Digeo purchased by Arris, promises continued Moxi development, sales and support

After a post-CES “streamlining” resulted in layoffs and left highly anticipated products like the Multi-Room HD DMR to never see the light of day the future of Moxi DVR builder Digeo has remained in doubt, but that’s all behind us as it has been acquired by ARRIS. Promising not only continued support for current Moxi customers but also plans to continue to develop and market the line of products, it appears the communications company sees this as a way to expand its own networking expertise. The cost to snap up Digeo’s IP, 75 employees and other assets? A mere $20 million cash – we expect to find out more details via conference call tomorrow, any questions you want answered about the future of Moxi? Let us know in the comments, whether this means the UI will get a makeover is already on our list.

Filed under:

Digeo purchased by Arris, promises continued Moxi development, sales and support originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 21:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Apple Exec Dismisses Idea of DVR-Equipped Apple TV

appletv2
Have you ever dreamed of an Apple TV featuring a TiVo-like digital video recorder? We have. But unfortunately an Apple executive has squashed any possibility of that ever happening — and with it, he’s probably also killed any chance Apple TV had of becoming a major success.

Apple’s chief financial officer Tim Oppenheimer told investment bank Caris and Company that Apple killed the idea of a DVR-equipped Apple TV because it doesn’t fit in with the company’s business. That makes sense: Apple sells movies and TV episodes via iTunes, and a DVR certainly wouldn’t help with sales.

Then again, if you want an Apple-branded DVR, you can always get a Mac Mini, load on Boxee, and connect one of those Elgato TV tuners. Bonus: The Mac Mini includes a DVD player, so it can even play your Netflix discs — something Apple TV can’t do.

We never thought an Apple TV with DVR was going to happen, but we hoped. Now we’ll just let it go and dream about something else. An official Google Voice app for iPhone perhaps? Hah!

See Also:

Photo: nialkennedy/Flickr


Apple CFO says DVR, CableCARD not coming to Apple TV

Although Apple has always referred to the Apple TV as a “hobby,” there’s been a lot of speculation regarding the future of the box recently — it was first introduced nearly three years ago, and although the interface has since been upgraded, it’s still essentially the same product, leading to whispers that Apple was working on a new DVR-enabled model with CableCARD tuners that would replace your cable box. Awesome, right? Not so fast — according to analysts at Caris and Company, Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer “pretty much killed” that idea when they asked him about it, saying it didn’t mesh with Apple’s business. Yeah, it’s sad, but it makes a lot of sense — Apple probably doesn’t want you to record for free what you can buy from the iTunes Store, and we can’t imagine anyone at Apple looking back at their experience with AT&T and deciding that partnering up with Comcast or Time Warner Cable was the next logical move. Still — doesn’t it seem like it’s time for something to happen with the Apple TV? Who know, maybe we’ll find out tomorrow.

[Via iLounge]

Filed under:

Apple CFO says DVR, CableCARD not coming to Apple TV originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Sep 2009 13:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sony introduces five new feature-packed, confusingly-named Blu-ray DVRs

Sony introduces five new feature-packed, confusingly-named Blu-ray DVRs

Now that Toshiba’s getting in on the Blu-ray train, Sony needs to up its game. Enter a quintet of new players, each packing TV recording tech, overlapping feature sets, and seemingly nonsensical names. Starting at the low end is the BDZ-RS10, which sports a measly single digital tuner and 320GB worth of storage. Next up is the BDZ-EX30, adding a second digital tuner and a Blu-ray recorder into the action. Then the BDZ-EX50 moves up to 500GB of storage and adds PSP support, the BDZ-RX100 goes up to a full 1TB, and the BDZ-EX200 2TB. All but the lowest two support DLNA and can spin an hours worth of video to a PSP or X-1000 in under two minutes, meaning you could sync the entire Battlestar Galactica series in just over two hours and get your Cylon fix wherever you like.

Filed under:

Sony introduces five new feature-packed, confusingly-named Blu-ray DVRs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 09:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

TiVo projects larger than expected losses, still taking the patent fight to AT&T and Verizon

We’ll let the analysts make sense of TiVo’s new projection that it will lose $8 to $10 million in the third quarter, larger than Wall Street expectations while projected revenues are lower — we’re too busy adding Verizon and AT&T to the patent battlemap. Today it filed complaints against both for violating three of its DVR-related patents — Nos. 6,233,389 B1 (“Multimedia Time Warping System”), 7,529,465 B2 (“System for Time Shifting Multimedia Content Streams”), and 7,493,015 B1 (“Automatic Playback Overshoot Correction System”) if you must know — seeking damages for past infringement and a permanent injunction. We’d assumed it would wait until settling things with DISH to push forward against other companies, but it looks like we’re not the only ones getting impatient. Beyond the legal slapfight there’s a few nuggets for the bleep bloop faithful, with the Comcast TiVo on-line scheduler beginning to roll out in Boston plus further expansions on the way and the due-in-2010 DirecTV HD TiVo still on track — we’ll need a few seasons of Law & Order queued up before this mess ever gets resolved.

Read – TiVo Swings to Loss, Files Infringement Suits
Read – TiVo Reports Results for the Second Quarter Fiscal Year 2010 Ended July 31, 2009
Read – TiVo Files Complaints for Patent Infringement Against AT&T and Verizon Communications in United States District Court, Eastern District of Texas; Seeking Damages and Injunction

Filed under:

TiVo projects larger than expected losses, still taking the patent fight to AT&T and Verizon originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 20:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Latest Hitachi LCDs & plasmas take all the thrill out of the Wooo

Look here Hitachi, according to our extensive community college experience “Wooo” is always an indicator of a good time to be had by all, new experiences, possible overnight police station stays and most recently, UWB wireless shenanigans, super slim HDTVs or other examples of display imagination. Following that trend from your Japanese arm, these 5 spec bumped models of XP035 series plasmas (42-, 46- and 50-inch, pictured) and XP35 LCDs (42- and 47-inch) don’t quite live up to the name, while spec bumps over last year’s edition with thorough DLNA and DTCP-IP support and 500GB hard drives with iVDR slots to add even more space might impress some, we’ve come to expect more. Come 2010, we’re looking for super resolution or something else you haven’t done before, don’t let us down this time. Click through for even more detailed prices and specs, we’ll be in the corner checking our CES reservations one more time.

