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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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WeaKnees News

Humax T2500s In Stock

Sound like a bit of a blast from the past? Yup, that’s right. The Humax T2500.

This is definitely a bit of an older unit, but it’s a pretty good one, and it’s pretty cheap. We’re selling them at $99 as our “deal of the day” today, and likely for a few days.

Just to be clear, this is a standard definition, analog unit (it has no digital tuner – for more on that see our blog post about the digital transition), with no internal DirecTV tuner. Further, many people associate Humax with the DVD burner units – we have those, too, but this isn’t one of them. This unit is basically a TCD540040 clone, branded by Humax, with a much larger capacity.

So that said, why would you want one of these? Lots of reasons:

  • Perfect for a second room or bedroom without HD
  • Great gateway from your computer to your home entertainment system, since it supports networking
  • Large capacity for use to access shows from other units over Multi Room Viewing
  • Low price – no rebate involved! $99
  • Finally, we expect that many will buy these for parts, since they have a new remote, power supply, hard drive, and cables. If you need maybe two of those parts, the rest is free.
Categories
WeaKnees News

More TiVo Power Supplies Available

We’ve just added three more models to our TiVo power supply page. Amazingly, we now sell fourteen (14!) different models of power supplies for TiVos alone. Yes, we’re packed in to the gills over here.

The ones we just added are for:

 

  • Dual Tuner TiVos (TCD649080 and TCD649180)
  • TiVo Series3 (the original HD TiVo)
  • TiVo HD (the second HD TiVo)

 

Categories
DirecTV Troubleshooting Help

DIRECTV TiVo Tuner Problems

As DIRECTV TiVos age, we are seeing more problems with satellite tuners. I thought it would be helpful to summarize some of the more frequent symptoms of a bad DirecTiVo satellite tuner. (Also see our TiVo troubleshooting page.) Here are some of the more common symptoms associated with a defective satellite tuner (you need not have all of these symptoms to have a bad tuner):

  1. “Searching for Signal on Satellite 1” or “Searching for Signal on Satellite 2” message appears on your screen. Sometimes, this message appears constantly; other times it appears and disappears.
  2. Some of your recordings record; others don’t, especially when you have two programs set to record at the same time.
  3. If you conduct a satellite test, you see one or both of your satellites without any signal strength on all transponders. (To conduct a test, go to Messages and Settings > Settings > Satellite > Test Satellite Signal Strength > Ok; then cycle through the various transponders and satellites. Note that even fully functional units do not get a signal on every transponder, but your SAT 1 and SAT 2 signal strengths should be the same.)
  4. If you conduct a satellite test, you see the satellite signal strength on one of your tuners jump up and down, or you see one of the satellites significantly lower than the other. (To conduct a test, go to Messages and Settings > Settings > Satellite > Test Satellite Signal Strength > Ok; then cycle through the various transponders and satellites. Note that you won’t necessarily get signal on every transponder.)
  5. You see heavy and significant pixellation (blocky picture) on one or both of your satellite tuners. This could be a drive or a bad tuner, and we previously wrote about ways to diagnose the source of a pixellating DIRECTV TiVo. If you rewind, the pixellation is in the same place repeatedly.
  6. You see consistent, heavy pixellation on certain satellite channels, but not all of them.

If you are unsure whether you have a bad tuner, here are some tests you can conduct to help troubleshoot:

  1. If you are running two tuners and only one of your tuners is bad, try swapping cables in the back. Put the SAT 1 cable in the SAT 2 port, and vice versa. If the problem follows the cable (i.e., if the bad tuner was SAT 1 but after swapping cables is SAT 2), then you know you have a dish problem and not a satellite problem.
  2. If you are running two tuners and the bad tuner seems to be SAT 2, then you should be able to repeat satellite setup (Messages and Settings > Settings > Satellite > Repeat Satellite Setup) and specify that you have only one tuner. After doing that, your unit should work fine, but with only one tuner. If it does, then you know you have a bad SAT 2 tuner.
  3. If you have heavy pixellation on one tuner, then you can pause a pixellating channel and switch tuners (down on the circular directional arrow pad) and confirm that the pixellation disappears. If it does, then you have a bad tuner.

