CableCARD In-Depth 128
Atvtg writes "Ars Technica has an excellent article on CableCARD, and where it's heading. After discussing the history of the
initiative and some of the technical details, they cover how CableCARD may meet its end shortly after the launch of 2.0 (the bi-directional spec) because of DCAS. The real
surprise, however, is that CableLabs, which controls the CableCARD spec, has to certify computers to use CableCARDs for DVRs and the like. Ars points out that the upshot of this is
that it will not be possible to build your own DVRs using CableCARDs. Will this kill the DIY market?"
Re:What the fuck is 'CableCARD'? (Score:4, Funny)
Lars Technica (Score:1, Insightful)
DIY (Score:5, Interesting)
Will this kill the DIY market?
No, but all the DRM restrictions and nonsense about having a guy come to your house to provision the dam thing will probbably kill cableCard. The DIY crowd will just record off the analog out, it's really at the "good enough" state anyway. I read this article earlier today, and I still can't figure out why anyone would want this thing. It sounds like it was mandated by congress, but the cable companies didn't want to do it so they made a device that's so crippled no one will want it.
Re:DIY (Score:5, Informative)
Not for HDTV. The advantage of cablecard is that it allows the device to directly access the compressed digital signal. Analog out is just fine for recording SDTV. If you want to record unencrypted HDTV, you won't get very much bang for your storage buck...
-JMP
Re:DIY (Score:2)
So if you ca
HDTV (Score:3, Interesting)
My HD2000 gets me direct access to the compressed digital signal, but it's over the air. The HD3000 can tune unencrypted digital cable channels too. The only thing all this cablecard crap is really going to accomplish is DRM. Why anyone would want to run out and buy an expensive DRM system that only reduces their options is beyond me. As for protecting premium HD content - who cares. I
Re:HDTV (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, and 640K is more RAM than anyone will ever need.
Gotta break it to you - people are already passing this stuff around on the net and have been doing so wide-scale for almost 2 years. Furthermore, that ~35GB mpeg2 of about 4 hours of superbowl can be relatively easily converted to ~8GB or less of h.264 with little perciptible loss of quality. HD movies which tend to run 1
Re:HDTV (Score:2)
So that they can watch more than their 7 local OTA channels in HD. Pretty simple really. No cable company is going to have the balls to broadcast anything unencrypted, unless they are really forced to do so.
Re:HDTV (Score:2)
Re:DIY (Score:3, Interesting)
Many more older high end HDTV's do this as well. they cant stop me from doing it as that will piss off a large section of the market, the early adopters. and if you piss off that group, you lose the ENTIRE market.
Re:DIY (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:DIY (Score:1)
Re:DIY (Score:5, Informative)
Not an option. My cable box doesn't have an analog out for HDTV. It has an HDCP stream coming over the HDMI cable.
I was perfectly happy with my analog-based ReplayTV, but it was relegated to the "little" TV once I got an HDTV set. I had to pay to lease the Comcast DVR cable box since it's the only game in town for recording HDTV. However, it sucks -- the software is more buggy than the ReplayTV software ever was, and the interface is much less friendly than the ReplayTVs. Plus, with the cable company firmly in control, they don't let me do things like "hide" unwanted channels. Like I'm ever going to watch QVC, or why I'd want to skip over 60 pay-per-view sports slots that I'll never watch?
Yes, my TV has a CableCard slot, and yes, it's most likely going to sit there unused forever. I want a DVR more than I want "one less component".
I'm thinking of buying an HDCP decoder so I can build my own DVR using the cable box anyway. But those decoders are still about 400 euros.
Re:DIY @ any price (Score:2)
I wasn't aware that an HDCP decoder was available to the public at any price. Just a few dozen of those running around out in the wild and the entire HDCP infrastructure falls flat on its face because it only takes one person to rip and post a HD torrent and the anyone who wants it can have it.
I figured some day there would be a DIY project to take an HDCP monitor ap
Re:DIY @ any price (Score:2)
Seems it has already been done [seclists.org], but the researcher is not releasing any details due to fear of the DMCA and MPAA.
Re:DIY @ any price (Score:2)
Who would do something like this if they couldn't boast about it afterwards? It's no fun otherwise.