Read – Hitachi, 500GB HDD built-in full HD plasma / LCD TV – High-definition recording eight times / DLNA support “Wooo” 5 models
Read – Hitachi Announces Several PDPs and LCD TVs with Both a 500GB HDD and DLNA Support

Filed under: ,

Latest Hitachi LCDs & plasmas take all the thrill out of the Wooo originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 18:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Mitsubishi’s new Blu-ray DVRs have you covered, from super resolution to VHS

Mitsubishi has always tried to take a different tack with its Blu-ray recording DVRs in Japan — see its DVR-BF2000 model for evidence — and we’re sure someone’s glad to see them going the extra mile with these latest three models. The DVR-BZ330 combines a 1TB hard drive with the super resolution upconversion that promises to pull additional information from low res video via its Diamond HD chip. If that bit of video magic isn’t impressive(or believable) there’s always the similar DVR-BZ230 sans-Diamond HD and half the hard drive space, while true back compat freaks should opt for the DVR-BV530 with VHS playback (no recording, we know you had an LP tape you’ve been saving.) Expect these to hit the streets in October from ¥180,000 ($1,915) for the high end DVR-BZ330 to ¥120,000 ($1,270) for the DVR-BV530.

Filed under: ,

Mitsubishi’s new Blu-ray DVRs have you covered, from super resolution to VHS originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 06:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Zune 4.0 software won’t play nice with HDTV Media Center recordings

With the launch of the Zune HD and the CEDIA show just around the corner, we’ve been hoping this could mean an all new integrated future for Windows Media Center and other Microsoft platforms — until now. As a few commenters pointed out yesterday, the corrected spec sheet received from Microsoft indicated HDTV and protected Windows Media Center DVR-MS (the files used by Vista Media center) recordings were not supported. We reached out for clarification and received the following:

Zune HD, and the forthcoming Zune 4.0 PC software, will support and transcode Windows Media Center recorded TV file formats from Windows Vista or Windows 7 that contain MPEG-2 video, in either the DVR-MS or WTV formats. Support is limited to unencrypted SD and HD recordings. HD Files with AC3 audio are not supported by Zune.

As you may or may not be aware, at least in the U.S. , and most other countries, any high definition broadcasts you snag from antenna, ClearQAM or otherwise use Dolby Digital AC-3 audio, meaning the Zune software won’t be able to convert them. Current workarounds for bringing Media Center recordings on the go should still be a go, but all we can see is the missed opportunity to tie the two platforms together with easy one click transcoding support. Hopefully Microsoft still has something up its sleeve to pull together Zune and Windows 7 Media Center, but portable DVR recordings ain’t it.

Filed under: , , ,

Zune 4.0 software won’t play nice with HDTV Media Center recordings originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 17:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Verizon FiOS Expands Remote DVR Programming

verizon media manager.jpg

Forgot to set your DVR before heading out of town for the weekend? If you’re a FiOS TV DVR customer with a smartphone, you’re in luck. The company announced Monday that it is expanding the number of customers who can remotely set their DVRs via cell phone.

Any FiOS TV DVR customers can now program their DVRs via an Internet-enabled phone. In April, Verizon announced that FiOS TV DVR customers could program their devices via the Web, but only subscribers of Home Media DVR, which lets users watch shows they’ve taped on up to six TVs throughout the house, could program via the Internet and smartphones.

“Now, if you’re a FiOS TV DVR customer, you can use the Web site or a cell phone to review, change or add recording requests, delete recorded programs, browse and search TV and video-on-demand listings, set parental controls and more,” Verizon spokesman Eric Rabe wrote in a blog post.

Verizon also expanded access to its Media Manager download, which lets customers view photos, play music, and stream videos from the PC to FiOS TV DVRs.

“Until now, Media Manager has only been available to certain subscribers, but now we’re opening up the service to any TV and Internet customer who also has a DVR. There’s no extra charge,” Rabe wrote.

Those certain subscribers include Home Media DVR customers that also had FiOS internet. Now it’s open to all FiOS TV DVR customers who also have FiOS Internet.

To access Media Manager, sign into your Verizon.net account and download the program. Then, select the “Media Manager” option on the FiOS TV Interactive Media Guide.

Patent Office rejects some of TiVo’s patent claims, battle vs. DISH to rage on

You knew it couldn’t be over, right? The long running TiVo vs. DISH / Echostar patent case took a not-so-new twist yesterday when the Patent and Trademark Office issued a preliminary finding rejecting some of the claims of its Time Warp patent. While DISH was pleased, considering the PTO’s conclusions as “highly relevant” to its ongoing appeal, TiVo issued a statement calling this step “not unusual” pointing out that the exact same thing happened when its patent was reexamined in 2005 (and subsequently upheld in 2007,) and that the next step in the process is where it will be able to present its explanation for the first time. All you need to know is that it will still be a while before anyone involved (except the two company’s lawyers) are cashing any large checks, or gets their DVR taken away.

[Via Multichannel News]

Read – TiVo Statement on Developments in Lawsuit Against EchoStar
Read – DISH Network and EchoStar Statement Regarding Tivo

Filed under:

Patent Office rejects some of TiVo’s patent claims, battle vs. DISH to rage on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 09:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments