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Ever since the abortive first attempt was announced four years ago there have been on-again, off-again rumors of TiVo and Netflix working together again. They finally got it over with and released the tension in October by announcing a new deal. At the time they indicated the service would launch soon - and they were right, it is launching today!But they have one more surprise up their sleeves - high-definition content! From the press release (below) it looks like they'll be launching with some HD content available to stream to TiVo. As stated previously, the Netflix service is only available on broadband connected TiVo Series3, TiVo HD, and TiVo HD XL units. The Series2 platform unfortunately is incapable of supporting the video codec Netflix uses. Only the newer units have the required hardware, sorry, that's just how it is. It isn't like Series2 units don't have options - Amazon VOD, CinemaNow/Disney, and Jaman are all available. This is likely why the HD units started getting the new software revision last week, to prep them for the launch of Netflix. ( Press release below: )Tags: netflix, press release, series3, tivo hd, tivo hd xl Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Music: TiVo: Robot Chicken
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Hmm, I wonder if I upset someone over at TiVo? I didn't get any advance notice on this one. Well, anyway, on to the news. Correction, their PR firm did email me - a little after 20:00, less than four hours before the embargo lifted at midnight eastern. That's a little late to be letting folks know about a major announcement, especially as I know others got the word around 15:00. Unfortunately, that was after the last time I'd checked email before midnight. I might've caught it, but I'm down with a bad cold and not hovering online as much as I normally do. I only caught it after seeing the news elsewhere. Netflix streaming is coming to TiVo - very soon. It is great news, but it isn't too surprising. TiVo and Netflix first talked about partnering over four years ago, though that initial deal seemed to fizzle when Netflix had trouble getting content rights. In the meantime the market has completely changed. Netflix has rolled out their streaming service and TiVo has added streaming support to their platform for YouTube. And, of course, movie downloads from Amazon and Jaman, with CinemaNow/Disney expected any day now. Content providers are much more open to digital distribution than they were four years ago, and the technology has improved as well. A lot of us have been expecting TiVo and Netflix to bring streaming to TiVo. Especially after Netflix made deals with LG and Samsung to stream to some their Blu-ray players. This now gives TiVo content from four major services - Amazon, Jaman, CinemaNow (soon), and Netflix. The only major service left that I can think of is Blockbuster/Movielink. And, honestly, they're not exactly the market leader. I suppose TiVo could work with VUDU to build a VUDU client into TiVo, but with all the other content I don't know that it would be worth it for TiVo. More benefit for VUDU I'd think. The only thing left to make TiVo *the* platform for movies is HD content, and I'm sure that's coming. As Amazon VOD also offers streaming, I expect TiVo to bring that to their platform in addition to the downloads available today. And we're all just waiting for HD content. There have been repeated hints and mentions of work toward bringing HD content downloads from Amazon to TiVo, and more recently Jaman and Cinema now. And just today Netflix announced they'll be streaming in HD to Xbox 360. So maybe we'll see Netflix in HD on TiVo as well. What's next for TiVo and broadband content? I think we'll see them making deals with more content portal sites and networks, like Hulu.com and CBS.com. It is just logical, and TiVo already has the infrastructure to support such streaming sites. I think TiVo is making the right moves. The Netflix streaming, like YouTube, will be coming to the TiVo Series3, TiVo HD, and TiVo HD XL. It isn't clear if they'll be using H.264, like YouTube, or if the streams will be using VC-1 - which Netflix uses for their PC and Mac streaming. The TiVo hardware is capable of supporting both codecs, but VC-1 hasn't been used to date. Why no Series2 support? As with YouTube, the hardware doesn't support the newer codecs. Picked up from Zatz Not Funny. ( The press release: )Tags: netflix, press release, series3, tivo hd, tivo hd xl, zatz not funny Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: sick Current Music: TiVo: Most Daring
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Reader David commented on a previous post that Time Warner Cable of San Antonio, TX has a link to order a free Tuning Adapter to enable SDV on TiVo Series3, TiVo HD, or TiVo HD XL units. The order form states: "The expected availability date is later this year." That leaves two and a half months, though I personally suspect it will be sooner rather than later, especially as Comcast is already deploying Tuning Adapters. Is anyone else seeing Time Warner offer Tuning Adapter pre-orders in their area? Tags: sdv, series3, time warner cable, tivo hd, tivo hd xl, tuning adapter Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: tired Current Music: quiet
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Buy.com has the Western Digital 500GB eSATA My DVR Expander on sale again for $131.99. This is the only drive officially approved for use with the TiVo Series3, TiVo HD, and TiVo HD XL. That's a great price on that drive, so if you've been thinking about getting one, now is a good time. Tags: buy.com, esata, sale, series3, tivo hd, tivo hd xl, western digital Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: exhausted Current Music: TiVo Web Video: MobLogic