DMCA? (Score:2)
Re:DIY @ any price (Score:1)
Re:DIY @ any price (Score:2)
Then they will use their cracks to post stuff on P2P
It will go through the same channels that "DVD Screeners" leaked from production companies, awards judges and such go through. And the same channels that result in the latest games being available on p2p days after release, fully cracked and working. And, just like the DVD screeners and games, the people b
Re:DIY (Score:1)
Got a link? I haven't been able to find such a thing at any price.
Re:DIY (Score:2)
Re:DIY (Score:2)
I think what the PP was trying to get across is that you'll still be able to record in SD off the analog ports. It's not HD, but it's better than nothing at all. It's becoming increasing clear to everyone that the HDTV "analog hole" is going to be made extinct.
Re:DIY (Score:2)
Re:DIY (Score:2)
Easy for me to say (Score:2)
Capitalism at work: if the product sucks, send it back. Don't reward them with money per month for a bad product.
Of course, if the difference between SD and HD is great enough, then you may be willing to put up with paying them more money for poorer software.
But if Comcast is refusing to let you hide the stupid channels, it doesn't bode well for the future. I'd let them know that the mone
Re:Easy for me to say (Score:2)
Yes, it blows, and it blows hard. But they're pretty much a monopol
Re:Easy for me to say (Score:2)
Re:Easy for me to say (Score:2)
Re:DIY (Score:1)
Well good news is on the way, a Tivo (different from ReplayTV, but with similar high goodness count) with 2 CabeCARD slots is expected after mid
Re:DIY (Score:1)
Feature of MythTV:
http://www.mythtv.org/ [mythtv.org]
-firewire capture method, for those with cable boxes capable of firewire output (Motorola DCT-6200 + cousins, SA 3250, etc).
-Internal channel-change over firewire support for DCT-6200 series cable boxes.
HOWTO on interfacing to the DCT 6214:
http://replayguide.sourceforge.net/dct6412/ [sourceforge.net]
Re:DIY (Score:2)
Re:DIY (Score:3, Informative)
What makes you think there will be an analog out? They're going to digitally encode the signal going from the converter into the television, or whatever other device, to prevent exactly that. Are you sure you read the article? Let's quote said article:
So far, so good, right? Now we have a clear MPEG-2 stream ready for viewing--which is why the CableCARD re-encrypts the signal using the keys that it has already exchanged with the host device. This is to
The reality is... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The reality is... (Score:1)
Re:The reality is... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The reality is... (Score:1)
Re:The reality is... (Score:2)
This sort of thing is breaking a lot of profitable distribution models.
Re:The reality is... (Score:2)
Then its their fault for not getting it there earlier. And who knows, with that kind of lag time you could have bought the Galactica DVD set and MAILED it to New Zealand. Yes, yes you would of course need a evil region free DVD player, but I think true fans of the show might be able to find one somewhere
While this is breaking a lot of profitable distribution models, it is opening up even more, if any of these insdustries
Re:The reality is... (Score:2)
To a degree, sure, but I still don't think they need to certify the entire PC. They ought to be able to certify, say, just an All-in-Wonder card.
Um, as a consumer there isn't much appeal (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, the industry says, lets fix that in the 2.0 release. So they begin work on it. Unfortunatly, that's still vapor and it looks like the 2.0 release might be ready just about the time it's getting killed off by yet another technology.
Why does it take so long to develop these things? Well, a big reason is that they have to figure out new and exciting places to encrypt the datastream again. Also, there is a requirement to make it as annoying to the end user as possible by denying them the use of their DVRs and making it so you have to buy your computer from an OEM if you want to watch TV on it. At the end of the day, if the technology actually takes off, it will probably be hacked anyway (probably with mod chips/special remote codes for TVs and DVRs that enable the output regardless of state of the no-copy flag).
Basically, this is a technology that the cable companies didn't want to implement in the first place (Congress forced them to), and they've done everything in their power to make it unappealing to the end user to discourage adoption and let them extend the deadline passed by Congress and the FCC for as long as possible. It's also an example of DRM concerns basically killing what would otherwise be a pretty decent product.
Not so simple (was: Re:Um, as a consumer...) (Score:2, Informative)
Not so simple.
OCAP defines a set of APIs, but it is not dependent on CableCard or on DCAS. There is some independence from the underlying security implementation.
