Software PVRs Becoming Tivo Killers 439
mikemuch writes "ExtremeTech's Jason Cross examines PVR software that runs on Windows -- applications from SnapStream, Cyberlink, and SageTV. With TiVo's mounting price hikes, service contracts, and 'features' like self-deleting shows, the DIY option is getting more appealing all the time." From the article: "All the major TV features you're used to with TiVo or Windows Media Center Edition are there--quick 30 second skip, padding show recordings (start early and stop late), a nice integrated guide with easy-to-read program info. The interface design isn't quite as good as either of those two other options, but it's one of the best we've seen in a Windows-based PVR application outside of MCE. If we had to pick an annoyance, it's that you can't seem to bring up the program guide or navigate the menu without stopping the live TV or recording that you're watching. TiVo plays the current TV program in the background, and MCE plays it in a small window in the lower left. We didn't miss it until it was gone."
MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:5, Interesting)
I tried EVERY other Win & Lin PVR and none were as stable or easy to install/use. The new Rollup2 for MCE adds copy/view restrictions but they're relying on the video driver and encoder to pass the flag. I found a driver that doesn't pass the flag, and I'm happy.
I'd love to switch to Meedio or MythTV but recent trials a few weeks ago vetoed the idea. Stability and ease of use weren't there yet. MCE is a performance hog but it works. No kludges, never crashes and really integrates well in my house with the Xbox Extender.
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:2)
My reason... (Score:5, Interesting)
I can't speak for the parent, but one reason I'm attracted to MythTV is because of external modules, stuff like MythGame, MythWeather, MythPhone, etc.
As for TiVo, they still (for now) have one big advantage for me: I'm a DirecTV subscriber, and TiVo is the only device that will record the digital signal instead of the analog conversion. When DirecTV starts offering their own DVRs, I'll probably start using it instead. I love my TiVo and MythTV, but the most important thing to me is seeing what I watch in its glorious original quality.
Re:My reason... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:My reason... (Score:2)
TiVo Too (Score:4, Informative)
Re:My reason... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:5, Insightful)
Every MythTV I've built has involved future phone calls. I've followed guides and tried various installs. When my home MythTV burped, it was hours of hitting forums to resolve.
I've been building PCs (Win & Lin) for 19 years. I love Linux, but MythTV is ill supported.
Funny thing... I had to call MS once for an MCE issue, and tech support figured it out in 10 minutes.
When a F/OSS PVR passes the WAF, I'll keep it.
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:5, Funny)
10. Less chance of catching VD.
9. Laundry always clean
8. Personal Memory Backup
7. Cheaper insurance rates
6. Morning Sex
5. Ego boost (she's hott)
4. Someone to procreate with without threat of lawsuit or ridiculous child support hassles
3. Inside jokes get better
2. Introduction to non-AnCap views
1. Morning Sex
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:5, Insightful)
I was "lucky" to run a very successful BBS starting at age 12. By 14 I was earning enough to move it to a commercial space, basically moving out from home.
I don't know how old you are, but I can give you some advice...
First, if you have even the slightest desire to marry some day, NEVER live with a girlfriend . Ever. Even a fiance. Live together after the wedding.
Why? Cohabitating can create very bad codependencies. You need to test your girlfriend's ability to make it on her own. Don't seriously date girls who live at home. Casual dating is fine with them.
Don't date girls in massive debt. Don't date girls with all guy friends and 1 girlfriend, or girls who say "I hate girls." Don't date girls that your friends don't like or that don't like your friends. Don't date girls who can only have a good time drinking or smoking up.
With that out of the way, it shouldn't be hard to find a girl who can handle your PC "addiction," or in my case, gadget addiction. The "no" girls I listed above will have a propensity towards jealousy -- over friends, family and even toys.
My lady met me when I had 7 PCs at home. Now I only have 1 media PC and 1 PDA, but not because of her. I'm bored with technology. I know she'd love a new notebook at home
If you can use your PC skills to strike out on your own (consult), she'll see value. Even better, build a tech bench with a power strip on a timer -- have it force you off between 5pm and 8pm for spouse time!
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:3, Funny)
we call these girls "one night stands"
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:2, Troll)
Less EVIL?
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:4, Funny)
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:5, Informative)
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately -- TRY GB-PVR (Score:4, Informative)
Both of these fine products are easier to setup than MythTV or Freevo (I tried those too).
Just another alternative to MCE.
Re:MCE for me, unfortunately (Score:3)
I currently have a TiVo, which my wife loves, but I've been looking for a long time for a more integrated solution that can play media from my computer. However, all the current component solutions suck or aren't particularly user friendly. Then I was over at my friends' house one night with my wife and he had his MCE machine up and running. While playing with it, my wife exclaimed "Ooh, I want one of these". That wa
Re:Easy to use Windows PVR software: GB-PVR (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Easy to use Windows PVR software: GB-PVR (Score:3, Informative)
This is one topic I'm rather passionate about and I'm always talking to my co-workers about PVRs and how having one has changed my viewing habits. For example, we (the wife and I) just used to watch whatever was on and our experience wasn't the best. But now, we find that we watch what we want to and consequently, watch less TV overall.
Personally, I'm really excited because GB-PVR has a built in M [hauppauge.com]
Re:Easy to use Windows PVR software: GB-PVR (Score:2)
That said, thanks for the pointer... I'll have to check it out.
Windows based? Who cares? (Score:2, Insightful)
And with all the DRM and such on windows these days, who would WANT to run a windows based PVR? Ignoring of course that adding xp pro to some hardware pumps the cost of that PVR by $150
-GenTimJS
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
People who have ATi graphics cards and/or people who would rather buy such a graphics/DVR capable card from the local Best Buy or CompUSA instead of ordering a specialized Linux supporting card from a more obscure source.
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:2, Informative)
-GenTimJS
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:2)
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:2)
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:4, Interesting)
Why mess around with a Windows-based PVR, when there's Linux and OS X?
I've seen enough Windows-based solutions to be 100% positive that I made the right decision going with a Mac and the EyeTV 500. If I cared about streaming video all over the house, I probably would have looked at getting my fingernails dirty with MythTV on Linux, but I don't so the Mac does a fine job of what I want.
So why even look at whatever "me too" offering the Windows world is currently coming up with? Go for one of the obvious choices and spend your time agonizing over which projector to buy.
Re:Windows based? Who cares? (Score:3, Informative)
Prepare... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Prepare... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, I don't expect this to be modded, seeing as it's an analysis of the commentary on what people might post about the article about MythTV. Too much meta-shit. Guess I'm a karma whore too, today.
Not for Joe Public (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not for Joe Public (Score:3, Interesting)
I was using the Comcast PVR and was impressed that it allowed me the ability to record TWO shows at the same time AND watch TV! I am not sure if this is due to the picture in a picture (2 tuners) and haven't had time to look this up yet but if I would LOVE to be able to record two shows using my TiVo.
Re:Not for Joe Public (Score:2)
That won't help. The Standalone Tivo only has one MPEG encoder, so it can only record one thing at a time.
The Directv/Tivo records the digital streams directly to the hard drive (no encoders needed), which is why it's fairly easy to record 2 things at once (it couldn't when originally released, but that was fixed with a software update)
Re:Not for Joe Public (Score:3, Insightful)
When and if TIVO starts implementing the auto-delete feature on shows, I may re-evaluate. (if it affects what I watch) but for now Tivo is still great.
People have to accept that rights management is something we're going have to de
Price Point (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Price Point (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, why wont it be up 24/7? My desktop (and I figure most user's on slashdot) has been up for the past 9 months with 2 days of downtime.
Re:Price Point (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Price Point (Score:2)
http://www.snapstream.com/Community/Articles/medu
Re:Price Point (Score:2)
OOS: Freevo and MythTV (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:OOS: Freevo and MythTV (Score:2, Insightful)
Software PVR killed my Tivo. (Score:3, Funny)
Need a clue here- (Score:5, Insightful)
But what confuses me is this: All the "new" features they keep adding, seem like a step backward to me, are these features forced upon you regardless of device you have, or are "1st Gen" model TiVOs and whatnot, valuable property for ignoring all the new stuff?
Re:Need a clue here- (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Need a clue here- (Score:3, Insightful)
This one [theonion.com] is also appropos.
BTW...did I mention I don't own a TV? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Need a clue here- (Score:2)
Personally, I have a Mac and an EyeHome.
My interest runs to documentaries. BBC, Australian Television, Finland... These folks seem to run far superior and more informational programs then any I could find on the Paint By Numbers networks in the US. Thanks to the Net and to folks who like me are sick of the cra
Great timing on the topic (Score:2, Informative)
http://freevo.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]
or
http://www.mythtv.org/ [mythtv.org]
or is there another option I'm missing?
Re:Great timing on the topic (Score:5, Insightful)
But then again I'm a Mac person, and I value things that just work.
Re:Great timing on the topic (Score:2)
The BeyondTV install is quite simple: you go through a quick and decently-designed series of questions and prompts, and then it works. No crashes, no weird messages, no screwing up a planned recording when you're out of the house. In fac
Re:Great timing on the topic (Score:2, Informative)
Software PVRs don't do digital (Score:2)
What abour your cable provider? (Score:2)
It, too, carries an additional fee, but it's actually the same price to get a second box for your home. At that point, it's about the same price as just replacing your original one.
I'm not affiliated with Comcast in any way besides being a
Re:What abour your cable provider? (Score:2)
Windows only? (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Windows only? (Score:2)
Re:Windows only? (Score:2)
What about MediaPortal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What about MediaPortal? (Score:2)
Re:What about MediaPortal? (Score:4, Informative)
BeyondTV for portability (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:BeyondTV for portability (Score:2)
Re:BeyondTV for portability (Score:2)
The poor man's PVR: Hauppauge PVR-150, Burner with DVD+RW media, and a walk down the stairs to the DVD player.
Net cost: $99CDN, plus perhaps $15 for a 25 pack of DVD+RWs.
Before mentioning alternatives, please re-read th
80 GB and then some... (Score:3, Insightful)
With the ability, for years, to record straight to my HD I couldn't think of a decent reason to get a TiVo. Heck, I even get TV schedules and can pick and choose what to record, when and it came with my ATI video card. No funny business, telling me what I can and can't record, how long it lasts, what I can do with it, etc. It's all a bunch of MPEG files and plays as good as when I recorded it.
This all subject to change when everything goes HD.
I have my OWN TiVO Killer... (Score:5, Funny)
Get ready for "Tivo SUCKS use MythTV to be cool" (Score:2)
just add up the phone and gas charges there to see the infamous "price points"
Noooooo, thats so last year. (Score:3, Interesting)
And, in fact, they both suck because neither supports QAM/CableCard HD.
Until there are input cards that accept a cablecard, software PVRs will always be a fringe hobbiest activity. Joe six pack doesn't want to deal with the hassle, so Tivo or a service-provided DVR makes more sense. And anyone who has bought one of the 16.5 million HD sets in the US doesn't find them terribly useful either. I have three Tivos sitting in my storage unit
Re:Noooooo, thats so last year. (Score:2)
Re:Noooooo, thats so last year. (Score:3, Informative)
A few nitpicks:
I don't think a new version called "Media Center Edition 2006" was ever planned or announced. The article's introduction [extremetech.com] referred to the "massive Rollup 2 patch," which is a free update to MCE 2005. This update was supposed to include Cable Card support, but this feature was cut (according to Microsoft's Matt Davis). Here's the blog entry where I re
Tivo Advertising a Household Name (Score:3, Interesting)
Although some of these references may have just been for the hell of it, like on talk shows, when the name comes up in sitcoms and dramas, it's pretty safe to assume the plug was paid for.
Living in the southern US, everyone down here likes to refer to generic products by their brand name. Every soda in the word becomes a "Coke" even if its a Pepsi, every portable mp3 player becomes an "iPod" even if it's an "iPlay" and now ever PVR device is being referred to as a "TiVo" when it's really a Comcast PVR (which is probably made by Motorola or some other company).
TiVo might go away, but the name will stick in every household.
Coca Clola's trademark ploice must be slipping. (Score:2)
Coca Cola has (or used to have) its own trademark police that would bring infringement suit threats (or suits) to bear on any restaura
You Can't beat the Cable Companies Offerings... (Score:3, Insightful)
The standard offerings by cable companies are pretty good. Cost $5 a month for standard definition PVRs or $10 a month for the HD PVRs.
That $10 a month for the HD PVR is practically untouchable. There just isn't any HD PVR solutions that are comparable. I am talking about more than just the over the air HD content that MythTV, et. all. can record. HBO-HD, InHD, TnTHD, Discovery HD, etc.
You can get cable boxes that output HD over firewire for recording purposes, but those firewire devices must respect the "Broadcast Flag" like signal the cable companies have implented. IE, you don't control the content coming from that port.
I am coming from an HD centric view point. SD centric viewers obviously have more choices and options available to them.
Re:You Can't beat the Cable Companies Offerings... (Score:3, Interesting)
DVR Computer vs. Appliance (Score:2)
Ideally, I would like to have a device that is: cheap (I only want to spend more than $300), small (limited space near TV), quiet (I don't like to have noisy devices on all the time), and extensible (I like adding neat stuff like weather, games or my own custom programs).
Ideally, I would like a small, quiet comput
DirecTV (Score:2)
Dish Network DVR (Score:2, Interesting)
MCE and PowerCinema (Score:2, Informative)
Slashdot idiocy (Score:5, Informative)
What series of price hikes are you referring to? The prices for the Tivos themselves have been consistently dropping, albeit with rebates (and the before rebate prices haven't been going up). The monthly subscription fee has increased just once in the past several years - certainly not at all in the 2+ years I've been a subscriber - and the multi-unit fee has actually DROPPED.
I'm guessing you've never had a Tivo - you just get all your "facts" from Slashdot discussions?
