




Tivo Institutes 1 Year Service Contracts 332
azoblue writes "TiVo recently changed their customer agreement, allowing them to institute service contracts with early cancellation fees." From the article: "According to the new service agreement, any TiVo activated after September 6 will require a 12-month commitment. Those who cancel before the end of their contract, or have their contracts terminated by TiVo, will be forced to pay a $150 early termination fee ... Although not specified in the new agreement, some customers have reported that adding a new TiVo to their service makes contracts activated before that date also applicable to the new policy."
Reasonable (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
It's reasonable for people that buy their FIRST Tivo. If the reports that adding an additional Tivo (rebates wouldn't apply as the user would already have existing service and wouldn't be elligible) causes your contract to change, then that's not reasonable.
Re:Reasonable (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Reasonable (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Reasonable (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Reasonable (Score:2, Informative)
But, if they do try to take advantage of it, and they know it, often times if legal action is mentioned, they will not bother with $150. That is small change if they only have to give it up once in a while.
Re:Reasonable (Score:5, Interesting)
The conversation went along the lines of...
Me: You have broken my phone. You need to fix the service or cancel the contract without penalty.
Cingular: We are aware of the problem, it is caused by our upgrades to the system. We can sell you a new phone, and move you to the Cingular network. That would solve the problem.
Me: Would that require a restart of the contract period? What would be the cost?
Cingular: Yes, it would restart your contract period. It would be about $10 more a month, and you would get 200 less minutes.
Me: Why would I sign a new contract with a company that has violated their existing contract, AND pay more for less minutes? That would be stupid of me wouldn't it?
Cingular: Well, I guess. There really isn't anything else we can do...
Me: No, you need to fulfill the existing contract.
Cingular: We can't do that.
Me: Then you are in breach of contract. To continue to bill me for a service that you know you are not providing is fraud.
Cingular: Well, if you read your contract, we don't guarantee service in all areas.
Me: I'm not complaining about various dead zones. I am complaining about zones that previously had service, and no longer has them. I am complaining about voice mail being delivered days later, and out of order. I am complaining about sitting still, and having calls disconnect.
Cingular: What would you like us to do about that?
Me: I would like you to fulfill your contract.
Cingular: Well, we don't like to do this, but we could cancel your contract.
Me: Without any penalty to me?
Cingular: Yes.
Me: Ok. That would be acceptable.
Re:Reasonable (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Reasonable (Score:5, Insightful)
That's bullshit. You can't unilaterally alter a pre-existing contract. It would be like buying a second cell phone on a second line, and being charged an early cancellation fee on both lines if you changed services, even though your first cell line is already fully-amortized.
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
Secondly, the agreement states:
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
If you choose not to take the rebate for some reason, then they're not going to charge you $150 extra on top of the cost of the unit.
N.
Re:Reasonable (Score:3, Interesting)
Not where I live, they don't. Any such act is illegal (Consumer Protection Act) and you can ignore the change.
Up here, any change must be given by written notice, prior to the change coming into effect, so that the consumer may cancel. In such cases, there can be no penalty assessed for "early cancellation". The contract may not be changed during the time of its fixed duration, either, so if they say 1 yea
Re:Reasonable (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
Hypothetically speaking: It depends on what's being offered. Cellular providers, for example, will often give you a free phone for a 1 or 2 year contract. This seems reasonable to me, they're giving you an up front savings. They also give you a month to back down, although I think this is a rec
Re:Reasonable (Score:2)
MythTV (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:MythTV (Score:2, Informative)
Re:MythTV (Score:2)
Re:MythTV (Score:3, Funny)
Link? (Score:2)
Re:Link? (Score:5, Informative)
I've had a Replay for 2 years now, haven't had any problems with them removing services or anything. Commercial skip still works, etc. It even has a network port. If I download the right software I can grab those shows. They even have a website where you can set your unit. (it takes 24 hours for the changes to take effect, though. It makes sense considering it only calls home once a day.)
With that said, though, I think the unit is going bye bye. It's not out of disatisfaction, though. Comcast has a DVR option now. I've had it for a couple of months and I like it. There are some downsides to it. I cannot hit it over the network. It doesn't have auto commercial skip. I think it has less capacity than the Replay, though it has enough I haven't noticed much. I liked Replay's interface better, it handles categorization etc. (I.e. My girlfriend had her own group and I had mine.) Sounds like a crummy unit, right? Nah. Thing is, I have digital cable. I couldn't get the Replay to work with the digital cable. (well... supposedly I can get an IR thingy for it, but as I say more here you'll understand why it's not of much importance to me.) So I cannot record HBO etc with the Replay. The Replay lets you watch TV and pause etc, but it's not as elegant as Comcast's DVR does it. It's slower to change channels etc. Even when I only had analog cable, I despised using the Replay this way. I think the Replay I have only has one tuner. The Comcast box I have now has two, and it's come in handy. I also like that the Comcast DVR doesn't eat up a network port. That's the main reason I'm seriously considering getting a second unit for the bedroom. I only wish those two units would talk to each other so that stuff I record in the bedroom could be watched in the living room. It doesn't auto skip commercials but fast fowarding is easy enough. To make a long story short, the Replay has merits above the Comcast DVR, but I'm happier with the Comcast box. Mainly, though, the difference is my preference for digital cable.
In any event, you have choices out there. I don't know if your cable company has a DVR. If you don't, the Replay is a fine unit. Honestly, I prefer the Replay over TiVo to begin with. I know a guy with a DVR on his satellite reciever. He's happy with it, though I'd highly recommend one with two tuners. That's bitten him a few times.
Re:MythTV (Score:4, Informative)
Re:MythTV (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually nothing. The interface may be better, I don't have a TiVo. What's going on here is U.S. Cable conglomerates being greedy. You're in Canada I take it being on Rogers. In the U.S. cable providers don't make their boxes available to buy at Best Buy, Circuit City, ect. If you did manage to procure a box (like by keeping one from your cable provider or buying one on eBay) the new provider would refuse to authorize it on their systems. In fact, if I remember right, buying digital cable boxes online is illegal (probably since the boxes are never meant to be sold and therefore are considered stolen property on the marketplace). And now they've probably added DMCA stuff to the mix.
If you want to record a digital cable station while watching another you can either rent a second converter box to use solely with your TiVo or other PVR (none of which can deencrypt the digital signal on their own), or rent a PVR with dual tuners from your cable company. U.S. cable companies will not allow you to purchase outright any digital cable box, only rent.
Cable companies sucker people in with the extra channels on digital cable, not mentioning how it will keep them from being able to record and watch the higher channels without paying a second box fee like they have been able to with analog cable and a VCR for decades. Plus, they do stuff like disable the S-video port of cable boxes so TiVo can't make the box tune stations on it's own. When you call and complain, they will be sympathetic, then they'll offer you a DVR rental for a low monthly fee to alleviate your sudden issues using TiVo.
Re:MythTV (Score:3, Funny)
I'm sor
Re:MythTV (Score:3, Informative)
I've had my 8300 PVR for about six months now with only one problem in that time. A single episode of Voyager got corrupted, which wasn't so bad, since it was a rerun and sucked anyway.
MythTV questions (Score:2)
This is the stuff Google doesn't help with, and I don't know where to try out a MythTV box without going through the hassle of setting it up myself. Basically I'm asking this. Does TiVo : MythTV
Re:MythTV questions (Score:2, Interesting)
Here are some screenshots [mythtv.org] to peruse.
I dithered between the idea of getting another Tivo (one not tied to DirectTV) and building a MythTV box. After their glitch, which allowed people to see the content restrictions that can be put in place, I've decided to build my own.
It'll take a few months though. Until then, I'll stick with the old fashioned way of recording. Setting the channels before I leave the house, and sett
Re:MythTV questions (Score:2)
Screenshots only tell half the story, though. How about responsiveness? Visual cues? I don't care about useless animations like in XP, but little things like zooms, fades, wipes, even subtle blinking UI elements can really give you a sense that you know what's going on, that you're in co
Re:MythTV questions (Score:2)
As far as responsiveness, I can't tell you, since I haven't yet build a box. I suspect that will depend, much like any other computer operating system, on the CPU and amount of memory.
Hopefully, it'll be as, if not more responsive as Tivo was most of the time.
H.
Re:MythTV questions (Score:4, Informative)
Why so long? You want to know a little secret from one satisfied MythTV user to a potential user? Seperate your backend system from the front end you're going to hook up to your TV. It'll add more to the cost but you will appreciate it in the long run. I use a plain old AMD Athlon 1.4 GHZ system with 512MB of RAM and two Hauppauge WinTV PVR 250 cards on the backend and a little diskless book-sized system on the frontend using a Via EPIA M10000 motherboard and MiniMyth [linpvr.org].
The advantage to going this way is that the backend can be very low-end (a PIII-500MHz or slower would be sufficient) since the MPEG2 encoding is done on the Hauppauge cards. The frontends are also pretty low end (mine is around 1GHz) but they have built in MPEG2 decoder hardware on the motherboard so they use very little CPU while playing back video.
If you run Debian unstable you can get pre-built packages from Matt Zimmerman's web site, so the hard part is getting the IVTV drivers working so you can capture video from the PVR 250 cards. It's well documented and they've stabilized a lot in the last 2 years. My setup has been running without any problems since March when I finally traced back some issue I was having with 0-byte size recordings to an IRQ sharing conflict. Once I disabled the USB and parallel ports I wasn't using and put each tuner on a separate IRQ in the BIOS it's been rock solid. Once you get the capture cards working, mythtv itself is simple to setup. apt-get install the packages, follow the setup prompts, and then run the mythtv setup program to configure your tuners, setup your guide data download preferences (North America uses the free Zap2It Labs Data Direct service that downloads listings in a nice XML format (labs.zap2it.com).
I've been using MythTV for two and a half years now and I honestly never get jealous of TiVo or ReplayTV users. If anything I pity them for being locked into a proprietary pay service with their video locked on a hard drive which forces you to jump through hoops to get at it.
Where is the Tivo we all used to love? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, with rebates that bring the devices under $50 and their recent radically retarded decisions such as presenting ads to users that bought a Tivo to rid themselves of ads, etc, it's no wonder they are going to these lengths!
I was the first to support Tivo for what their device and service did for my household. I am also the first to complain to Tivo and Slashdot (and various others including my parents who I had originally suggested a Tivo) that their service is no longer worth it.
Good riddance Tivo. While I still use your product (DirecTivo), I'm glad I'm not obligated to fall under any of your contractual and flighty mishaps.
And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:4, Insightful)
Digital cable (even basic cable) is getting extremely high priced, and this is with no DVR style record feature. Not keen on a satelite dish either, heard some horror stories from other family members and friends.
TiVo looked great, record what you want when you want so you never miss something. Skip commericals (bout frakking time) and more. Now they've taken some ancient MSN/AOL type deal where you gotta have a service plan contract? Sorry, no thank you.
What if something where to happen where you couldn't afford that TiVo every month? (Granted yes money management saves alot but anyone can fall on tough times), you suddenly gotta cough up $150 flat fee cause you needed to save a few monthly payments and use it for gas or food? Yea, that'll go over real well.
Watch for a slow rise in the bittorrent community in the coming year or so as more TiVo like providers probably switch to similar "plans".
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
Grump
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
The only problems that you'll really have are when the di
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
Nevermind. After stalking you...er...reading your bio, you live up north and I'm in socal. It's a different complex.
Anyway, I'm trying to build a PVR box and I haven't even gotten far enough to find the channels (NVTV card requires XP MCE..and i'm using xp home)
Grump
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
I've been using it for a couple of weeks now, and it's not so bad.
-- Joe
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
about my internet'tv situation:
I'm a UCR (riverside) student and I live in a student housing complex. My services are provided by ygnition (ygniton.com). When I moved in, they only said to plug into the walljack, phone service would be turned on in a day or 2 and tv should be working. No NAT or proxies.
Been here for a week, the
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
From the looks of the news coming out of TiVo lately, my decision to bypass TiVo was a good one.
Re:And TiVo drops out of the contendership (Score:2)
I'm paying $80 a month right now for digital cable (including HBO and Showtime) and a DVR. Could I be doing much better than that with satellite? I don't know if it helps, but I'm just north of Santa Barbara in California. I say 'much better' because I also have a cable modem (that's another $40
Reverse (Score:3, Insightful)
Scaring Away Customers? (Score:2, Insightful)
And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:5, Informative)
Very..."unconfortable"...
