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TiVo News

Switched Digital Video on TiVo is Progressing

Today TiVo announced that they have submitted their software for using Switched Digital Video (SDV) to CableLABS for testing. They use an external “tuning resolver” which is a device that talks back to the cable company to tell the head end what stations to send down the pipe.

SDV confronts many users in certain cable markets, especially Hawaii. Likely, more and more cable providers will begin to use SDV as they try to supply ever larger numbers of HD channels down the same cable pipe.

More information is at TiVo’s site. No word, yet, on whether this will also cover On-Demand programming.

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TiVo News

TiVo AOL – the Deal that Never Made It

I have to confess that I didn’t remember seeing this one ever – and I’ve been working with TiVos for many, many years now. I was digging through some old boxes and I turned up these remotes with AOLTV buttons:

So I did some searches and found this link to an old story about a partnership that never blossomed.

I’m still not sure how you would change the volume with that remote on the right, but it seems ideal for Simon Says.

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TiVo News Troubleshooting Help

9.3c Update Available via Priority List

We’ve had a bunch of questions about setting up units with antenna inputs recently. Customers with new drives, or re-doing Guided Setup with Series2 units with 9.3 have experienced problems with the auto-search for channels. TiVo knows about it, and is supplying a fix for it – 9.3c. If you have an affected unit, get on the priority list here:

http://research.tivo.com/93priority/index.htm

Thanks to GizmoLovers for the first report that we saw – this answered several questions for us over the weekend!

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TiVo News

No Such Thing as Bad Publicity, Right?

By now you’ve probably heard that TiVo tried to predict who would be removed from American Idol last night. They put out a press release (although I confess that I couldn’t find it on their site, and the closest I could come to an original source on this was here – did they try to pull it?) basically saying that they were able to predict the removal candidate for the last four shows. So they felt confident, and they went live with their next prediction. And, they were wrong.

Then, when proven wrong, they released a statement basically saying that as the field narrowed, the loser became harder to predict (seems to go against logic to me; if you have fewer to choose from, odds are a lot higher that you’ll just get lucky, but also statistically, the numbers should be more distinct).

So here we have it: crowdsourcing failed. One problem, of course, is that the mismatch in demographics between the TiVo viewers and general viewers who vote could be huge. Another problem is that the the original press release doesn’t confirm that the theory was developed prospectively. If it was retrospective, then it might be no more predictive than following stock price histories. Did a statistician figure out the correlation, or did a theorist propose the correlation and then evaluate the data and confirm?

This is all for the better. Exit polls don’t work, and neither does this type of prediction. I, for one, am glad.

Categories
TiVo News Troubleshooting Help

Good Article about TiVo vs. Cable DVRs

Dan Costa just wrote a good piece about what he expects to be a resurgence of TiVo DVRs in the face of cable DVRs. It’s on the PC Magazine website. He’s on to what I consider to be one of the most important issues in the differentiation between a cable DVR and a TiVo: a TiVo isn’t just a DVR. Many people think that a DVR is basically a generic box, and that TiVo has become the name for the box since it was the first large brand name in the field. Part of that is true, but TiVo has evolved far, far beyond just being a DVR, and that’s where the real issue is. A TiVo doesn’t just have a nicer interface and a much better remote than a cable DVR (although those are both true and important aspects of the experience). Simply put, the term DVR really undersells what a TiVo does. Here’s a quick, incomplete list of features on a TiVo that far outstrip anything on a cable DVR, and also most satellite DVRs:

  • Amazon Unbox – Want something that isn’t being broadcast currently, like an old movie, or a super-new one? Likely, it’s here.
  • Streaming music from a PC or Mac – Your TiVo is attached to your stereo receiver, so use your computer’s storage, and ditch the CD player or iPod dock. This is much better.
  • Online Scheduling – Schedule shows from your web browser. Don’t type with the remote! (some satellite DVRs are getting this)
  • Videocasts – More and more good, high quality content is available, and much, much more is coming. Do you want it on your PC or your TV?
  • Transfer video to your computer – Burn DVDs, or take your laptop on a plane with shows you’ve recorded on your TiVo.

That’s really just a partial list, but these are some of the features I use that cable DVRs just don’t have. The TiVo isn’t just a DVR anymore.