A Brief FAQ on CableCards 157
TechNit writes "Just when I thought my Comcast DVR box was not going to change here comes the CableCard. Fascinating concept but I don't see these being used without the added features of Pay-Per-View, Video on Demand etc. that many consumers (me) have become used to. I see these being used more for authentication/theft prevention devices as apposed to stand-alone service providing devices. What do others know about this?" An earlier CNet column points out the shortcomings of current CableCard implementations.
Wait for 2.0 (Score:5, Interesting)
Some of my fellow TiVo users are disgruntled that TiVo doesn't support CableCard yet. From what I gather, they are waiting for the 2.0 standard (this is only rumor but it makes sense).
Neat technology, but not feature rich enough yet.
Get it now. (Score:4, Interesting)
I really don't care for PPV and on-demand programming. I don't use them with my TiVo now; why would I want to use a CableCard in my TV that bypasses my recorders so I can only watch that content live?
And maybe I don't want them to be able to audit what I'm watching. And no, I don't like that they can do that with my cableboxes now. (Though they do get a skewed look about me based on what my TiVo records as suggestions.)
Re:Get it now. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Get it now. (Score:2)
I think the real question is, why would you put the CableCard in the TV, not the TiVo?
(This is in the near future of course, with CC2.0 with PPV/VoD/KitchenSink-102.2+ and the fabled TiVo compatability with such a monster)
Re:Get it now. (Score:2)
No, it's why would I wait to get a CC-2.0 compatible TV with PPV ordering abilities when I can't record with a TV.
I'd probably pick up a CC-2.0 TiVo and put such a card in it that would let me record PPV and On Demand content (if only TiVo would allow it), but I have no need for access to that content directly on the TV.
Besides, anything on PPV is or soon will be available on DVD, and is often also currently showing in
Re:Get it now. (Score:2)
For you, CableCard will provide access to cable HD programming and (with the 2.0 standard) multiple tuners (so that you can record two shows at once), both of which are not technically possible with an outboard TiVo controlling a cable box. A cable-card 2.0 equipped TiVo will be able to compete feature-for-fe
Not supporting CableCard now hurting Tivo (Score:2)
I think a lot of people in the income group capable of buying Tivo are also Digital Cable subscribers, too. SA Tivos work fine with Digital Cable and the IR extenders, but it makes changing channels slow, its overly complicated and about once every month or so my cable box freezes/reboots, which puts it out of sync with the Tivo (power-cycling not being a function Tivo can do via IR).
Furthermore, this same group probably has HD TV, and CableCard would give Tivo
Re:Not supporting CableCard now hurting Tivo (Score:2)
I can see where Tivo wouldn't want to waste a lot of development effort with a 1.0 standard box if 2.0 was around the corner, however, this demonstrates to me two problems: 1) Tivo isn't doing enough ongoing hardware dev
Hacks (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Hacks (Score:5, Interesting)
one thing with digital cable boxes/cable cards is that they generally use something like a MAC address and that number is associated with your account. when you don't pay your bill they zotz the box(es), or when you change programming. you are effectively on a cable company private network so if they have the software they could possibly track down rogue devices..... though from the nature of the cable system it might take them a while to zero in on which actual house/apartment is using that device. that i am guessing from the stories of cable modem users' local networks including a printer hooked up to a neighbor's pc.
Re:Hacks (Score:1)
Cable boxes (digital) are two way. So if you don't get it right the first time, you give away your attempt and your address at once. Not a good combination.
Satellite is download only. hack away.
Re:Hacks (Score:2)
But yeah, hacking satellites is not only safer, it doesn't seem very illegal to me. (They're sending the signal through MY house, why can't I build some hardware to decrypt it?)
Re:Hacks (Score:1)
Non-Cable DVR's... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Non-Cable DVR's... (Score:2)
Re:Non-Cable DVR's... (Score:2)
how long until cable cards become like dss cards (Score:1)
TIVO (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:TIVO (Score:2)
Now that DirecTV is making noises about dropping TiVo, it's good to know that I'll have a similar option in the future, even if it does mean going back to Comcast.
Re:TIVO (Score:1)
TiVos (up until now at least) have been somewhat hacker-friendly, and can be viewed as a regular old PowerPC Linux box, even able to run other user-compiled apps. Could, then, an adequately-skilled programmer write an app that, running on their new CableCard-equipped HD TiVo unit, tunes and decrypts their cable TV provider's stream using this TiVo's CableCard API, then saves that HD video transport stream to, oh, I dunno, some Samba share?
As delightful as this sounds, getting a CableCard license requires
Re:TIVO (Score:1)
"The GPL requires that users be able to recompile their Linux kernel,"
No, it just requires that the source code changes are made available....see tivo.com/linux.
Re:TIVO (Score:2)
The product should be released in early 2006.
That seems like a long time from now... I wonder if they'll be able to financially survive until then.
Re:TIVO (Score:2)
By the most amazing coincidence you'll have to rent the card from them for at least as much money if not more.
Worth it? (Score:2)
Re:Worth it? (Score:2)
MOD PARENT INSIGHTFUL! (Score:2)
Re:Worth it? (Score:2)
Re:Worth it? (Score:2)
The cable cards require either an external or internal tuner that is card compatible. And as the internals suck, an external box (cable or otherwise) you are stuck with if you want good picture.
At least you should (hopefully) be able to use a V.2.0 cable card in a DVR.
This is exactly how I envision things "should be". I want to by a DTV monitor. No tuner should be needed, and let the DVR act as a tuner.
That way if something new and nifty comes out (such as lets say I went out and bought a CableCard ge
CableCards aren't all that new (Score:2)
They're good because you don't need them for premium and other scrabled digital channels. No on-demand or PPV until CableCard 2.0, though.
Personally, I think its a waste anyway. The only viable cable HD PVR solutions are part of the cable box anyway, so all a cable-card TV gets you is the ability to view the TV and not record it.
Re:CableCards aren't all that new (Score:1)
I love this cable card idea. I agree that until we see PVR's ready to use them, they will not be very popular.
Re:CableCards aren't all that new (Score:3, Interesting)
Are you talking about v1 or CableCard in general. The reason why cable card exists is to specifically remove the ability of the cable company to control the PVR market (among other things). I personally have no desire to give that much control to my cable company, and prefer a homebrew solution.
When CC.v2 will be r
Um you do need them (Score:1)
Your last statment about the only viable option for and HD DVR is part of a cable box is correct. It should be noted t
Re:CableCards aren't all that new (Score:2)
One potential use... (Score:2)
Re:One potential use... (Score:1)
What CableCard is good for (Score:5, Interesting)
CableCard is somewhat a half-baked implementation right now.
Currently, it's only one way, so there is no support for two way device communication required for PPV, VOD, etc., and there is no guide, because there is no memory or provision for the EPG (Electronic Program Guide).
If the industry evolves the CableCard into a truly two way design, with memory and programmability and support for EPG, then it will be interesting. Additionally, an all digital set top costs providers about $70 in volume, while a CableCard is slightly more and has none of the features of the set top.
Really all CableCard is good for at this juncture is tuning/accessing encrypted digital channels directly with your television or monitor, WITHOUT a separate set top; if that's all you want/need, then it works fine. But what would be really nice is if some third-party PVRs or PCI TV cards for computers supported CableCard: then, you don't really care about the guide or some of the other functionality. You just want to be able to get at, and record, content that you can't otherwise get to without some convoluted IR blaster-type setup with an external set top, or being locked into your provider's choice of PVR, and its features (or lack thereof).
Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
So much for the firewire ports on set-top boxes that let you connect a MythTV (or other roll-it-yourself PVR).
It looks very much like a PCMCIA card, but something tells me that none of the interface specs/protocol will be made public. God forbid consumers or third party companies deliver solutions.
Sounds like a way to keep only the "cool kids" from playing in the sandbox more than anything else.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2, Informative)
http://mythtvbox.blogspot.com
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:1)
Right now your only options for "watching one live show while recording another" are to stick with analog cable, to get a DirecTiVo, or to get two cable boxes. Plan A works for me, but I hate IR blasters. One more box to watch TV is one too many.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:1)
I'm afraid that someday we'll be paying for cable per tv, just like we used to have to pay per computer when they could control that... hopefully we can end up with a digital cable router-like device...
in anycase, this is the beginning of the end
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:4, Informative)
If you live in the US you should be able to do something about this.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:3, Interesting)
Aren't all HD devices supposed to have firewire ports on them?
So all the tv's of the future would have f/w on them, no?
And if my above understanding is incorrect- if you have a cable-card interface (whether is via a pcmcia adaptor, a pci card, a usb adaptor or a firewire adaptor) that's all your MythTV (or other roll-it-yourself PVR) would need. No more set top box needed. Get the cablecard w/ adaptor, plug into MythTV setup and go.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:3, Informative)
If the creators of MythTV have not signed the requisite contracts promising, basically, that "users will have no rights", your MythTV will have no easy way of decrypting the data.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
Then the requsite contracts would not be necessary as myth would not decode the video, the TV would do that.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:2)
Which one? ATSC doesn't mention Firewire.