If you have determined that you do indeed have a defective tuner, then you have a few options: (1) You can abandon the TiVo and upgrade to high definition using one of DIRECTV’s non-TiVo DVRs. (2) You can send in your TiVo for a TiVo tuner repair. (3) If you have a bad SAT 2 only, then you can run with only SAT 1. (4) You can get a replacement DIRECTV TiVo (while supplies last).

Categories
Product Information

TiVo and the Digital Television 2009 Transition

You’ve likely heard that there will be some big changes in the broadcast TV industry in February of 2009. But there’s a lot of misunderstanding out there about what’s exactly changing, and which situations the change affects.

(Yes, “DTV” will cause confusion. It means “digital television” here but means “DirecTV” to many.)

The Short Version

The condensed version is pretty straightforward: if you have satellite (DirecTV or Dish) or cable TV, these issues don’t affect you. The equipment you have (receiver and/or cable box) will continue to output the same signal you currently receive. But if you have an antenna, and you aren’t using it exclusively for HD, then you’ll likely need to get some new equipment by February of 2009.

The Details

Essentially, the issue is that the FCC (the federal government agency regulating the airwaves) gave out to broadcasters additional spectrum for them to broadcast digital signal – both standard definition (SD) and high definition (HD). As part of this program, the FCC also took back the spectrum these broadcaster were using for traditional analog SD transmissions. But to make the transition less painful, they allowed for an overlap period where broadcasters could use both the analog and digital areas of the spectrum allocated to them to broadcast both simultaneously. We are in this transitional period currently.

So to be totally clear, this change only affects customers who use that which will be taken back by the FCC: analog SD antenna broadcasts. They want the airwave spectrum back. They really don’t care (at this point) what goes through cable wires or satellite transmissions.

Most, but not all, standalone TiVo DVRs, including the HD models, can receive these transmissions. So if you have a TiVo set up with antenna reception, you’ll likely see at least some change in February of 2009. If you only have antenna as a programming source, you’ll need additional equipment to keep receiving channels (coming to that). If you have antenna as one input source, but you have others, you may not care about the difference.

If you have an HD TiVo connected to an antenna, you’ll basically lose the analog channels, but retain the digital ones. So if you currently receive 7, 7-1, 7-2, and 7-3, you’ll lose the basic 7, but you’ll retain the 7-1, 7-2, and 7-3. The newest list of digital channels broadcasting nationwide is generally here.

Many cable customers are concerned that cable companies will be cutting their analog service. Cable companies can do this if they choose to, but the cable company conversion to digital broadcasting is largely the decision of the cable provider, not the FCC at this point. In fact, the FCC is helping to keep analog alive in the cable world: “Cable companies are actually required by FCC rules to continue offering local broadcast stations to their customers in analog as long as they offer any analog service. This requirement will continue for at least three years after February 17, 2009.”

Converter Boxes

The FCC didn’t want to render all of the analog equipment out there useless, so they’ve been working with a few manufacturers to get converter boxes produced. Otherwise, all older TV sets (pretty much any non-HD TV), VCRs, and DVRs would be useless. So the converter box works, in a sense, like a cable or satellite box, taking one type of transmission (digital antenna broadcasts) and tuning and converting that to an analog output for a TV, VCR, or DVR. The result is that the converter box must tune the channel, rather than the TV, VCR, or DVR. This may make some installations more complicated. It will certainly also prompt many users of older equipment to just upgrade their equipment, rather than to get a converter box.

Compatible Digital Equipment

Most newer TVs include digital tuners now. In fact, the FCC requires any TV sold at this point to be capable of tuning digital antenna transmissions internally (and they fined some companies recently for selling equipment that didn’t comply). So any TV purchased after March 1, 2007, should be able to receive digital antenna signals.

In the TiVo world, this likely explains why TiVo’s latest standard definition DVR, the Dual Tuner model, lacks antenna input totally; they wouldn’t be able to sell this unit at some point since it would have analog but not digital antenna capabilities.

Our latest shipment of Series3 TiVos was complete with this notice:

So the Series3 complies with the FCC regulations. It receives both analog and digital inputs via the antenna port. The TiVo HD has the same capabilities in this regard.

Roundup

This transition won’t affect most TV and TiVo viewers – all of those with DirecTV, Dish, and cable. It only will affect antenna users, and of those, only users who get analog channels still. For those users, they can either get converter boxes to use with their TiVo (TiVo hasn’t released full information about which DVRs will support what converter boxes) or they can get a newer HD TiVo and begin to receive the digital antenna broadcasts.