CableCard is technically difficult, which has led to delays. However, the main reason DCAS will supplant CableCard is that it's cheaper, and it probably will be more secure. Cheaper is better for everyone.
Like most other DRM security schemes, DCAS is being designed in secret without open peer review. Some of those other schemes are known to b
Short Answer, no (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:3, Informative)
"That's right--only new PCs from certified vendors will accept a CableCARD. You can forget about buying a copy of Vista and an OCUR to roll your own solution--as ATI told us, their product will only be available in OEM systems, no doubt because of the certification issue."
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:3, Informative)
Which means that somebody buys the OEM parts in bulk and sells them individually. Licensing be damned, people find a way around silly restrictions like this.
If there's no actual technological problem, then the DIYers will make it happen.
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:2)
The question is if CableCARD will try to limit the market by insist only certifying major OEM machines, or will they do the rational thing by granting a blanket certification to popular motherboard
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:1)
Re:Short Answer, no (Score:3, Interesting)
snort... (Score:2)
a video card maker is under no legal requirement to make sure their product is compatible with another third party product...
the MARKET might punish them, but the law can't
dont follow (Score:3)
How is not being able to do something an "upshot" of owning hardware?
less is more?
Re:dont follow (Score:2)
less is more?
Perhaps this [reference.com] will help. Note the distinct lack of value judgements in the definition.
Re:dont follow (Score:2)
I had a college roommate who consistently used the word "nevertheless" as if it meant "consequently." He would say things like "I'm hungry. Nevertheless, I think I will go get some dinner."
Re:dont follow (Score:2, Funny)
less is more?
alias less='more'
Re:dont follow (Score:1)
is better because scrolling will work.
td
Cripple DIY market? (Score:2)
DIY? No it will just move up a step (Score:5, Informative)
Re:DIY? No it will just move up a step (Score:1)
For those of you who don't know how to pronounce it here as a copy from their site FAQ [hauppauge.com].
"How do you pronounce Hauppauge?
Hauppauge is pronounced HOP-HOG."
Also why use USB, as from my experience IEEE 1394 is better for transfering data of this size or using the PCI push technology (IIRC that is what they called it back then) that my ancient TV Tuner
Re:DIY? No it will just move up a step (Score:2)
Locked down and out (Score:3, Insightful)
Welcome to the future of digital television--it has never looked so good, and never looked more locked down.
If this is the future of television, it looks pretty bleak.
I guess we MIGHT be able to use our DVRs, but not if the content providers say no.
Re:Locked down and out (Score:2)
'nuff said.
Or was this the time for a "you must be new here" comment?
Re:Locked down and out (Score:1)
The "future of television" is not cable tv or sattelite tv. it's ala-carte tv shows from a provider like itunes.
Imagine subscribing to the shows you want to watch. then your set-box get's them off your broadband connection and you watch when you like.
Every person I have talked to dreams of this instead of the crap that is current television model. they would even tolerate AD's if they could get shows this way.
the only use for cabletv and sattelite would be for news and
Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much... (Score:5, Interesting)
Computers are getting faster -- I have a
This will not remain safe for one very good reason: It is more fun to show these people how STOOPID they are by breaking their multi-level encryption than it is to sit and watch the latest crap spewing out of televisions.
Entertainment, though not the kind the cable and satellite companies envisioned, has taken a GREAT step forward.
Re:Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much.. (Score:4, Informative)
Having said all that, I'm not really looking forward to our digital future.
Re:Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much.. (Score:1)
Re:Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much.. (Score:2)
What I mean is, supplying a static message enrypted with a ton of different keys will help you break the entire encryption system, but there's no "easier" way to decode one specific message other than figuring out the whole system. And what are the chances of someone "solving" AES? Once someone figures out P=NP I guess...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Layer upon layer of encryption sounds so much.. (Score:2)
Your wife's dual core amd system is worthless.
Crypto is broken by circumventing the crypto entirely, by stealing (not cracking) the key, or by finding fundamental design flaws in the cryptosystem itself.
kill the DIY Market? I think not (Score:3, Insightful)
The real question is, Will DIY really mean DIY, instead of buying a computer, adding a capture card, and installing a ready-to-go program. DIY moves in cycles, it starts as a real nitty gritty DIY where people are building stuff from spare parts, creating solutions that didn't exist. Doing it cause they just want to make it happen. then others get infected with the idea, ideas are shared, innovations fly, people collaborate. Eventually some one else wants to make a profit... blah blah blah
I hope.