From boing boing:
Earlier this month, TiVo owners discovered that a mandatory, non-optional "update" to their TiVos changed the built-in software so that broadcasters could flag certain shows for automatic deletion and for restriction from use with TiVoToGo. David Zatz, a TiVo owner, decided to cancel his TiVo service. After all, he'd bought a device that could record all shows, not one that could record all shows save those that some paranoid Hollywood exec, overzealous broadcaster, or fumble-fingered technician gave him permission to record. TiVo had broken his device and he didn't want to keep using it. But when he looked up canceling his TiVo, he found out that under the terms of his "agreement" with TiVo (e.g., the crap he clicked through when get got set up), he was obliged to pay a $150 "early cancellation" fee.
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:2)
Irrelevant. You don't have to pay to break a contract the other party has already broken.
TWW
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:2)
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:2)
IANAL, but I'm fairly sure it's illegal to add "services" to a contract without a signed contract amendment... which would include anything they're charging money for.
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:2)
I could see big issues with local control (for example, if the local cable company decides that they want to sell their own PVRs instead of people buying TiVos, and insert the protect-flag everywhere to make owning a TiVo less appealing than their own receiver).
I know that Tivo "claimed" this was the case, but if it was a local flag as opposed to something downloaded in the guide from TiVoHQ, it would be simple to build a fil
Re:And what about single-side-contract change? (Score:2)
This is why (Score:2, Insightful)
Sell the blades, give away the razor... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nothing new here, move along...
Re:Sell the blades, give away the razor... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sell the blades, give away the razor... (Score:2)
Re:Sell the blades, give away the razor... (Score:2)
Really, this hurts their chances in the second hand market. I would like to try Tivo on a series one model and eBay is a good place to get one. I can't spend $300 out of my pocket and refuse to sign a contract (that I might not be able to see to it's end because changing finances), so now I'll never really see Tivo in my home.
They could have had a nice second revenue stream from people activating older units but now if I'm for
Re:Sell the blades, give away the razor... (Score:2)
re: So what? Bad move on their part. (Score:2)
My Tivo actually died on me (appears to be a faulty CPU since it boots to the initial splash screen ok, but then goes to a black screen with some kind of error about an unexpected instruction and stops). Even though I already had a lifetime membership for it, I'm unab
I don't get it... (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, a few years ago, Tivo was a wonderful, one-of-a-kind service. Back then, maybe something like this would fly. But now, with virtually every cable company out there offering their own DVRs, the novelty of having a tivo has pretty much worn off. Sure, nobody's DVR can match the ease of use or features of a Tivo, but I don't think a tivo is worth the $150 price premium they're imposing on their users.
I have two Tivos, a 40 hour and a 140 hour. I have them cuz they 'just work', and I haven't gotten around to building a stable MythTV box yet. I'm also a Tivo Rewards member, with 6 referrals under my belt. With this new pricing strategy, those two Tivos will be the last I ever buy, and I'll never recommend a Tivo to anybody again.
Tivo contract (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tivo contract (Score:2)
Most cell phone contracts are now 2-year agreements. Also, if you upgrade your phone, your timer resets and are now responsible for another 2 years.
Decisions, decisions... (Score:5, Informative)
I really want to sell the whole thing that cost me over $400 to build and switch to a Tivo. With Tivo, I could spend $200 on a box (get $150 back in a rebate) and pay $14/mo for service. Sounds good so far. This 1-yr contract doesn't bother me as much (like with my cell phone) as long as the thing works. The only real worry is the DRM and the fact that they control their service from afar.
I know people are going to say "blah blah, this is why you should switch to MythTV." Has anyone been successful in prototyping a Mythbox (such that it just works for long periods of time without having to worry about tweaks and workarounds)? If so, please tell me how.
Otherwise, I'm afraid Tivo seems the better way to go if you value your free time.
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
The ivtvdev_drv.o for X11 was a royal pain to compile, I had to apt-get source xserver-xfree86 and build the deb so that I had a configured X11 tree otherwise XV wouldn't be enabled and it'd be slower than crap.
Limitation
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:5, Informative)
Sure, I've had a stable MythTV server for over 12 months. I've got 350GB striped storage, DVB tuners and multiple frontends (Mac, Xbox, Laptop).
Easy.
That last lesson is the hardest to learn. Once you stop "tweaking" the damn thing, it stops breaking.