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 TiVo has updated their Web Specials and they're now offering a factory-renewed TiVo Series3 for $349.99, considering the value of the 'Glo' remote, the added capacity, and the few features the S3 has over the TiVo HD, that's not a bad value when compared to a new TiVo HD. However, factory-renewed TiVo HD units are also Web Specials, just $179.99. I don't think the Series3 is $170 better than a TiVo HD, nearly double the price. So, personally, if I were buying a factory-renewed TiVo, I'd probably take the TiVo HD. (You can also get a factory-renewed Series2DT for just $49.99, but I couldn't recommend that for most users.) However, either way, the TiVo Web Specials are good deals. You have the same 30-day return window and the same product warranty as new units. So there is little risk, and you save a good deal of money. Tags: sale, series2dt, series3, tivo hd Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: exhausted Current Music: quiet
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Since the TiVo 9.4 update enabled YouTube support a few weeks ago, I've been hoping that the ability to stream video would be extended to HME. Since the entire YouTube interface on TiVo is implemented with HME, using the HME toolkit internal to TiVo (probably with features first implemented for the OCAP development work), it makes sense that it would be possible to support video generically through HME. And the developer community did not disappoint, they've figured out how to support video playback in HME applications. It is early days and people are still sorting it out, but it is possible to stream MPEG-2 and MPEG-4/H.264 video to a TiVo Series3 or TiVo HD with the 9.4 software. That means it is possible to implement a generic video playback application via HME to stream any MPEG-2 or H.264 video to the S3/HD - or any video as long as the application can transcode them. That's fantastic news! And the fact that MPEG-2 works for streaming implies that it may be possible for TiVo to add the streaming support to the Series2 for just MPEG-2, since the hardware can't decode H.264. That hasn't been any indication that TiVo will do so, but it would certainly be nice if they did as it would then be possible to produce a generic player application that transcoded to MPEG-2 for the S2 and MPEG-2 or H.264 for the S3/HD. Of course, this is all reverse engineered by the developer community and it is possible TiVo could change something to disable this, but I would certainly hope that they don't. In fact, I still feel quite strongly that TiVo should embrace HME and support 3rd party developers, and I would love to see TiVo issue an update to the public HME SDK which included official video support (and official HD support, as it is only in the beta SDK today - still). But even without official support this has great potential. The ability to stream video from an HME application means that 3rd parties could bring video to the S3/HD directly. Sites like Revision3, Veoh, Break.com, Heavy,com, etc could host their own HME front end to allow streaming of any of their videos directly to TiVo. Of course, the elephant in the room is adult content, which TiVo seems loathe to officially acknowledge. But with the ability to stream right to the TiVo via HME, and bypass TiVo (the corporation), it is certainly possible. In general the ability to stream video is something that has been requested since the first days of HME, so now that it is here it may generate some new interest from developers who had moved away from HME. It would be especially useful if TiVo would bring the streaming support to Series2 units as it would create a much larger potential market, but even just the Series3 and TiVo HD are significant as it is a growing market with the HD being TiVo's primary platform now. I'm looking forward to seeing what people come up with, and when and if any video streaming sites embrace this. Thanks to reader Kevin Moye for the tip. Tags: hme, series2, series2dt, series3, tivo hd, tivocommunity, video Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: tired Current Music: TiVo: Masterminds
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Over at Blogcritics, Barbara Barnett has published a Technology Review of her experience using a TiVo Series3 for the past several months. She'd upgraded from the Comcast cable DVR, and as she says: I will never, ever look back. I’ve been "TiVo’d."She highlights the features of TiVo that have made her, as a non-geek user, a TiVo convert, such as the Season Pass, the advanced search capabilities of WishLists, the Thumb Ratings and TiVo Suggestions. All of the features usually touted as making a TiVo more than just a standard DVR. She also highlights the more advanced features added by connecting the TiVo to a network, but also prosaic things like being able to undelete a program, which while simple is something most DVRs don't provide. It is nice to see a blog from a non-geek user about that features they really use, and why they love their TiVo. It is a chance of pace from the usual parade of geeks - myself included. :-) Tags: blogcritics, series3 Current Location: Foster City, CA Current Mood: hungry Current Music: TiVo: Cranky Geeks - via Slingbox
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When I reported on the release of the 9.4 software for the TiVo Series3 & TiVo HD on Tuesday, I speculated on whether the update also included the promised YouTube support. Well, that question has been answered - it is in there, and Dave Zatz got a look at it and to keep things circular, he posted a video of it to YouTube. Since this was only announced on March 12, 2008 it is nice to see it coming out so soon.