Aren't all HD devices supposed to have firewire ports on them?
No.
So all the tv's of the future would have f/w on them, no?
No.
However, the FCC is requiring cable companies to provide a Firewire-enabled cable box if you ask for it.
Re:Goodbye firewire set-top boxes (Score:3, Informative)
ANSISCTE282004.pdf [scte.org]
I guess it's open after all. Although I hope there's no proprietary software initialization that you still need to actually make it work.
HTPC Use... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:HTPC Use... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:HTPC Use... (Score:2)
Re:HTPC Use... (Score:2)
Sticking with analog for as long as I can ... (Score:1)
Just another pothole (Score:2, Interesting)
I gave up on "premium" cable TV years ago when I found out that the set-top box that decoded the scrambled channels couldn't be made to work with a programmed VCR.
With all of the other things-you-aren't-allowed-to-do-anymore goodies being loaded on ("broadcast flag," etc.) to TV with the mandated en
Re:Just another pothole (Score:2)
Ask yourself why your VCR can't hook up directly to your scrambled channels. It's because there's no integration between the distribution system and the VCR, except for a very p
Indeed. I love some TV shows, but better on DVD. (Score:2)
Cheaper to produce. (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a reason that I have never wanted to get cable and this is it. The fight in the cable industry is not to bring better programing or features, or even to lower costs for us, but to reduce our ability to use (within our rights as well as without) the content provided.
Over the years Cable Companies and the "watchdogs" who are supposed to be supervising them (FCC) have been focusingmore on how to compel us to purchase new products (HDTV) than on how to safeguard our rights to use our cultural products. The cable companies have been spending lavishly on this from their profits. My purchasing of their products and services (like shopping at Wal Mart or purchasing Microsoft's products) supports their political agenda by filling their war chest. I suppose I could just donate to the EFF as well but that just ups the cost for me.
Yes I miss a few shows that are interesting, yes by shopping at more expensive (locally owned) stores I pay more for basic goods than I would at Wal Mart. But, when I factor in the cost of my freedoms, freedoms that are impacted adversely by supporiting the companies that I oppose, I find the skipping the movie, shopping locally, and using linux far far cheaper in the long run.
One-Way CableCards not read for prime time (Score:5, Informative)
There's a long and sordid history in the Cable Industry behind the CableCard. From the outside it seems like a fine idea, but none of the insiders wanted it, so it happened slowly. Now that it's here, it's obsolete as the version available now only supports 'one-way' video services, i.e., traditional broadcast TV. EPG, VOD, built-in PVR, and more interactive services, all require two-way communication, which is not in this version.
There are specs in CableLabs for the two-way version, but it's not clear if they're finished or even workable. And more likely the existing specs would be trumped by the industry's NGNA -- Next Generation Network Architecture effort (see http://www.cabledigitalnews.com/ngna/ngnaprimer.h
There's a chance this will change, due mostly to digital TV requiring less bandwidth, pent-up demand for new technology (VOD & PVR primarily), and the great success cable has had with DOCSIS-based Internet Access (they make a ton of money on it!) leading to some appreciation for open standards and interoperability. We'll see.
Still unclear... what about multiple tuners? (Score:3, Interesting)
If I put a card in my TV, my VCR, which comes before the TV, won't be able to tune the channels, will it?
Maybe picture-in-picture will work, but what about all the other circumstances where you have multiple tuners? Watching one channel while recording another, etc....
Re:Still unclear... what about multiple tuners? (Score:2)
Thus all that you are complaining about can be remdied by getting multiple cable cards.
Re:Still unclear... what about multiple tuners? (Score:2)
I can't remeber were I saw this though, has anyone else seen something like this?
You need a card for EVERY tuner. (Score:2)
Most of us dont want two way CableCARDs. We dont care for PPV, VOD, or goofly little cardgames. We just want our HDTV going right into our Tivo season passes. While those features are "ok", they do not make or break a product at this p
Re:You need a card for EVERY tuner. (Score:2)
WiFi? WTF? (Score:3, Funny)
Does CableCard support Wi-Fi?
Not yet.
What the fuck? WiFi? I hate this notion that everything should have everything else in it. What possible purpose does WiFi serve in an authentication card? None.
Other possible questions:
Does CableCard support printing my favorite vacation photos?
Not yet.
Can I use CableCard like a CreditCard?
Not yet.
Can CableCard be exchanged for Wishes and Dreams?
No.
Can I write on CableCard with markers?
On Tuesdays.
