#31
Post
by ghostjmf » Mon Dec 29, 2008 6:56 am
ha ha! Thread that never dies! Even if I am talking to myself, with occasional input, not always 100% accurate, from BobJ in it.
The "not always 100% accurate" thingie applied to BobJ who I normally get along with but who in this thread might just have been actively trying to frost the easily-frostible (frostable?) me is:
He'd said that you can get TiVO without renting one through your cable system. True, but they almost exclusively are advertised through cable systems. And rented, not bought outright. But I did find a web site that lamely offers a few models for bought-outright.
What you get mainly from forums, rather than TiVO's own web site, is that that easy-to-use "pick your show" feature only works if you subscribe to a monthly service. It is not clear to me whether the regular-VCR-type "time, date, station" programming menu is even available on these machines. If I was really into them, I would have dug for that info, to be sure.
Also, TiVO needs info cards from your cable company put into special slots for them in order to make the machine compatible to get the channels from your cable company. This all revolves around you having a cable company. To be fair, the machine apparently can get straight antenna input too, without a card-in-slot, but nobody using an antenna seems to be using TiVO.
But never fear. My buds at DTVPal, the company formerly known as EchoStar, which split off from Dish Network just so that it could sell its sorta-excellent machines directly to to people who don't (yet) subscribe to Dish Network (which is satellite, not cable, for any who don't yet know that), have come up with the Machine For Me; --Sorta.
Does slice bread, but does not cut its own DVDs. Grrr. Also, does not take the US Govt free-pass cards, even though it does offer an analog-out signal. Because its a DVR, & DVRs don't qualify for the coupons even if they do act as a convertor box too.
This thing has an output of HD digital signal for "when my TV dies & has to be replaced', along with its analog-out signal. The analog-out signal is, however, only providing mono sound, something I'm gonna hate but which is apparently true, anyway, of all other convertor boxes. I think. Gotta check. But the industry thinks "if you don't care about a high-def picture on your little 13" TV which because of its small size gives a very clear picture anyway, you don't care about stereo sound either". Oh yeah? But if I pipe it through my am-fm tuner/amplifier to good speakers, as I often do now, via one of the VCR's outputs, with the stereo signal my ancient TV can't handle anyway, I'll at least get better-sounding mono sound.
It also has an ethernet port, & a USB port. Not sure TiVOs have that, but I admit I haven't checked. The USB port will become important when I try to hook a disc-burning machine up to it. Which I will have to, if I want to save programs & occasionally give one to someone, instead of relying on stuff being saved on the internal hard disc. We all know what eventually happens to stuff "saved", but not backed up, on internal hard discs.
Of course, these ports would be important too if I had a computer at home to hook up to it, which currently I don't.
And "of course" this wonder, once called EchoStar TR50, now called DTVPal DVR, can record 2 shows at one time. While you watch a 3rd, if you want. Just like the latest TiVOs. And of course TiVO has sued. Either DTVPal people don't care, or they won the latest stage of the suit, because they're finally shipping these babies, after a long, long delay.
I for one am going to wait. Because I went out & got my DTVPal connector-boxes-only, then found out they had a bug in the timer, the feature I bought this brand for, because only one other (& hard-to-find) convertor box even has a timer. With absolutely no easy-exchange policy offered. Sears, where I bought mine, doesn't even carry the fix, dubbed DTVPal+Plus (yeah, that's 2 pluses on the face of the box), & billed as "having an enhanced tuner", which I'm sure it does, but which also has a de-bugged timer, according to the tech-talk groups, too.
So my sister is going to order DTVPal+Pluses for me, with her coupons, after she gets her coupons that is. And I am going to give her my as-yet-unopened DTVPal(no plus)s, because she is interested as having these as backup for the old TV & the VCRs, post-digital-transition, in the event of cable-failure, but wouldn't be using the timer feature on any regular basis, only the convertor.
And when DTVPal DVR gets whatever bugs it comes with worked out, &, better yet (dream on self) builds in a DVD burner, I will buy one.
Meanwhile, my sister's Panasonic DVR-with-disc-burner is spoken of very highly on the tech-talk circuits, but you can only buy one used, a Panasonic or any other brand, because the industry just doesn't make these anymore.
One problem people speak of having is a machine that clunks out when you try to copy a copy-protected disc. Silly people, they knew that stuff was built in to the machines. Apparently it kicks on for some not-copy-protected discs too, though. My sister says she's never had that problem burning discs, but she's never tried to copy a disc, copy-protected or otherwise, but only made copies of TV shows she's recorded to the hard drive.