While we’re on the theme of what customers want but they can’t get, we should put to rest another request: the DirecTV TiVo with DVD.
Yesterday’s installment concerned the request for an HD TiVo with DVD. That one can’t work at this point and probably in the future for technical reasons.
But the idea of a DirecTV DVR with an integrated DVD burner really, really could work for technical reasons. The issue here is more about copyright, and, in general, DirecTV’s unwillingness to push the envelope with content providers.
Why is this different from a standard TiVo with DVD which does, in fact, exist? The big reason is that on the Humax models that we sell (and on the older Pioneer and Toshiba TiVo models with DVD) the recordings are made from analog inputs. That means that the quality, while very good, isn’t quite as good as the all-digital quality of recordings to DirecTV TiVos and other DVRs and the HD TiVos with CableCARDs. If you take that all-digital signal and pump it to a DVD, then you’ve basically got a digital copy that’s pretty amazing. DirecTV doesn’t want to be the gatekeeper on that.
Of course, if that’s what you really want – all digital copy to a DVD – then there is a way to do it, just not with DirecTV. You can get a standalone TiVo or HD TiVo and copy your shows over a network to your PC or Mac, then burn them there. But DirecTV won’t help you there – at least, so far. There’s a chance that the upcoming DirecTV HD TiVo will have networking features . . .
2 replies on “Another Customer Wish NOT Granted: DirecTV and DVD”
“You can get a standalone TiVo or HD TiVo and copy your shows over a network to your PC or Mac, then burn them there. ”
How does one copy a show over a network to a PC? I have the HD TiVo.
One way I found was to use a video capture card with a RF lead in. I plugged that into the local cable line and from there just set it to record in coming video. Of course it wasn’t 1080, but it worked.