Re:WiFi? WTF? (Score:2)
Re:WiFi? WTF? (Score:2)
If it were portable then it would be interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:If it were portable then it would be interestin (Score:2)
CableCard Plusses (Score:2)
1. Cheaper to rent than STBs. They are about 40% the cost of the STB.
2. Unified remote control. No separate remote for STB.
3. Better picture quality. Often your $4000 HDTV will have a much better tuner than what your $5/mo STB has. Plus there is no cable to run/degrade signals from the STB to the TV.
Re:CableCard Plusses (Score:2)
Re:CableCard Plusses (Score:2)
Also if you connect the cable box using component cables for HD then any SD is usually upconverted to 1080i or 720p. The cable box normally does a super lousy job with the upconversion. My cheapo RPTV's internal line doubler is FAR superior to the upconversion of my TWC cable box.
With CableCard the signal received by the TV in its native resolution. From there the TV can scale and process using quality hardware.
Re:CableCard Plusses (Score:2)
You also know that most cable boxes have component analog output, and that most cable systems more than a few analog stations too, right?
Re:CableCard Plusses (Score:2)
5. Less Cable company owned equipment to go wrong. The cable card is more of an authorization device than a decoder/descrambler. If the internals of the digital box die, cable co eats the cost. If your TV's QAM demod suddenly starts to flake out, well, that's your problem.
6. (sort of) easy, self provisioning installation. You come to the office
Usability/cost (Score:1)
My favourite quote from the article... (Score:2)
Sure consumers will pocket some of the savings. Just like bypassing the middleman and dsitributing content on-line directly to your customers will allow publishers to pass some of that savings along to the customer (or maybe the companies will just pocket the savings... which sounds more likely to you?) They'll probably rent out the cards for $6.99
Re:My favourite quote from the article... (Score:2)
Well of course, because Economics 101 tells us that in an industry consisting of small players with no product differentiation in perfect competition, price equals marginal cost because all players must lower their price to compete.
What's that you say? Cable companies aren't in perfect competition? How could the FCC allow that to hap...
...oh wait.
Regular broadcasting going away (Score:1)
Your portable TV, your regular TV with rabbit ears, and your radio that picks up the soap operas... are all going to quit working in a few months... forcing you to spend, what, $200 to be able to receive the new HDTV signals...
Where is the outrage? Or will it all happen when folks wake up and their TV's only show snow,
Re:Regular broadcasting going away (Score:2)
Which won't be happenning by the end of this year, or next year either. But it'll happen soon enough.
Where's the outrage? Well, most people who even know about this issue probably already have ATSC equipment themselves, so they realize how badly NTSC sucks by comparison. I certainly won't miss it.
But anyway, by the time the shutoff does come (again, not this
Re:End of next year... (Score:2)
Yeah, I know -- they'd just love for me to pay the extra 20 bucks a month they want for digital instead of analog.
So anyway, I don't get it -- tell me again why I should want to replace every TV in my house (they ALL only have RF jacks) in order to get the "privilage" of paying more for DRM'd content that violates m
Re:End of next year... (Score:2)
That's the whole point. CableCard would bring that down to an extra buck or two a month, at best. The card replaces the digital box. The real money is in services like PPV and VOD and so on.
So anyway, I don't get it -- tell me again why I should want to replace every TV in my house (they ALL only have RF jacks) in order to get the "privilage" of paying more for DRM'd content that violates
Re:End of next year... (Score:2)
Cable companies HATE CableCard (Score:3, Interesting)
So what do they do?
As anyone with a CC equiped set know, they provide shitty service and support to cablecard customers. Staff I've talked to dont get informed. They have to search the web to go and find information on what TVs have difficulties and what to do about it to fix them. The software is still buggy, despite the FCC mandate that CableCard be operational on July 1 2004.
Too much integration = big, expensive TV to repair (Score:4, Insightful)
So, I saw this News.com FAQ the other day, and I had a talk with my boss before Christmas about this CableCard crap and when the best time buy an HDTV will be. When I talked with my boss, I researched the CableCard ready Toshiba DLP projection HDTVs that are in their lineup. Pricing was higher than their entry level DLP projection HDTVs, and certainly a lot more than my dinky rear projection HDTV that I just bought.
Anyway, my conversation with my boss got me thinking...what happens when the CableCard slot shorts out or fails after the first year of warranty coverage? What happens if one of these new integrated card readers on some of these HDTVs stops reading SD cards from your camera?
My thinking is this -- you just paid $3000+ for a nice HDTV with CableCard a year ago. Now, if you didn't get sucked into a bullshit store service plan for $500 which might not cover a failed CableCard slot, you're stuck with a relatively new TV that has trouble getting digital cable or satellite services. Or you've got a TV that, 1-2 more years, will have this nice little HOLE in the front of the console for that SD card that it can't read, thus screwing up your pricing if you decide to sell it used.
