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Product Information TiVo Upgrade

2 Terabyte Kits for TiVo HD and TiVo Series3

We just added the kits to our site for getting 2 Terabytes of storage on your TiVo HD or TiVo Series3. See the kits at the bottom of each list:

TiVo Series3 Upgrade Kits

TiVo HD Upgrade Kits

So these kits come with two 1 Terabyte drives – one internal and one external. And they have to work together. This is the most storage capacity ever on a TiVo!

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Product Information

External HR20 and HR21 Kits Now Available

We’ve been upgrading the DirecTV HD DVRs for a while now by changing out the internal drives. And we think, for several reasons, that this is still the best move. But due to the complexity of the installation, we do all of those type of upgrades here – we don’t sell upgrade kits for self-installations like we do for TiVos and other DVRs.

Now we’ve just begun selling external upgrades for these DirecTV HD DVRs – the HR20 and the HR21. Again, we think that the internal upgrade is the best option, but if you already have your DVR and you don’t want to send us the unit, and you don’t mind having another item plugged in at your setup, you can now order an external upgrade for HR20 and HR21. We use DVR-specific hard drives in these cases, good cables, and quiet cool enclosures.

One important note on this type of upgrade – this kit will replace your existing storage – not add to it.

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DirecTV Product Information

DirecTV TiVo Power Supplies (Series1) are now $39

We just received stock of replacement power supplies for DirecTV TiVos (DirecTiVos) from the first generation of units, and we lowered the price now that we have a good quantity. These power supplies were $99 and are now $39. So if you’re looking to salvage an older unit, you can now do so for a very good price.

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These power supplies are compatible with the Philips DSR6000 (and all sub-versions), the Sony SAT T-60, and the Hughes GXCEBOT and GXCEBOTD.

See more info on our TiVo power supply page.

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Product Information TiVo Upgrade WeaKnees News

The New Big TiVo! 2 Terabytes, 292 Hours of HD

We’ve been selling these for a while, but we finally put them up on our website as one entire product. It’s a TiVo Series3 with a one terabyte internal drive, and a one terabyte external drive. Both are used together to allow you to record up to 292 hours of HD, or 2777 hours of SD, or, as is pretty much always the case, a combination of both.

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WeaKnees 2 Terabyte 292 Hour TiVo Series3

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Product Information

TiVo + CableCARD = The Best DVR Yet

&The technology of the CableCARD has generated a lot of interest among our customers – and for good reason. CableCARDs have enabled end-users to get the content they want on the hardware they want. And without the dreaded cable box. Just as a web browser enables users to see internet content in a variety of ways on a desktop, laptop, PDA, or phone, CableCARDs allow users to view and record content on their choice of equipment, including TVs and DVRs.

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Some quick background: the FCC requires all cable providers in all 50 states to supply CableCARDs when requested by subscribers (you can see some info about this on the FCC website – they call the technology “plug and play”). The FCC has allowed these cable companies to wire each and every home, so they’re regulated as part of those agreements, and the CableCARD standard has evolved from those regulations. At this point, the FCC doesn’t (and probably can’t) require satellite broadcasters (DirecTV and Dish) to adhere to CableCARD rules due to the inherent differences in broadcast mechanism. The standards for the CableCARD product are evoloved and maintained by a group called CableLabs.

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So what is an actual CableCARD and how does it work? It’s really just a chipset housed in a metal case that’s about the dimensions of a credit card, and about three times as thick. Each cable provider can have different chips inside, but the key is that there is a descrambler in there, just like in earlier cable boxes. There is also a serial chip in there that holds an electronic serial number. That way, the cable company can link the serial number to your cable account and then tell that specific cable card that you pay for a certain set of channels, and to decode or unscramble only those. So in essence, it’s an unlocking device that can be controlled, in part, by the cable company.

Once the CableCARD is installed in your equipment (TV or DVR generally) then the equipment requests a certain channel and the CableCARD supplies it. As you change channels, the card follows along with the new requests. The best part is, this is totally seamless. You never have a cable box that didn’t get the message – the hardware is completely integrated.

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The interaction between TiVo DVRs and CableCARDs is truly a great step forward for DVRs. Two TiVo units – the TiVo Series3 and the TiVo HD – can both use CableCARDs to get their programming. If you’ve used a cable box (or any set top box) in conjunction with a TiVo, this a significant advance, because you now only need one box instead of two. Since the TiVo doesn’t have to control a separate box, all of the attendant issues (cables getting moved, IR interference, the box switching off unexpectedly, etc.) are eliminated from the setup.

A new type of CableCARD is emerging that can decode two streams of encrypted cable signal at once. These are knows as M cards or multistream cards. With an M card, one card is sufficient to allow a compatible DVR to record two separate channels at once. Currently, only the TiVo HD is compatible with this feature of an M card. A Series3 TiVo can use an M card, but only to record one channel at a time. So for a Series3 unit, you’d need two M cards installed to have the ability to record two channels at once. If/when the Series3 units can receive two streams through one M card, notice should be posted on the TiVo M card support page.

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(sample CableCARD setup screen on a TiVo Series3)

While the CableCARD technology is a great advance for TiVo users, there are a few drawbacks. The most important is that current support in TiVo DVRs for CableCARDs is limited to one direction: downstream. They can’t send signals back to the cable company. This means that Video On Demand and PayPerView cannot be initiated from a TiVo with CableCARDs. But if the programming is unlocked on the cable account (by phone, online, or from a cable box on the same account) then the TiVo’s CableCARDs will generally be able to view and record those shows. One other important note is that neither DirecTV nor DISH make any type of CableCARD, nor are they expected to. Since the FCC doesn’t regulate satellite broadcasters in the same way, and since their technological infrastructure is very different, we don’t believe that we will ever see this technology for use with satellite broadcasts.

CableCARDs make the latest generation of TiVos by far the best DVRs yet. They can receive signal from more sources than any previous unit, and their clarity and ease of use are unsurpassed. Essentially, the entire CableCARD platform was developed to let consumers choose their own equipment, and TiVo has produced DVRs that marry the best interface with the best HD and standard definition cable and antenna programming.