Saving Money (Score:3, Insightful)
You hit the nail - it's really the end of CABLE! (Score:3, Insightful)
You hit the nail on the head.
The day they succeed in locking down the incoming cable stream so I can't record things and watch them whenever I want to as many times as I want to is the day I no longer need the cable stream.
Already the only reason we have cable TV is because it was cheaper to order broadband internet access
Re:You hit the nail - it's really the end of CABLE (Score:1)
Once I graduated and was out on my own I was not able to afford cable anymore. I survived by just buying the DVDs of the shows I like, downloading them (legally or illegally), and *GASP* spending my time doing something more productive.
The majority of what is on TV these days is complete crap. I also remember when a 30 minute block of TV us
Re:You hit the nail - it's really the end of CABLE (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, but until then you're still giving them $60/Mo...
Why not stop now?
What you're doing is more like an abusive/dysfunctional relationship than anything else - you know you're going to be smacked hard and beaten to a pulp in the future, but until that actually happens you'll stick with it because, damn it, you're
I've got a cable card (Score:2)
It only took Time Warner 5 tries for it to work. They also had to visit the house each time and refused to trouble shoot the problem over the phone. It was rather aggravating and troubleshooting 101 seemed to be to swap out the card with another one and
OCAP developed before DCAS (Score:4, Informative)
I just don't understand (Score:1)
Re:I just don't understand (Score:1)
Pessimistic Dates (Score:1)
If I can't put a card in my PC (Score:2)
It's time manufacturers got the message; They don't control what gets made, sold and bought, WE do.
Vote with your money. And I don't mean that ironically.
Re:If I can't put a card in my PC (Score:2)
I am sure that if the manufacturers could make it possible to record anything and send the resulting video file to any other device you like, they would do that.
But the big media corps are worried about people spreading HD-TV content online (never mind that any digitally copied HD-TV content stored with enough quality to preserve any advantage that HD-TV content has over content recorded through existing analog channels like S-Video and Composite
Re:If I can't put a card in my PC (Score:2)
As for the actual content they publish with the DRM, it'll get cracked, transcoded and reposted on p2p systems.
After a while, more and more content will be available in open formats, and DRM will get die from being ignored, cumbersome and troublesome, but we all need to vote with our dollars and support open content and hardware.
DIY still has the Over The Air channels.. (Score:4, Interesting)
My MythTV box does a great job recording / timeshifting / removing commercials / transcoding broadcast HDTV stations. So, I think the DIY PVR boxes have a life left for the immediate future.. I can still record Lost, and The West Wing, along with many sporting events.
The biggest hurdle I have seen developing is with more sporting events. Events that would have been on broadcast TV in the past are often on ESPN ( e.g. next year Monday Night Football is on ESPN-HD, not ABC). If that trend continues, I have to decide whether to stop watching that program/event, or to go to a commercial PVR. Most shows I can easily live without.. the exception being ESPN-HD... when my MSU Spartans are playing basketball in HD, I am very tempted to go to the cable companies crappy PVR.
Re:DIY still has the Over The Air channels.. (Score:2)
I'm confused. Are you saying the card you are running does not support clear QAM or that ESPN-HD is encrypted?
Upshot? (Score:1)
Re:Upshot? (Score:2)
upshot != upside
Look up "upshot" in the dictionary and you will find that the upshot of your post is that you looked stupid. The upside is that you learned something.
Re:Upshot? (Score:2)
Hrm.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean seriously, if your company is spending money (and lots of it) on technology just to restrict what a customer can do by removing features, then you might as well be shoveling money into a gaping fire pit of doom.
For an anology as think it as if a Microsoft Office project manager showed up at a meeting and said "Hey guys! I'm going to get us a million dollar budget so we can find out how to remove the Save feature for Word and Excel! Our customers will be so pleased they'll buy two copies of Office for every computer they own!"