9.4 enables native H.264 decoding on the S3 & HD, required for YouTube support. What is not known is if there decoding support has been extended to other areas as well, such as video podcasts. If so, it could eliminate transcoding on a PC via TiVo Web Video, at least for video podcasts in H.264 - which is many, if not most, of them. I'm hoping the H.264 support does apply to other video sources, it would make life much easier. TiVo Web Video is OK, but not ideal. Speaking of, allow me a small digression... I realize I never did pull together a review of TiVo Desktop 2.6 as I'd said I would. I've been pretty busy and it got away from me. And, honestly, I've had so many problems with it that each time I think about writing it up I just get upset again. I recently had TiVo Web Video forget all of the podcasts I'd subscribed to, twice in two days! I noticed it wasn't transferring anything after a couple of days, and when I checked the config file it was back to default - all the subscriptions gone. So I restored them and it started transferring again, so I went to bed. The next day it had stopped, and the file was wiped out, again! I wiped everything and started from scratch and it has been working for over a week now. And this isn't the first time this happened, early on it lost all the subscriptions too. Of course, since TiVo Web Video, unlike TiVoCast, doesn't just start with the most recent recording and move forward, but insists on downloading and transcoding back episodes as well (default is 5), it would re-download and re-transfer everything. It literally takes a few days for my PC to suck down all the backlog (I subscribe to a number of podcasts) and transfer it. So when this happens it is a major pain in the posterior. And it doesn't clean up after itself, I found over ten gigabytes of abandoned downloaded recordings sitting the the Downloads directory. Recordings it should've deleted after transferring to the TiVo. It just slowly uses up the drive. The leaking seems to vary - right now there are two files from back on 7/8 totally about 50MB. But all it takes is a few long-form HD podcasts to be missed and it adds up fast. Those are just a couple of the problems with it. Don't get me wrong, having it is better than not having it at all, but it is far from a stable solution, let alone ideal. But I digress, I really should make myself write up all the issues and such. Back to the topic at hand.., So anyway, I would really love to see TiVo allow the S3/HD to download H.264 podcasts directly, bypassing the PC. Heck, as an interim even if they downloaded to the PC but skipped transcoding and just transferred to the TiVo as-is it would speed things up a great deal. Transcoding really slows things down. Dave got a look at what is apparently a pre-release version of the software, so the final release could vary, but probably won't. YouTube is added as another option under the TiVo Central -> Find Programs & Downloads -> Download TV, Movies, & Web Video menu item. It looks like the screen has been retitled from 'Video Downloads' to 'Broadband Video', which may be a reflection of the fact that TiVo is now streaming video and not just downloading it. The 'Movies & TiVo from Amazon Unbox' link has been changed to 'Amazon Unbox TV & Movies', which I think sounds better. And just below that, slotting in above 'Brows Other Videos' is a new link entitled, simply, 'YouTube'. The only sub-option at this time is 'Watch YouTube Videos', and once you select that you get into the YouTube HME application interface proper. The color scheme reminds me of the current Music Choice application. Within the application you can select Featured Videos, Most Recent, Search, Top Favorites, Most Viewed, or Top Rated. Each selection then has sub-selections. The interface looks pretty good, and you can even rate the videos 1-5 stars, just as you can