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Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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MIT Fraternity Accused Of Robot Hazing: [link]
Cute in theory, annoying in practice?
The size of the device changes depending on the amount of data it holds.
When the device is about to blow up you will see the familiar error message on your screen: "There is not enough free space".
When swithched off the flashbag remains pumped up, so you can estimate with the naked eye how much more pics, books and music albums can be transferred into it.
I guess it would depend on how big the inflated version is.
So what are folks' opinions about Tivo vs. MythTV/EyeTV/homebrew? My plan was to get DirecTV here once I had housemates and get a Tivo then. But if they're killing the lifetime subs...well, that's not so good. I'm afraid I might not be enough of a tech wonder to troubleshoot the issues that might come up with MythTV. I could probably handle ElGato's EyeTV although I suspect it's a much more expensive solution. What do folks think?
Well, lifetime subs were never an option with Directv's version of Tivo anyway. And at this point, even with the extension of the relationship (which is good! Don't get me wrong, tivo gods!) the Directivo is partially crippled. It has hardware that won't ever get activated, like the networking capability which is pretty important to me.
But, on the other side of it, because the Directv version of Tivo isn't an encoder (the satellite signal is already digital) there are some benefits to the way it functions, such as having two functional tuners (so you can record two stations and watch a third already recorded program simultaneously). The Tivo brand is a leader for a reason, and I do like having all the Tivo functionality; the guides, the way season passes work, etc. I haven't tried the homebrew versions, so I can't really compare.
But on the whole, I really like what I have.
I have a computer with MythTV and I really like it. If working with Linux doesn't sound scary, then it isn't really all that bad to set up with Fedora Core 4. You can use it to pause live TV, record shows (mostly what I use it for), playback MP3 files, flag commercials for automatic skipping, cut recorded videos (I use this to build up a library of shows with no commericals), play back videos not recorded on the system, and you can schedule programs from the web.
If you want to ask questions here or e-mail my profile addy, I'd be happy to help.
Thanks, guys. Gud, I've taken two beginning Linux classes in the past and haven't followed up on things. It's true that it's a steep learning curve. But at least MythTV is a big motivator to learn.
Am I going to hate the $8.95/month HD-DVR that I can get with my Time Warner Digital Cable? I'd rather it be a true Tivo, of course, but does anybody have any "OMG it sucks" experience to relate with a cable-package-included DVR?
The fact that it can actually record in HD is a pretty huge deal to me, since I'll be watching on my roommate's ridiculously large plasma screen. I may be wrong, but I don't think Tivo makes an HD-DVR for a reasonable price, true?
I love my HD-DVR from Adelphia. I only wish the HD were bigger. (HD recordings take up a lot more space.) I'm sure they'll have a bigger one available eventually.
ETA: I don't know what DVR your cable company provides but mine is a Moxi, which means it has two tuners built into the box so you can record two programs at once, including HD.