I say stop the integration with the most expensive piece of hardware in my entertainment center. I'm not paying $3000 for a receiver or a DVD player. Those are relatively inexpensive items that I can replace in a pinch if need be. But a $3000 TV ought to be stable enough -- in terms of integrated features -- that it won't require replacement or a repair for something that can just as easily reside in a satellite or cable receiver in my A/V rack.
Not to mention the fact that, if I DO have a service plan that will fix it, I run the risk of sending off my nice $3000+ HDTV to someplace that may F--- it up in transit or during repairs, or, based on stories about Best Buy service plans, not come back for 3-4 months. The TV should stay put, and keeping it simple -- without all this extra crap built in -- is the safer bet, I say.
Or at least make it a modular add-on to the back of the TV that can be purchased for a reasonable price and, thus, replaced if broken at a reasonable price.
IronChefMorimoto
Re:Too much integration = big, expensive TV to rep (Score:2)
Re:Too much integration = big, expensive TV to rep (Score:2)
The pricing fluctuations are NUTS!
IronChefMorimoto
Re:Too much integration = big, expensive TV to rep (Score:2)
This is basically equivalent to, "What if the tuner on my TV craps out after the warranty runs out?" The answer is the same: Pay to get it fixed, or buy/rent a set-top box/tuner that sends it's signal to your TV via a video port. Only now you'll have a choice of set-top boxes: the one the cable company provides, or competing cable-card equipped set-top b
Re:Too much integration = big, expensive TV to rep (Score:2)
That's exactly what the cable card is. And your fear of the cable card slot failing is one of the reasons that they don't do that very often. The connector for a modular add-on is far more likely to break than a solid state device. And if your modular add-on is, say, a memory card reader with physical connections being made and broken, that simply gives TWO highly likely points of failure instead of one.
Additionally, the cable card slot is not
TiVo's letter to the FCC regarding the CableCARD (Score:3, Interesting)
It is about Quality (Score:1)
Laptop? (Score:2)
My nearest PCMCIA slot is on the left side of my notebook. So, when do I finally get to watch TV on my laptop?
--Mike--
One-way is fine, give me a box that uses it! (Score:2)
That is a box with Tivo like features in terms of pausing live TV, but otherwise can act just like a VCR that happens to store recordings on the HD. I don't care about "season pass" style features, or at least could do without.
It would be nice not to have to pay a monthly fee for a guide service, and I have no need of PPV or VOD so really just being able to handily record TV (especially HDTV) without tapes is a high priority for me.
The HP "hub" sounded l
Re:One-way is fine, give me a box that uses it! (Score:2)
Several companies are coming out with them. Sony already announced the DHG-HDD500.
What I'd really like to see is a CableCard adaptor that would plug into the FireWire port on the Mac Mini.
This probably won't be allowed because the mini doesn't have enough DRM.
Re:One-way is fine, give me a box that uses it! (Score:2)
If this is all you want, you can probably have it now. Most cable companies are now offering such a product. They generally don't have the fancy TiVo features like being able to track a show if it changes time, automatically resolve
Yeah, but why fork over a monthly fee? (Score:2)
Now, the real question is if Dish in any way supports the Cable Card concept.
Re:Yeah, but why fork over a monthly fee? (Score:2)
You'll pay more because for a lot of people DVR features add value. CableCard will give you more choice as to whether you pay the extra money up front or spread out over months as a monthly rental. However, 3rd party boxes probably won't save you money, because it is likely that CableCard based devices will be aimed for t
Unanswered questions (Score:2, Interesting)
Can I pull my cablecard out of my TV, go to a friends house (who has the Same cable provider, and a cablecard ready TV) and plug in my cable card so I can watch the Channels that *I* paid for?
I bet it wont work that easily, and that I would have to end up calling the cable support line each time. If that's the case, then WHY in gods name is the little bugger so portable? It doesn't need to be.
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2)
Sure. Just make sure that your friend's cable is able to correctly receive the digital transponders. They are usually way above the analog channels in frequency, and if your friend's cable has been just plain 'ol basic television service (pobts?) for years, it may not be up to current spcifications. If that's the cas
WONDERFUL (Score:2)
GREAT....
CableCard is meant to replace set-top boxes. But it does not yet replicate all set-top box functions.
FASCINATING.
Wow, they got you hook, line, and sinker! (Score:2)
Cable Cards provide a "choice" of TV hardware in the same way that the Communist Party in Russia provided a "choice" of politicians -- that is to say, no choice at all.