's Foundation and their new partnership with Comcast to provide a TiVo-like service."
Enzymes are things invented by biologists that explain things which otherwise require harder thinking. -- Jerome Lettvin
Goodbye Tivo (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:5, Insightful)
Name recognition is a liability here (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Name recognition is a liability here (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course the result of such cheapness is that the packaged ca
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey TiVo, you need to call someone over at Motorola. I have a Motorola cable/PVR/HDTV box and it SUCKS. Bad. I've had TiVo for three years, and I love it. The Motorola box crashes all the time, the controls suck, the program guide sucks. Looks like it was programmed in the 80's.
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:3, Insightful)
End user: Why pay for Netscape when this IE thing is free!
*months later*
Netscape: We're free too now.
End user: Too late. I already have things setup the way I like.
Unless there's some severe price-breaks and bundling involved I wouldn't write off Tivo just yet.
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:2)
As for the new service? Well, from what I can tell every non TiVo/ReplayTV licensed DVR box put out by the cable companies has been woefully short on features. About the only thing cable DVRs have going for them are video on demand. I'm not exactly holding m
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:2)
Excellent comparison (Score:3, Interesting)
Why pay a monthly fee if you don't have to? Their business model is what will kill TiVo, not just Microsoft.
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:2)
Microsoft will have to fight hard to catch up to this.
Why do they need to fight?
Wouldn't it be a lot easier to for them to buy TiVo outright? They could buy 100 companies of TiVo's size using petty cash!
And, just like hotmail service that originally ran fine on BSDying, they could slowly "upgrade" the TiVo users to MS-Whatever, once it's ported to PPC, once the call center's been warned about the fanatics calling in about how their 9th-Tee Ethernet card doesn't work anymore, etc.
OK, nevermind.
Second try at a Microsoft PVR (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Second try at a Microsoft PVR (Score:3, Interesting)
I had a DishNetwork DishPlayer - it was the predecessor to Ultimate TV. Single tuner, crashed a lot, etc etc.
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Goodbye Tivo (Score:2)
This will be fun. (Score:5, Funny)
And there's also.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This will be fun. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This will be fun. (Score:2)
Re:This will be fun. (Score:4, Interesting)
Come to Mexico City and watch Cablevision for a while, you can see the BSOD on their programming guide instead of the previews. This happens often, since they switched to "microsoft tv" and are starting to switch from everything they had to all-Microsoft for their infrastructure.
The satellite TV service Sky is about to do the same thing next year (it's owned by basically the same people). And DirecTV is closing shop in Mexico, so once again there is a monopoly here, this time on satellite TV. And Microsoft is in on it.
Ultimate TV??? (Score:5, Informative)
Yup thought so [toddverbeek.com]
HP is trying it now (Score:2)
Here is a link [hp.com] to the offering from HP. Seems a little expensive, but I haven't seen one in person to know exactly how powerful it is.
I've talked with friends about building a simple linux system to do all this and interface it with a home LAN, and we all agree that you could do it for a lot less t
Foundation (Score:5, Funny)
</joke>
I thought it was called Ulitmate TV (Score:3, Funny)
Blue screen (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blue screen (Score:2)
Eats, shoots, and leaves (Score:5, Funny)
One of the above words has correct use of the apostrophe. You decide which one!
Yo Tro (Score:2)
Re:Yo Tro: Re: Yo (To Tro) (Score:2)
Seriously? (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously? It was yesterday, during boot-up. I had to power it off. Thankfully, it did not blue-screen during the next boot.
Re:Blue screen (Score:2)
Re:Blue screen (Score:2)
Also it regularly goes to sleep and won't wake up. I have to restart the machine. This happens once a week or so.
I didn't have these kinds of problems when I was running windows 2000 on the same machine. On my machine windows XP is less stable then windows 2000.
That's probably because it's a year old Dell. Windows is very picky about hardware. It won't run properly on the vast ma
Re:Blue screen (Score:2)
On the occasions I play a game on that box I haven't had any BSODs - but my real computing is on a Powerbook so the time on Windows is pretty limited.
Blue screen fix (Score:5, Informative)
Yup, no more BSOD! Just random reboots instead. Good work team!