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2, Interesting)
Replay (Score:2)
Tivo has some nasty approaches to DRM and content expiration. If you like Myth, you'll probably be happier with a networked OOBE, DRM-free thing like ReplayTV [avsforum.com].
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
Re:Stupid question for you: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Stupid question for you: (Score:2)
Probably a Gentoo issue of some kind.
Re:Decisions, decisions... (Score:2)
You sound retarded.
-transiit
This ahs to do with a rebate they're giving (Score:5, Informative)
Evil is bliss (Score:4, Informative)
That being said, maybe they think people will just bend over and take it, since their sattelite dishes and cable TV usually requires a service contract too.
Re:Evil is bliss (Score:2)
Somewhat true. (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyways, the service contracts seem to be for those customers who get the rebate from TiVo, in order to ensure that TiVo doesn't lose money offering up $150 rebates to new customers.
It's TiVo's marketshare to lose anyways.
That would be illegal in some countries (Score:2)
Dying, dying, dead? (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, what's the status of being able to skip over commercials? Is this still allowed or has it been significantly changed from the way it was originally? Might this new 12-month commitment presage an end to being able to skip commercials? (So that p
Somewhat OT: HDTV DVR? (Score:2)
What is the current state of the art in High Definition DVRs? I know that TiVo put one out about a year and a half ago, but stories like this make me hesitant to deal with TiVo.
I have DirecTV, which means that if I use 'their' DVR, I'm still using a TiVo. (right?)
Mostly, what I want is:
1) Ability to do with HDTV the same thing I can do with SDTV today -- time shift, pause, ski
I guess I won't get a TiVo (Score:2)
I can get Replay, but I heard it has subscription fee too.
MythTV is nice, but I don't have time to set it up and maintain it (stuff break down, need upgrades, etc.). I prefer hardware base.
Re:I guess I won't get a TiVo (Score:2)
I also have an ATI Radeon 980 Pro AIW. Oy, hard to keep it stable. It is buggy. Hence, why I am avoiding software based PVRs.
Re:I guess I won't get a TiVo (Score:2)
I bought their PVR-500 bundle, Sage TV and remote. I've invested probably 10 hours in the machine to get it wife-approved.
Now, she won't watch TV any other way!
Re:I guess I won't get a TiVo (Score:2)
The story is wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
Since you can buy TiVo units for a cost of $50 now (and for a brief time, you could actually make a $50 PROFIT buying a $100 TiVo on Amazon and getting a $150 rebate) it only makes sense for TiVo to protect themselves from people buying cheap units for the rebate, then dumping them on eBay.
A long time ago, I spoke to one of the top executives at TiVo, he told me that they make no money on hardware sales, they gave all those profits to the hardware manufacturers, they make money only on subscriptions and subsidiary projects like advertising. TiVo is giving up $150, the equivalent of a full year's subscription fees, just to move more hardware. It is a gift to their hardware producing partners. It only makes sense for TiVo to protect themselves from unscrupulous buyers exploiting this project.
Re:The story is wrong. (Score:2)
MCE (Score:5, Interesting)
I think (Score:5, Funny)
Who are these "on the fence" people?? (Score:5, Insightful)
As for this most recent news article, it shouldn't affect anyone who's thought about this for more than 10-15 seconds.. Paying the $12/month fee is a suckers game - they let you pay a one-time fee (originally $199, then $249, now I think $299) for the LIFETIME of the unit.. If you have it more than 2 years, the lifetime subscription paid for itself and you're free - if you opted to pay $12 per month, you're losing money.
Who are these slashdot readers who are getting paid so poorly that they can't afford $299 up-front instead of the screw-you-layaway-plan option? They are the only ones who are affected or should be complaining about this change.
Every time TiVo makes some change that lets them stay alive, someone's there to complain that they're not going with them now. No one's buying it - you're not getting the company to change their plan - they're not reading slashdot to see if you're happy about it or not.
Oh yeah - one last thing.. From now on, anyone considering getting a TiVo: TiVo Inc just made it easier to see that the $$/month is a sucker's game.. To "make out" on that deal you'd have to buy a TiVo, decide AFTER a year that you don't like it, but BEFORE two years.. Then maybe you'd save UP TO $150.. Again - who is making these low salaries?!
