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	<title>Comments on: TiVo, your days are numbered.</title>
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	<link>http://www.loonyblog.net/2004/12/23/tivo-your-days-are-numbered</link>
	<description>random thoughts on games, art, geek culture and living in maryland.</description>
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		<title>By: mike_ch</title>
		<link>http://www.loonyblog.net/2004/12/23/tivo-your-days-are-numbered/comment-page-1#comment-1111</link>
		<dc:creator>mike_ch</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Dec 2004 10:52:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>No tears, no tears. I hate Tivo, I owned two of their boxes (original Sony, original DirecTivo) and their support line is horrible. The phone tree has voice-recognition that, well, let&#039;s just say that their voice recognition is about as spot-on as the handwriting recognition in the original Apple Newton. They kept billing me long after I was told my subscription was cancelled, and I had to call over the course of four bills or so to please turn my damn box off.

And while the DirecTivo is nice, and the HD version is even nicer, you&#039;re locked into DTV. I wouldn&#039;t mind that too much, but not having to actually own any hardware via the cable route is nice, and cable giving you HD-capable hardware at a few bucks a month instead of hundreds to own a box that&#039;ll be obsolete in a year is genius.

Lastly, the other DVR brand, ReplayTV, has an ethernet interface that operates with a third-party PC program called DVArchive. While not officially supported (and thus you can&#039;t really get away calling it a &quot;feature&quot;), it does provide a handy way of quickly doing things without using Replay&#039;s klutzy interface and can also extract programs&#039; MPEG streams, for reasons ethical or otherwise.

So basically, Tivo kind of ranks in last in the pack for me. It&#039;s advantages are an interface even the most old-fashioned Grandma could eventually understand and the intelligence of it&#039;s Season Pass program. And even the latter is a downside to me since my family went nuts with Season Pass on the DirecTV unit, resulting in programs constantly being deleted to make room for more and any one thing you choose to record being erased under an avalanche of automatic recordings.

Later, Tivo. Can&#039;t say I&#039;ll miss you.
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No tears, no tears. I hate Tivo, I owned two of their boxes (original Sony, original DirecTivo) and their support line is horrible. The phone tree has voice-recognition that, well, let&#8217;s just say that their voice recognition is about as spot-on as the handwriting recognition in the original Apple Newton. They kept billing me long after I was told my subscription was cancelled, and I had to call over the course of four bills or so to please turn my damn box off.</p>
<p>And while the DirecTivo is nice, and the HD version is even nicer, you&#8217;re locked into DTV. I wouldn&#8217;t mind that too much, but not having to actually own any hardware via the cable route is nice, and cable giving you HD-capable hardware at a few bucks a month instead of hundreds to own a box that&#8217;ll be obsolete in a year is genius.</p>
<p>Lastly, the other DVR brand, ReplayTV, has an ethernet interface that operates with a third-party PC program called DVArchive. While not officially supported (and thus you can&#8217;t really get away calling it a &#8220;feature&#8221;), it does provide a handy way of quickly doing things without using Replay&#8217;s klutzy interface and can also extract programs&#8217; MPEG streams, for reasons ethical or otherwise.</p>
<p>So basically, Tivo kind of ranks in last in the pack for me. It&#8217;s advantages are an interface even the most old-fashioned Grandma could eventually understand and the intelligence of it&#8217;s Season Pass program. And even the latter is a downside to me since my family went nuts with Season Pass on the DirecTV unit, resulting in programs constantly being deleted to make room for more and any one thing you choose to record being erased under an avalanche of automatic recordings.</p>
<p>Later, Tivo. Can&#8217;t say I&#8217;ll miss you.</p>
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		<title>By: Bantis</title>
		<link>http://www.loonyblog.net/2004/12/23/tivo-your-days-are-numbered/comment-page-1#comment-1110</link>
		<dc:creator>Bantis</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Dec 2004 09:37:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.loonyblog.net/?p=651#comment-1110</guid>
		<description>Tivo has no worries. At CES in January, Tivo is said to announce a Tivo that will interface with their own CableCard, bypassing the issue of cable company encryption (That&#039;s the reason there are no standalone Tivo&#039;s that can record HD, the streams are encrypted). Tivo Isn&#039; not going anywhere.
I do have to agree though, I wonder what&#039;s going to happen with DirecTV, I&#039;ve always heard it was going to end, but it seems like now more than ever DirecTV is pushing Tivo</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tivo has no worries. At CES in January, Tivo is said to announce a Tivo that will interface with their own CableCard, bypassing the issue of cable company encryption (That&#8217;s the reason there are no standalone Tivo&#8217;s that can record HD, the streams are encrypted). Tivo Isn&#8217; not going anywhere.<br />
I do have to agree though, I wonder what&#8217;s going to happen with DirecTV, I&#8217;ve always heard it was going to end, but it seems like now more than ever DirecTV is pushing Tivo</p>
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