They have put a great deal of effort into something that won't earn them a cent of profit. The majority of people who were going to use DVR aren't going to pay twice for things and if you try to force them to then they'll probaly go elsewhere for their movies (DVD, satellite, or iTunes Video).
On the flip side, I'm sure it keeps techy engineers employed helping them spend all this money on HDCP.
It won't kill the DIY market ... (Score:2)
I don't care anymore, I was mad when I first heard this news, but now it's just amu
Re:It won't kill the DIY market ... (Score:4, Insightful)
The cable companies are not making these calls, its the media companies forcing it on them. If the cable companies lose 1% of people in order to be able to continue to provide content for the 99% who don't care, if you think they spent even a millisecond worrying about you as a customer, you're horribly mistaken.
If you want to see the mainstream media, you play by their rules. You can try going anywhere you want, but the same restrictions are coming for satellite. Via the broadcast flag, they will eventually come for OTA as well.
Re:It won't kill the DIY market ... (Score:2)
The question I have is, does implementing all this DRM (more specifically, restrictions on what cable boxes and cablecards can do with the output once its decrypted, the DRM on the actual cable signals does serve a valid purpose) achieve the stated goal of making people pay for their content instead of downloading it off BT?
CableCards extend the cable monopoly (Score:2, Informative)
1) No interactive menu.
2) No pay-per-view.
3) No DVR. (No HD DVR at all, and even SD recording requires that you route the TV outputs into your recording devic
A minor hurdle... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to see a change, people need to cancel their monthly subscriptions en masse, and stick to OTA out of spite. Or, just don't pay the additional charge to upgrade the equipment and subscription to HD.
The only thing worse to the entertainment industry than theoretical money lost due to copying, is real money lost, due to lots of people refusing to accept their restrictions...
Less FUD, more truth (Score:3, Informative)
Cablecards are an example of what happens when Congress decrees that a certain service provider must provide the service Congress's way, instead of letting the service provider do it in a way that is guaranteed to work. CableLabs created the cards with a specific set of requirements for the firmware for correct operation. Some companies (LG for example) wrote their TV firmware along the direct specification. Other companies, such as Sony, Sharp and Mitsubshi took the liberty to write their firmware however they damn well pleased. In fact, we have an entire binder full of TV makes and models with known firmware issues.
I've never seen a problem using a Cablecard in an LG TV; it's pretty much plug it in, wait for the authorization numbers to display on screen and call them into the office for initialization. If I had the cash for a flat panel plasma to hang in my living room, it would be an LG, and I would get a Cablecard for it. Other brands, however, present a wide variety of issues. For example, any channel in our lineup that uses a 64 QAM data stream will no properly display on a Mitsubishi TV.
Another problem is in the specifications: Cablecards are one-way devices. They do not operate along the return path, which means no Video-on-Demand, no interactive pay-per-view, and so on. You're also stuck with the interactive guide that your TV firmware came with. Troubleshooting these ALWAYS requires a truck roll, because since they are one-way only, we can't hit them from the office to return an error message like we can with our DCTs. (We use the exact same boxes shown in TFA).
In response to some of the comments made about a MSO-issued settop box, we don't charge the monthly equipment fee for our digital equipment to milk more money out of customers; we do it to attempt to break even. A typical MSO loses anywhere between $75 to $100 per average digital subscriber due to failure to use common sense. Last week, I replaced a $500 DVR for a woman (at no cost to her) who had started putting her old newspapers on top of the box. It eventually overheated and died. I asked her why she had put them there, and she said, "Because my computer monitor got too hot with them on top of it, and I didnt want that to burn up." And just today, I replaced $700 of equipment for a family that had moved. They put their equipment in a box in the kitchen, and proceeded to improperly attach a dishwasher hose and flooded their own house.
Anyhow, back on topic, cable companies will try to steer you away from the Cablecards to their equipment because they know it will work. If our equipment isnt working, we replace it and make it work. With Cablecards, we are stuck trying to make third-party firmware play nice with someone's TV.
Re:Less FUD, more truth (Score:2)
Re:Less FUD, more truth (Score:2)
You also agree that I am forced to use some poorly implemented interface to navigate digital cable content instead of allowing 3rd party developers to create more rich and robust interfaces allowing for quicker searching and selecting of digital cable content.
I don't
Re:I Have a Different Solution (Score:1)