(and yes, I know DirecTivo people don't have the lifetime option - but then again DirecTV isn't marketing DirecTiVos anymore either)
Re:Who are these "on the fence" people?? (Score:2)
You clearly love your Tivo so I'll put this in terms you'll easily understand: Baaaaaa baaaaa baaaaaa. (I'm sorry if my spelling is bad,
Because I'm ****ing unemployed (Score:2)
Who are these slashdot readers who are getting paid so poorly that they can't afford $299 up-front instead of the screw-you-layaway-plan option?
Find me an entry-level programming job in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and I might find the $299. Monster, CareerBuilder, and Dice haven't helped.
Again - who is making these low salaries?!
Some of them must be people who graduated from university with a B.Sc. in computer science only to find massive unemployment and who accepted part-time minimum wage jobs while wa
Re:Because I'm ****ing unemployed (Score:2)
Shit I didn't even own a TV until after I graduated and had a job a few months.
What ever happened to paying your own way through life?
oh, ffs... (Score:2, Insightful)
the box is obviously worth something, so if I cancel before some reasonable time I'd expect to pay for that box (or return the box).
Surely that isn't difficult to understand?
False headline. No Digg (Score:2, Informative)
I wonder which news (cough) source will post the same bullshit headline next.
Ahh, sensationalism at work.
true cost of tivo (Score:2, Informative)
Second, buy a lifetime contract. I have three tivos, all with lifetime contracts. For $299, the service is available for the life of the unit. And that doesn't mean that once the HD fails you are out. You can
Re:Who are these "on the fence" people?? (Score:2)
That would be those of us still in college, or recently graduated doing the proverbial "grunt work" of the IT world like Helpdesk untill better stuff comes along.
But don't sweat it my man, us poor folk run linux+Myth, have unprotected mpeg2 (or 4) files of everything, and can with a few taps back it up to DVDs, and oh yea, program guides and timeshifting for NO CHARGE EVER - so who is the sucker now?
What
Half the posts here are viral marketing (Score:2)
Not that big a deal! (Score:4, Insightful)
You're getting the $199 Tivo for $49 and are bitching that it is linked to a 1-year minimum contract. So you bitch about a $199 box and tell Tivo they should make it cheaper. They figure out a way to absorb the cost only to have you bitch about that.
P.S. Yes, I realize all the DRM crap Tivo is pulling -- but as far as I can tell, it is unrelated to the rebate/service agreement setup they've got going.
Options (Score:4, Informative)
Commercial Products and Services:
ReplayTV [digitalnetworksna.com]: TiVo's ancient nemesis, it also 'just works'. I can't say whether it is more user friendly than TiVo, but it is far more customer friendly.
Windows XP Media Center Edition [microsoft.com]: Yes, them. Choose from multiple manufacturers but expect to face Microsoft Corp's version of the 'personal' computing experience.
Hardware vendors are now pushing DVD/HD Recording devices quite a bit. RCA [rcaaudiovideo.com], Motorola [motorola.com] and Panasonic have products available.
Service Providers like Comcast [comcast.com] and DishTV [dishtv.com] are now providing time shifting hardware and tv-on-demand solutions. Check with your choice of cable or satellite service provider.
Hobbyist Solutions:
MythTV [mythtv.org]: The Open Source, Do-It-Yourself DVR. Expect to build your own machine and play around a bit before it works the way you want. (Linux)
Freevo [sourceforge.net]: MythTV, but not. (Linux)
MediaPortal [sourceforge.net]: Who ever said Open Source was limited to Linux software? (Windows)
Meedio [meedio.com]: It was a community based freeware product (myHTPC) that morphed into a commercial product without warning. Still a reasonable alternative to Microsoft for PVR function on the Windows platform. (Windows)
eyeTV [elgato.com]: This Mac product has me seriously considering picking up a Mini-Mac to use as a media center [engadget.com]. (Apple)
SnapStream [snapstream.com] (Windows)
SageTV [www.sage.tv] (Windows)
Chris-TV [chris-tv.com] (Windows)
ShowShifter [showshifter.com] (Windows)
On a personal note, I purchased the ReplayTV when it was first released and am entirely satisfied with it. Plus, by purchasing early I have never had to pay a subscription fee for data that is freely available elsewhere. If there had been a subscription fee I would not have purchased it.
Dan
Re:Termination fee? (Score:2)