online. From Dave's video I don't see a way to link this application with your YouTube account, which would be nice. I'd like to be able to pull up the subscriptions I have on YouTube from my TiVo. And to have ratings from one location be reflected in the other. Being able to subscribe or favorite a video on the TiVo and having it show up online would be nice. But this is the first release, and from what I can see it looks good. This could always be a future enhancement. UPDATE: Shortly after I posted this I was looking over some other blogs and over at Gizmodo I saw that TiVo will indeed be adding the ability to login to your YouTube account, in an update due eight weeks out. Dave also tacked a quick look at the Tuning Adapter and Network Remote Control screens at the end of the video. He says we can expect the official press release later today, and the application may start showing up on TiVos with 9.4 as early as today (Thursday) as well. TiVo has a new page on their site as well: http://www.tivo.com/youtubeNow that TiVo has support for H.264 and streaming video, I'm hopeful we'll see more features using them. Aside from the aforementioned video podcast support, TiVo could support Amazon's upcoming video streaming service, HD video downloads (most HD downloads use H.264), perhaps even streaming video between TiVo units, or from a PC to a TiVo. I'm still waiting to receive 9.4 myself, can't wait to play with this. (And no Dave, you're not the only one still waiting for Tekzilla. ;-) ) Tags: gizmodo, sdv, series3, software, tivo hd, tuning adapter, youtube, zatz not funny Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: tired Current Music: TiVo: The Colbert Report
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TiVo has long had the practice of trickling new updates out to a small number of users before officially deploying the update. It is a kind of feeler, one last check to make sure there are not major issues that were missed in testing, and to make sure the deployment systems are ready to go. And it looks like they've started to do that with the 9.4 update for the Series3 and TiVo HD, as users at TiVoCommunity have started to notice. You can tell it is a pre-release from the version number: 9.4.L6.01-2-648. That 'L6' indicates it is revision L, build 6 of the development effort. Final release versions drop that bit. This looks like a great update, and it brings a number of features to the TiVo - some of which have been requested for years. According to LoREvanescence at TiVoCommunity, the updates notice is as follows: Subject: You have a new service update! From: The TiVo Team Date: Tue 7/15
Congrats! You've just received the Summer 2008 TiVo Service Update for TiVo HD and Series 3 DVRs, including these new enhancements to your TiVo Experience:
*Play or Delete a Folder Play or delete an entire folder of programs with a single button press (including kids shows, music videos ext). Highlight a folder and press PLAY to play all the shows in sequence. Pres CLEAR to delete the entire folder.
*Browse the Guide Any Time Press the GUIDE button to display the program guide over what you're watching: live TV, a previously recorded program, or even a video download.
*Jump Forward in the Guide When the Guide is on-screen, press the ADVANCE to jump 24 hours ahead. Press INSTANT REPLAY to go back 24 hours.
*Find a Station in the Guide Now you can search for a station "call sign" within the Guide, e.g. KQED, WPIX, MSNBC. When viewing the program guide, press ENTER to bring up Guide Options, then SELECT Find by call sign.
*Toggle Closed Captioning On and Off The Closed Captioning icon in the Channel Banner now toggles closed captioning on and off.
*Review Thumb Ratings To display a list of all programs that you have rated, select Find Programs, then TiVo Suggestions. Press ENTER to bring up the Review Thumbs screen
Enjoy!