Seems like the natural stepping stone... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Seems like the natural stepping stone... (Score:3, Informative)
Not a huge Microsoft fan, but I'm developing a channel for this system, and I gotta tell you, it's pretty slick.
Re:Seems like the natural stepping stone... (Score:2)
I would love to see a P2P tivo like settop box. Some small cable company could setup all the settop boxes to act as one giant p2
Re:Seems like the natural stepping stone... (Score:3, Insightful)
In a way, Sun was right... the network *is* the computer. High speed networking and the infiltration of digital signals everywhere in our lives change the game fundamentally... and Microsoft is looking at having everything that's connected to the networ
This is good news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is good news (Score:2)
Well at least there aren't any commercials...
On the other hand... (Score:3, Insightful)
sad company culture (Score:2, Insightful)
Why does it always seem that Microsft instead of trully being innovative ( ala apple) they always have to buy themselves into an existing market, then try to bull rush it with thier tremendous capital.
Re:sad company culture (Score:2)
Apple [apple.com] has never [apple.com] bought its way [apple.com] into an existing markets [apple.com] ? (I'm sure there are other examples.)
I'm as big an Apple Zealot as any. I drink my koolaid first thing every morning. However, I do prefer a discussion that relies on facts, not misperceptions.
Will it include Binky, the Helpful Paperclip (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder if it will include Binky, the Helpful Paperclip...
"Hi Buddy, looks like you are watching Porn - do you want me to inform all people you know?
Press [YES] to confirm or [YES] to continue
Re:Will it include Binky, the Helpful Paperclip (Score:2)
MCE2005 vs. SageTV vs. MythTV? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm currently running SageTV (http://www.sage.tv) for my PVR needs. Before that I was running MythTV which I really liked, however it was really flakey.
I wonder how MCE2005 compares to either or both of the two.
TIA
Re:MCE2005 vs. SageTV vs. MythTV? (Score:2)
Re:MCE2005 vs. SageTV vs. MythTV? (Score:2)
I like it. The interface is pretty polished, and it can do anything I expect a PVR to do. I've written extensively about it over at www.byopvr.com. http://www.byopvr.com/Journal+index-jop-browse-mo d e-story-uid-525.html [byopvr.com]
From what I read BeyondTV is perhaps even more polished, but SageTV supports the hardware decoder of the PVR-350, which was important to me.
My gripes have been it's been challenging to set up, and displaying the user interface on the PVR-350 is problematic. (The PVR
MCE2005 is not about TIVO (Score:2)
It's pretty expensive as a PVR. It's the best tivo I've seen as far as user interface, but it's not THAT much more usable.
Big problem at the moment is price. The system we're using for testing at work runs $2500. But we can expect the price will go down, just like DVD players, CD-Burners, etc.
And although I'm developing for the system, I'm an Apple zealot, not a Microsoft one.
Re:MCE2005 vs. SageTV vs. MythTV? (Score:2)
Anandtech (Score:4, Informative)
"Control", eh (Score:5, Interesting)
With Microsoft TV Foundation Edition's new UI Customizer tool, you can make changes to the viewer's user interface, preview the changes, and then almost instantaneously publish them to the viewer's set-top box."
Gee, thanks Redmond, I was looking for an outside corporation to control my "experience" (there's that damned word again from the dot-com era). I like how they'll just have the vendor just make bulk changes then push them to my set-top box without asking me if I want an update or not. I suppose that's part of the agreement, though. Looks like another MS service I'll be ignoring.
Tivo already does this (Score:3, Informative)
Comcast + MS? (Score:5, Interesting)
I switched to DirecTV w/ Tivo long ago and will probably give that up eventually as more shows become available on bitorrent. Considering I only watch perhaps three shows regularly, its overkill. Also, Rupert-Owned DirecTV with DirecTivo does have its downsides. [everythingisnt.com]
Then again, never underestimate the power of bundling services.
Comcast (Score:3, Insightful)
I think TimeWarner + AOL turned out to be a bigger joke. But that's because they didn't capitalize on their partnership at all. They had a huge opportunity and they blew it.
