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Topic:
hd cable boxes with built in Tivo?
This thread has 5 replies. Displaying all posts.
Post 1 made on Tuesday September 14, 2004 at 13:03
john mulgrew
Long Time Member
Joined:
Posts:
July 2002
114
I know that DirecTV has a few hd boxes with a built in tivo, but are there any hd cable boxes out that have one? If they are not out yet I would imagine that the cable companies are going to try to get them out as soon as possible. What would really be great is a stand alone tivo that will accept an HD input so that any HD sat or cable box can use the tivo features. I doubt they will come out with that because of HD copy protection. I was not able to go to cedia so any info about what Tivo has planed for the future would be appreciated. I have only been doing custom installs for about 3 years but I have already seen the quality and reliability of these tivo's improve so much. I am just curios where they are going in the years to come.
Post 2 made on Tuesday September 14, 2004 at 14:09
Dawn Gordon Luks
Founding Member
Joined:
Posts:
September 2001
1,178
John,

I'm currently using the Scientific Atlanta Explorer 8000HD HDTV cable box/DVR. It's pretty nice, dual tuners, very simplistic interface, but it desperately needs a 30 second skip function.

Dawn
Post 3 made on Tuesday September 14, 2004 at 15:17
Impaqt
RC Moderator
Joined:
Posts:
October 2002
6,233
We're Comcast dealers or reps or whatever we're called (We can sign pwople up for HD cable service) and I got this in an email the oother day..

"
Comcast HD DVR-Motorola DCT-6208
80GB HD
Approx. 9hrs HD, 30 standard/digital programming, varies with mixed
recording
New Interactive programming guide
$9.95/month includes $5 HD fee...only $4.95 more per month than HD service

Coming soon...60-90 days
Comcast DVR HD-Motorola DCT-6412
120GB HD
Dual Tuner- Watch something while recording another channel, etc.
Approx. 15hrs HD, 70 standard/digital programming, varies with mixed
recording
New Interactive guide
"

So looks like Motorola is finally shipping their single tuner and the dual is on the horizon.
Post 4 made on Thursday September 16, 2004 at 17:11
Marky_Mark896
Select Member
Joined:
Posts:
January 2004
1,545
I agree Dawn. The original Scientific-Atlantic DVR had a skip ahead button, but for some reason they disabled them through the software, and then took the button off the remote on the newer models. Probably pissed off some advertisers is why it got taken off. I loved it though.

Mark
It's not just a hobby, it's an obsession...
Post 5 made on Thursday September 16, 2004 at 17:40
Late Night Bill
Long Time Member
Joined:
Posts:
February 2004
495
I have both a standalone Tivo and the SA8000HD DVRs. The Tivo is my favorite hands down. I had been using the Tivo for so long, when the SA8000HD came along I was like, "What the...?". The SA interface is not nearly as refined.
I read that Tivo was talking to cable companies, but nothing has come of it yet. I'll keep my fingers crossed.
Post 6 made on Friday September 17, 2004 at 00:54
Wagz
Long Time Member
Joined:
Posts:
September 2004
60
On 09/16/04 21:11 ET, Marky_Mark896 said...
I agree Dawn. The original Scientific-Atlantic
DVR had a skip ahead button, but for some reason
they disabled them through the software, and then
took the button off the remote on the newer models.
Probably pissed off some advertisers is why it
got taken off. I loved it though.

Not that this comes as any surprise but the skipper can be hacked back to health but then I'd have to kill you if I told you how. Goll-darn-frikkin-frakkin NDA's.

FWIW, I couldn't really find the PVR solution I was looking for (commercially) so I built me own Uber-PVR from plans off the internet. If you have some Linux experience, a masochistic streak and want the holy grail of media servers, check out mythtv.org.

If you don't, stop reading right now. If you do, go get a hammer and whack your left thumb really, really hard. Twice. If your eyes roll back in your head and you moan to yourself "oooohh, that's how I like it", you may keep reading.

=============

Runs just dandy on <1000 MHz hardware, 128MB ram, GeForce4 MX440 or better video, as much storage as you can lay your hands on (80 Gig will do fine to start) and Hauppauge 250/350 HW tuner/encoder cards. Also works with a couple of SW capture/tuner cards but they eat CPU like crazy. There are some ATSC cards now working with it and there are all kinds of contributed code to control outboard tuners (DISH, cable boxes, C-band, you name it) over RS-232, USB and of course, IR stick-ums. About 2GB/hr at full MPEG-2 for regular def, ~12GB/hr at HD. About 300-600 USD depending on your pile of spare parts laying around.

Other features:
Every feature TIVO has to offer and as many tuners, s-vid and composite inputs you can throw at it
Automatic commercial detection and flagging
Transcoding the edited recording to same or lower bitrates (MPEG-2, MPEG-4, Xvid)
DVD player, ripper and server with IMDB lookups/posters
Video player (.wma, .avi, .mpeg, etc, Xvid, DiVX)
Audio player, ripper, server (MP3, .wav, Ogg, more with lookups)
Photo gallery (.jpg, .bmp, others)
SID telephone/videophone
Weather Module (current, today's and ext forecast, animated radar)
Web browser - RSS feed reader - Web-based administration
Recipe module for the chef with internet lookups
Game emulator (MAME/arcade, NES, SNES, PS1 ... bring your own ROMS)
Client/server (frontend/backend, multiple frontends+backend, master/slave backends, even hack an X-Box as a frontend)
Completely themeable - even the OSD
Incredibly intelligent record scheduling across all sources
Waaaayyy too much more to list here

WARNING: For personal use only! If you try to sell one of these to a customer, that would make you a sadist. If you want to build one for yourself, I strongly suggest you read, read, read and then lurk on the maillists, IRC and other resource sites. The developers have a nasty bite and have absolutely no interest whatsoever in talking to manufacturers. They are open source software zealots.

Sorry for the longass off-topic post.


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