-The TiVo Team Playing or deleting an entire folder has been requested since the first day folders were introduced - probably before that during the beta for that matter. Being able to view the guide without jumping to Live TV is something that has probably been requested since the earliest days of TiVo. I know people have been asking for it since I first starting using TiVo in 2002. Being able to jump forward and back in the guide is something we just heard about as coming for the Comcast TiVo software, and in that post I said I hoped TiVo would add that to the standalone boxes too - and here it is. Being able to find channels by call sign is interesting too, I'd never thought of that, but it sounds neat. Controlling Closed Captions from the channel banner, without having to go down in menus, has been requested since the S3 first shipped. So it is nice to see it added. Reviewing the Thumb Ratings reminds me of the old hidden feature, Teach TiVo. Most of you probably don't remember it, since it was a hidden feature and pretty much went away with the release of 3.2. But in the early days of TiVo there used to be backdoor features that could be enabled by entering the right phrase on the right screen. These were generally incomplete features that TiVo was working on developing but were not yet ready for release. So they'd still be in the code, just disabled by default. If you knew the right codes you could enable these features, at your own risk of course, and play with them. After 3.2 you could still access some of them for a while by hacking the software, but eventually most of them seem to have been completely removed, or well hidden. IIRC, Teach TiVo went away completely with 4.0. So what was Teach TiVo? Well, early on TiVo wasn't really sure how people would use TiVo. One of the concepts they had, to help with Suggestions, was to provide an interface in which users could edit their thumb ratings for not just programs, but actors, directors, etc. Basically it exposed the underlying thumb rating data system - when you rate a program you're also influencing the ratings for any associated actors, directories, etc. Teach TiVo gave power users a way to fine tune their ratings. Say you hated a program, but happened to like one actor in it. You could rate the show down, but go in an adjust the actor's rating up. Or vice-versa. But it did make for a bit of a complex interface and since it didn't fit with TiVo's philosophy of keeping the UI simple it was never completed and released. So, anyway, this new ability to see your program thumb ratings and edit them sounds like a new, simplified approach to at least a subset of what Teach TiVo provided. But that's not all, exploring the menus has revealed some additional features. First and foremost, support for the Switched Digital Video (SDV) Tuning Adapter is here! Both Motorola and Cisco/Scientific Atlanta has their TAs scheduled for certification testing by CableLabs at the end of June. So if they passed testing we could see cable MSOs making them available soon, and it looks like TiVo users will be ready with 9.4. And remember when the network remote control functionality was discovered in May? Since it is always on and has no security at all, at the time I said TiVo should really do something to protect that before someone writes malware designed to probe networks for a TiVo and send random commands to it. Well, it looks like TiVo has taken a step in that direction with 9.4 There is now a menu item for Network Remote Control and it is disabled by default: "The network remote control feature allows your TiVo Digital Media Recorder to be integrated with home automation and entertainment control devices on your network. These device include touch panel remotes and other devices that are configured to work with TiVo's network based remote control protocol. This setting will be enabled by your home entertainment or home automation installer." That's certainly safer for the majority of users who will never use this feature, and the power users who will can easily enable it. It sounds like it is just an on/off toggle currently. I'd still like to see TiVo make it on/off/secure, with the secure option forcing some kind of authentication. But just being able to turn it off is a big step in the right direction and I'm glad TiVo did it. I just wish they'd officially publish the network remote protocol. There is also a report that the Live TV buffer has been extended from 30 minutes to one hour. Looks like this was a false alarm, unfortunately. Note that 9.4 is only for S3 & HD users, but I suspect there will be a 9.4.1 for S2 units to follow. We saw that with the last updates, with 9.3 for the S3 & HD, and then 9.3.1 for the S2. Since the TiVo HD is the current flagship and the focus for TiVo it isn't surprising they're now getting the updates first. Staggering the S3/HD and the S2 helps avoid overloading the engineering and beta teams by trying to do it all at once. No word if this release includes updates under the covers to support H.264 decoding to handle the forthcoming YouTube support, or if that will be delivered in yet another update. I'd say it is a toss up. TiVo has certainly done that before, slipping features in an update deactivated and only enabling them later when the new feature launches. The priority page hasn't been updated yet for 9.4, but it probably will be soon. Thanks to Dave Zatz of Zatz Not Funny for the heads up. Tags: sdv, series3, software, tivo hd, tuning adapter Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: busy Current Music: quiet