Great. Just great. (Score:5, Interesting)
What if, in their infinite wisdom, that Comcast requires that you use a Windows box to take advantage of "special features" of their device that MS creates propriatarily? In simpler language, I am used to Microsoft making things that don't fully integrate with my Mac OS arrangement (and generally, I usually don't care since I have plenty of alternatives with my platform). However, Comcast loves to charge its customers for things they don't or can't use, and it's hard enough to know exactly how they are sticking it to me as it is.
On the plus side, they may be a company that I worry about, but my cable internet from Comcast is 2.5MBits and whomps my office connection easily.
Channel choices (Score:5, Funny)
MSNBC
MSCBS
MSABC
MSFOX
The History Channel (sample show: Microsoft invents the GUI with Windows 1.0)
EA-SPN. (the sports network where you get to watch guys play sports videogames)
Animal Planet. (featuring the microsoft mouse)
Lifetime (featuring details of how long the Microsoft EULA binds you)
MTV (featuring Ballmer Beach Dance Blast!)
Re:Channel choices (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Channel choices (Score:2, Insightful)
Game consoles other than the X-Box will not be recognized. There will be Halo 2 marathons, nothing else. Microsoft staff will be interviewing and studying Tallarico in order t
(just about) anything is an improvement for cc (Score:5, Informative)
Just about everything you like about the TiVO ain't there yet for "Com-assed". The one big thing the box has going for it is direct firewire access to the current video stream including on demand content, hdtv, and stuff from the dvr library. Of course, once MS gets loaded on the box, you know they're going to lock it down.
Re:(just about) anything is an improvement for cc (Score:2)
One huge advantage Tivo has over anyone else entering the market is that since they were there first, they got all the patents. It will be difficult to make a commercial offering as user f
Re:(just about) anything is an improvement for cc (Score:2)
That being said, they also "upgraded" me from my old AT&T plan to the new Comcast equivalent when they put in my DVR without telling me, which means I have to pay $8 more per month and I lost the STARZ package. So to get that back, I gotta pay another $10/month. So my
I thought they already did this (Score:2)
Re:I thought they already did this (Score:2)
Now, there is Media Center.
They tried this already (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think TiVO has a thing to worry about.
-Todd
Awesome! (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks for that link to the Microsoft homepage! I've been looking for that.
Slashdot comes through again!!!
Maybe some good can come of it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Dlugar
Competition is good (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft has money and can buy name and track record.
That aside, competition is most aways a good thing it drives up inovation. The more brands availible the better off we are as consumers.
But look at other comcast products, G4, after the merger of G4 and techtv, they took one crapy network and one decent network(Techtv), and produced a crapy network.
Now i can use my comcast DVR to make sure i dont ever have to see a retarded G4 show again
The degradation of TechTV (Score:2)
DVR supports HDTV (Score:5, Interesting)
Check it out:
http://broadband.motorola.com/dvr/dct6412.a
That's pretty good for $10/month.
Re:DVR supports HDTV (Score:2)
Im sure it will rock! (Score:2, Funny)
MythTV (Score:2)
Example MS TV BSOD: (Score:3, Funny)
WHAT_CHU_TALKIN_BOUT_WILLIS?
Please enjoy viewing this Gary Colman bitmap while the dump file is being created...
Three tries to get it right? (Score:3, Informative)
Microsoft + Echostar = DishPlayer
Microsoft + DirecTV = Ultimate TV
Microsoft + Comcast = ?
I actually owned a DishPlayer. The problems with it to me wern't horrible, but it did cause a class action lawsuit to be brought against Echostar. Their new PVRs never matched the features of the DishPlayer, but they at least were stable.
Thoughts in response (Score:4, Insightful)
Forget skipping commericals... (Score:3, Informative)
Tivo was a huge giant step forward for consumers, Microsoft's taking us a couple steps back.
Time Travel? Temporal Flux? Gimme a hint. (Score:2)
According to the article you'll be able to "pause and rewind live television broadcasts" and record shows. There is no mention of any ability to fastforward or skip commericals. Thus it is highly unlikely that any such feature exists.
How do you propose to "fast forward" over live television?