Re:Slashdot idiocy (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Slashdot idiocy (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Slashdot idiocy (Score:4, Insightful)
Broadcast Flag (Score:2)
I know that pcHDTV [pchdtv.com] is safe. Have any of the other manufacturers, such as ATI, already built in Broadcast Flag capabilities?
Good free one (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Meedio/MeedioTV - buggy as hell. And slow. It's also very new, as in a few months (MeedioTV is, at least). Looks nice, though.
2) SageTV - the built-in video browser/viewer isn't that good. I found setting up plugins sort of a pain, and I could never easily get ComSkip to work well. Maybe it was just me. It's also kind of pricey.
3) BeyondTV - no videomedia component at all; you have to separately purchase BeyondMedia. Other than that, I like this one the best. Never really tried messing with any plugins.
4) GBPVR - pretty good as is, much better with the MyVideos plugin and some other plugins that are very painless to install. Downside is none of the skins, even the MCE port, are attractive at all. Also, sometimes there's a lag between hitting a key and getting a response. Few crashes, less than Meedio but more than Sage/BeyondTV (I have roughly one crash every 3 weeks, running 24/7). Have to renew your Zap2It profile every three months to get an EPG, which is kind of annoying. Installing ComSkip a breeze, and it will auto-ship commercials (BTV and Sage require you to press some button during commercials to skip them, presumably for legal reasons; I'm not sure with Meedio).
There you go. There are plenty of other ones, like Media Portal or Myth. I've never tried MCE, though, and most people I talk to like that best if for no other reason than the WAF (wife acceptance factor). Likely, my gf prefers software she's used to, and since I already showed her how GBPVR works, she's happy with it. As long as Desperate Housewives and The Daily Show are recorded, the GBP-vo stays.
they are going for quiet? (Score:2)
So they use a P4 at 3.2GHz? Extremetech just built the opposite of what 90% of homebuilt PVRs out there are using.
GB-PVR (Score:2)
Records MPEG files, works under Windows, and its FREE!
What's wrong with Tivo? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What's wrong with Tivo? (Score:3, Insightful)
ATI MMC, alternatives, my 2 cents, etc. (Score:2)
I would like its automated scheduler to be record with TV-On-Demand method so I can go back to the beginning watch whi
Let's be honest here (Score:2)
Maybe the "new features" don't agree with people. (Score:2)
The lack of HD stuff - especiall
you folks do realize... (Score:2)
Why pay for MCE? (Score:2, Interesting)
MediaPortal for Windows is FREE (Score:2, Interesting)
TiVo's true source of concern (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone could probably come up with a software solution to defeat 5C, but with the DMCA [wikipedia.org] in place and without the DMCRA [wikipedia.org] to defend our rights, doing so would be illegal. Essentially, it takes open-source PVRs, which are legal and worthwhile in the analog domain, and puts them in the category of tools for piracy when used in the digital domain. And what's more, the DTLA [wikipedia.org] (which administers licensing of DTCP) will, just like the DVD-CCA, never ever ever grant a license for someone wanting to build an open-source PVR.
TiVo has nothing to worry about from software PVRs - they'll die off slowly as the shift to digital HD continues. Then the entertainment industry can finish TiVo off at its leisure.
small error in article re: program guide (Score:4, Informative)
Not Really... (Score:3, Insightful)
From the article:
Not really, unless you're a geek with too much time on your hands. The DIY option will become appealing when it's as easy to install and set up as any other off the shelf appliance. Until then, a DIY PVR a hobby.
TiVo, for all of it's faults, is still trivial to set up and use. In fact, it's so easy to use that my six year old child (who can barely read) figured it out. My wife and I were so happy with ours that we just purchased a second TiVo (the current rebate didn't hurt).
Re:Cable provider DVR (Score:2)
I'm still probably gonna build a MythTV box as I can't pull the recorded shows off the rental unit.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Seconded (Score:2)
I do have an HTPC, but it mostly gets used for gaming, since there's little OTA HD programming I'm interested in and the tivo does a decent job with everything else.
Re:Tivo Myths Corrected (Score:3, Informative)
You are in error. Please see the TiVo terms of service [tivo.com] and scroll down to item number 8.
I have quoted the relevant portion for you below. (Caps are in the source, not my own addition.)
Re:HDTV support? (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think the ATI is supported unless underneath it's accually using an off the shelf chip. I guess that's possible, but I didn't see that card mentioned on the Wiki.
I have an Athlon 3200+ and I can watch live 1080i TV using a simple 'mplayer dvb://stationname' command. Myth seems to put a little overhead on it and the picture breaks up a little. My understanding is if I recompile with PREEMPT this should help clean u