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It would've been more surprising if TiVo hadn't extended their rebates, given the track record for the last several cycles. They last extended them in April, but that rebate expired on 6/28. So starting on 6/29, and running through 8/30, a new rebate takes over. Slightly different terms than the last one - $200 off a TiVo Series3 (TCD648) or $150 off a Series2DT (TCD649), there is no longer any rebate on the old single-tuner Series2. You can get the rebate form in HTML or PDF and pre-qualify via TiVo's website. The rebate brings the Series3 down to $392.45 through Amazon (and as low as $381.97 through their 3rd party sellers), and the Series2DT down to $65.99 through Amazon. Personally I wouldn't go with either of those, but rather the TiVo HD at $249.40, especially if you're considering the Series3. Get the TiVo HD and pick up the Glo remote separately and save some money. If you plan to use any of these units with WiFi, remember to pick up a TiVo USB WiFi Adapter. You can also pick up a factory-renewed TiVo HD for $199.99. Via TiVo Blog. Tags: amazon, rebates, series2dt, series3, tivo blog, tivo hd Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: sleepy Current Music: TiVo: The FBI Files
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Reader Rob Brooks-Bilson sent me a tip about a letter he'd received from Cox Communications in Phoenix, AZ, which he posted about in his blog and scanned into PDF. The big news is that Cox will be implementing SDV of July 1,2008. The bigger news is that later this year they will be offering Tuning Adapters to their users - FREE! I believe this is the first time we've heard of any firm pricing plans from a cable MSO with regard to the Tuning Adapter. Notice to TiVo Series 3 and TiVo HD owners: Cox, along with others in the cable industry, has worked with TiVo lnc to develop an external device called a Tuning Adapter that will allow TiVo Series 3 and TiVo HD devices using CableCARDs to access channels delivered via SDV. Availability of the Tuning Adapter is expected later this year. At that time additional information will be sent to you. The Tuning Adapter will be provided by Cox at no charge. In the interim, continued access to channels delivered via SDV is available with a Cox digital set top receiver. I have to say that Cox's letter is very clear overall and explains the issues around SDV clearly and without unnecessary drama, and other cable MSOs could take a lesson from this. There is no FUD, no attempt to spook customers into jumping onto a Cox STB - quite the opposite really. I think the letter is clear and concise, I wish more companies communicated in this fashion. So, it sounds like there will be a period of time between July 1, 2008, when Cox begins using SDV, and a point later in the year when they begin offering the Tuning Adapter, where users may lose access to some of their channels, unless they get a Cox STB for the interim. Since the Tuning Adapters are scheduled to be certified by CableLabs at the end of June, hopefully the gap will be a short one. But in any case it is nice to know they'll be offering the TA for free. Hopefully this will be across all of Cox's systems and not limited to Phoenix. Tags: cox communications, sdv, series3, tivo hd, tuning adapter Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: relaxed Current Music: TiVo: Undercover Titanic With Bob Ballard
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DVRupgrade posted their " Top Ten Reasons To Buy a TiVo Series3 or TiVo HD DVR", and that got me thinking about what I'd put on my list. I agree with most of their list, but not all of it. For example, I'm not a big user of TiVoToGo, in fact I hardly ever use it. While I do regularly transfer video to my TiVo, I prefer Slingbox over TiVoToGo for accessing my content remotely. Likewise I use my Slingbox for remote scheduling and really never use the web for that. And, being a single guy who lives alone, KidZone is of no use to me. Conversely, I use the various Internet features so much and value them so highly that I probably would've listed things like TiVoCast, TiVo Web Video, HME applications, etc, separately instead of as one entry. And since they're talking about the Series3 and TiVo HD in particular, I'd've mentioned the HD content. How about you? How would your top ten list compare to theirs? Tags: dvrupgrade, series3, tivo hd Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: busy Current Music: TiVo: How It's Made