If there were any issues with it not being able to fast forward over recorded commercials, somone at AVSForum would surely say something. Nobody has yet. [avsforum.com]
Think BEFORE posting! (Score:2)
Furthermore, I pointed out all the alleged features of the device. And none
Lifetime subscription? (Score:2, Insightful)
Beware the Broadcast Flag (Score:5, Interesting)
TiVo needs to position themselves as the Google of DVRs and adopt the "Do No Evil" policy.
I've lost my thunder (Score:5, Funny)
"I hear Microsoft plan to go for an untapped market niche neglected by the TiVo. This new recorder records just the ads around the program, as well as inserting a few of its own."
Surefire positive moderation and reassurance for my meaningless existence centered around Slashdot karma right? Well, it seems the comedians at Microsoft have already stolen my thunder. From the Microsoft Foundation page...
Sell and secure HDTV homes.
Promote offerings with targeted ads and recommendations.
Insert ads and promotions...
Control and customize your viewers' experience.
It seems that they have they thought of all my best gags and implemented them as actual features. Dammit. What a sad day when a monolithic company can spent thousands on marketing a product whose primary purpose is to deny a Slashdotter the simple pleasure of a two-line quip. *runs and cries*
Improved cable line-up (Score:2)
TiVo will survive like Apple still survives (Score:2, Insightful)
i woulder steer clear of anything (Score:2)
So with the three different cable modem providers I had in the past, you simply hook up the cable modem and go, but not Comcast. Once you open your browser for the first time, you are directed to some setup page. But the pa
I should pay for a slash dot subscription (Score:2)
Screw This I'm setting up my GNURadio / MythTV Box (Score:2, Funny)
Any day now.
What they are keeping quiet about.... (Score:3, Funny)
Why I will switch from Tivo when this is available (Score:3, Interesting)
First and foremost, Tivo has made no commitment to their customer base to offer a standalone or CableCard HD recorder. This is discouraging, at least... and it spells out the beginning of the end for this well-meaning company.
Secondly, when considering current digital cable content, the stream is sourced digitally, decoded to analog, and reencoded by Tivo. This result is less-than-optimal video quality. In fact, it's quite poor, even at the highest quality setting. I want higher quality recordings, even without consideration of HD.
So, I cannot record HD, do not have dual tuner support, and cannot access VOD content directly through Tivo. Even if Tivo WERE to develop an HD standlone record with CableCard support, it would be unable to access VOD and PPV content, based on CableCard specification.
Perhaps this isn't Tivo's fault. Maybe they did try to partner with cable providers and were beat out by a better MS offer. I want to give Tivo the benefit of the doubt here, but they are failing first on several other fronts which are only problems of Tivo itself.
*tink-tink* (Score:3, Funny)
Hi! It looks like you're trying to watch friends. Would you like some assistance?
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:3, Interesting)
You'll also be able to transfer the content to other devices throughout your home and to portable devices.
There is one obvious drawback: we'll all be locked into Microsoft's solution.
But if it's a good solution, I'm not sure most of us will mind. I don't mind being locked into my Powerbook
Re:Yay! (Score:3, Informative)
Mmmm, secure HDTV. Don't want any of those pesky users exercizing their rights! Let's make sure that we can keep them from recording what you don't want them to. That way you can target them with even MORE advertising because they will be forced to watch what WE want them to watch.
Timeshifting be damned!
"Sell and Secure HDTV Homes" means "get people who use HDTV to use our cable system, and keep them from switching to satellite". This should be clear from the context, as the next sentance reads "Micros
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Finally! (Score:2)
Re:Set top box? (Score:2)
Tivo is likely to fail due to regulation. Microsoft is likely to succeed, if only by subsidizing it with office. The second-generation Xbox will be the test of whether they can succeed with a business model like Tivo's.
I eagerly await the day when I own a high enough quality projector with cheap en
Nothing has changed (Score:2)
Dramatically? Try little at all. A few people have PVRs now, but it is still a small number. More and more people record onto DVD instead of tape, but that is just a change-of-medium. Some people are net-surfing instead of watching TV, but that is also a gradual change. Nothing dramatic here.