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Wow, in the past couple of days there has been an interesting flurry of online activity about CableCARD, Switched Digital Video (SDV), and the Tuning Resolver. HD GURU posted an 'investigative report' entitled "How The Cable Industry Plans to Cheat 10+ Million HDTV Owners", so you might guess at the tone. Unfortunately, there are a few factual errors in the post - for example, all CableCARDs are two-way capable and always have been. Mike Schwartz from CableLabs responded with an extensive comment that I recommend reading if you read the post. (I'd link to it but the blog doesn't appear to support comment links, just scroll down a bit.) The HDTiVo Blog picked it up from there (which is where I found the link to the HD GURU post). Gizmodo also picked up the story, though I have a nit to pick: "Our friend Gary Merson, the HD Guru, has uncovered an issue that may soon piss you off." Uncovered? Gizmodo hasn't been paying attention, blogs such as this one, Zatz Not Funny, and others have mentioned the SDV issue and Tuning Resolver repeatedly for quite a while now. Just one example, the issue with Bright House cable pulling channels, and then returning them. This is hardly a surprise issue if you've been paying attention. And, unfortunately, Gizmodo repeated the errors from the original post. Anyway, CableLabs responded to Gizmodo's original post, and Gizmodo shared the information in a follow-up post. I'm glad a statement came out of it to help clarify things a bit, and correct the misconceptions. Over at Zatz Not Funny, Dave Zatz chimed in on the SDV Tuning resolver issue as well. Including a link to the most solid, and best, news to come out of the whole thing, at Media Experiences 2 Go. Mari Silbey of Motorola reports that Motorola's Tuning Resolver implementation, now officially the MTR700, has sailed through CableLabs interoperability testing 'with flying colors'. The next step is CableLabs certification testing with product submission in April in preparation for the certification board meeting in June. So, presuming the device gets certified, it will be ready at the end of June. Which means it would be very unlikely to make the 2Q2008 release schedule, but will probably be available in early 3Q08. Motorola will be exhibiting the MTR700 at The Cable Show in New Orleans in May. While it may not seem that way to those awaiting a solution, the development of the Tuning Resolver has been extremely fast for a new piece of hardware. The cable industry is really fast-tracking development to get the Tuning Resolver out there as fast as possible. Now it is up to the consumer electronics industry to provide compatible firmware for CableCARD devices with USB ports. (TiVo is, of course, already on board.) Back in November when the Motorola Tuning Resolver was first, it was noted that it strongly resembled their DCT700 cable box. The MTR700 model number seems to indicate the commonality is more than cosmetic. Tags: cablecard, cablelabs, motorola, mtr700, sdv, series3, tivo hd, tuning resolver Current Location: 42.308929N 71.795328W Current Mood: hungry Current Music: TiVo: The Emperor's New School
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tivolovers
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TiVo announced today that they will be bringing YouTube videos to the TV via the TiVo interface - but only on the TiVo Series3 and TiVo HD: TiVo Inc. (Nasdaq: TIVO), the creator of and a leader in television services for digital video recorders (DVRs), today announced an agreement with YouTube™ that will offer access to YouTube videos directly from the TV via a TiVo DVR. The service will be available later this year to broadband-connected subscribers with TiVo Series3™ DVRs, including the new TiVo HD.
Every day hundreds of millions of videos are viewed on YouTube and hundreds of thousands of videos are uploaded. Upon launch of the TiVo-YouTube service, TiVo users will be able to search, browse and watch these videos directly on their television sets through their broadband connected TiVo DVRs. The combination of having the YouTube experience with the convenience and familiarity of TiVo's intuitive user interface will provide TiVo subscribers with the ability to discover and enjoy the most shared and most discussed web videos in the world on their televisions. Importantly, users will be able to log into their YouTube accounts directly from their TiVo boxes and access their favorite YouTube channels and playlists.
"We're delighted to be working with the world's leading online video community so that TiVo subscribers can access YouTube's popular content on the TV via the TiVo DVR," said Tara Maitra, Vice President and GM of Content Services at TiVo Inc. "Being able to make available YouTube videos to the TiVo subscriber base using one device, one remote and one user interface is another major step in our commitment to combine all of your television and web video viewing options in one easy to use service." Now, before Series2 & Series2DT owners break out the pitchforks and torches, this was pretty much inevitable. It is a hardware issue, the Series2 platform is just behind the times. The Series3 family (which covers the box generally known as the Series3 and the TiVo HD) has hardware that can decode MPEG-2, MPEG-4/H.264, and WMV/VC-1 - while the older Series2 platform only decodes MPEG-2. That means the S3 platform can support more services than the S2, and that's just how it is - technology moves ever forward. Interestingly, TiVo may owe a major debt to Apple. YouTube long encoded all of their video in FLV, or Flash Video, format. But the Apple iPhone does not support Flash. In order to get YouTube on the iPhone, YouTube has re-encoded all of their videos into H.264, which is playable in QuickTime - and, coincidentally, in the decoders in the TiVo S3 platform. (Adobe also added H.264 support to the most recent versions of Flash, due to demand, so content providers can use H.264 for all their needs.) Which leads me to the next point. This implies TiVo is enabling at least H.264 decoding. Today the hardware is there, but the software support is not. The S3 is limited to decoding MPEG-2 just like the S2. But this announcement certainly means they'll be enabling MPEG-4/H.264 decoding, and I'm hoping it means they'll also be enabling WMV/VC-1 decoding at the same time, but I won't count on that. In any case, this little implied nugget is probably the biggest news of all, Why? Because H.264 is a highly efficient codec which is widely used to encode video blogs and video downloads, including high-def video. (H.264, also known as AVC, is the most widely used codec on Blu-ray Disc, for example.) So this decoding capability would allow for much more than just YouTube (not that YouTube support isn't big news, of course), such as wide support for video blogs - without the PC-based transcoding announced for TiVo Desktop 2.6, high-def movie downloads from Amazon Unbox (though Amazon Unbox uses WMV/VC-1 for their PC & portable downloads, which is why enabling that support on the TiVo could be good - same HD file could be played on the PC or TiVo), support for PC-to-TiVo transfers without needing to transcode, and possibly other services. Back when the Series2DT launched I remarked that I was surprised TiVo didn't include advanced codec support in the hardware, as they did with the Series3. I foresaw that online content would be increasingly important, and had genuinely expected TiVo to including H.264/VC-1 decoding in all of their new hardware at that point. I felt that keeping the S2DT restricted to MPEG-2 would prolong the transition because it would take longer to reach a critical mass of S3 units to make it worth developing features restricted to that platform. And I think that has been the case. But it looks like we're finally reaching the tipping point, and I hope this is just the first of many new features to take advantage of the additional capabilities in the Series3 hardware. I know Series2 owners may not be happy (I own two S2 boxes myself, as well as my S3), but this is just how it is. At some point old platforms can no longer support all the new features. Someday there will be a Series4 and it'll almost certainly support things the Series3 cannot, just as the Series2 has features the Series1 lacked. Tags: press release, series2, series2dt, series3, tivo hd, youtube Current Location: 42.33821N 71.59212W Current Mood: tired Current Music: office buzz
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tivolovers
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The factory renewed 80-hour TiVo Series2DT is back as a web special for just $49.99. You can get the 80-hour S2DT with a one-year monthly commitment at $12.95/month, or pre-pay one-year at $129, for a total of $178.99. TiVo also has web specials on factory renewed TiVo HDs, at $249.99, and factory renewed Series3s, at $449.99. Of course, you don't want that TiVo HD offer - since you can get a factory renewed TiVo HD for $199.99, if you know where to look. ;-) Tags: promo, series2dt, series3, tivo hd Current Location: 42.33821N 71.59212W Current Mood: busy Current Music: office buzz
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zonereyrie | |
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 TiVo's promotion wherein you purchase a TiVo HD and receive three months of service free expires on February 17, 2008. You buy the TiVo HD for $299.99, commit to one year of TiVo service @ $12.95/month, and the first three months of that year are free. And this reminds me, the ability for any existing TiVo owner to pick up product lifetime on any new TiVo activation for $399 expires on February 13, 2008. So if you're thinking of getting the soon to be gone TiVo Series3 with lifetime, this is probably your last chance. Though you'll still be able to get the TiVo HD with product lifetime bundle for $698.99 through April 1, 2008, along with the TiVo HD, WiFi Adapter, and $100 Service Gift Card bundler for $399.99. Tags: lifetime, promo, series3, tivo hd Current Location: 42.33821N 71.59212W Current Mood: hungry Current Music: quiet
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