TiVo Premiere review

When we first heard rumors of new TiVo hardware back in April of 2009, our imaginations started racing. The current TiVo HD and HD XL have been the best DVRs on the market for their entire three-year run, and while they’ve received significant feature updates in that time, the overall experience of using a TiVo simply hasn’t kept up with the explosion of online content and the revised viewing habits of consumers — in fact, the interface has remained largely unchanged for nearly a decade. So while the actual TiVo hardware has actually gotten smaller and simpler, it’s the software that’s received a substantial makeover this time around — it’s migrated to Flash, and the main elements have been totally redesigned for HD displays and the invisible integration of online video services. Is it enough to keep TiVo afloat in a sea of cheap cableco DVRS? It is worth upgrading from an existing TiVo HD? There’s only one way to find out — read on for our full review.

Continue reading TiVo Premiere review

TiVo Premiere review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Mar 2010 21:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Comcast’s 3D Masters broadcast explained

Still wondering how the first live broadcasts for the new 3DTVs will work? Comcast Fellow Mark Francisco has been working on bringing 3D home for several years now, and was able to clear up some of the questions that you’ve been asking about what takes place before home viewers slip on those “beautifully styled” glasses for the first time. Whether you’d want to, can afford to with the first generation of compatible HDTVs, or why it’s expanding the use of that silly Xfinity name weren’t among them, so for that you’re on your own.

What format/compression will Comcast use on its Masters broadcast and going forward?

Just like DirecTV, Comcast is planning on a side-by-side 1080i (not sure what that is? Check out our breakdown of the different ways to send 3D) MPEG-2 transmission. Mark confirmed what we’d heard previously in our discussion with Bob Wilson from Motorola, on the backend, very little needed changing or updating to enable this transmission, which will take up a 6MHz channel, other than their frame multiplexers. There will also be an h.264 stream and VC-1 (for the Masters.com feed) and for broadcast within hospitality tents at Augusta National.

Will I need a new cable box or have to get a firmware update of some kind to watch 3D?

All of Comcast’s HD set-top boxes connected through HDMI are already capable of handling the signal, so don’t expect a firmware upgrade (unless you’re waiting for remote DVR features, of course) between then and now, although future upgrades will include 3D menus and guide information, which are currently still 2D.

Continue reading Comcast’s 3D Masters broadcast explained

Comcast’s 3D Masters broadcast explained originally appeared on Engadget HD on Fri, 19 Mar 2010 15:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Thumbs up, thumbs down at TiVo Premiere

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

TiVo’s announcement of TiVo Premiere represents the most significant user interface overhaul for the device in years. Based on Adobe Flash and optimized for the high-definition screens that are likely to be paired with CableCARD programming, the new user interface blends together live, recorded, and broadband content. That presentation is more akin to what we’ve seen from Windows Media Center, and less like TiVo’s Series3 that segmented programming sources by type. TiVo has also beefed up its search capability, bringing it up to par with that of its only significant retail DVR competitor, Digeo’s Moxi.

The new interaction widens the user experience gap between TiVo and your average cable or satellite DVR, and TiVo has two other features that set it apart. First, no doubt reacting to the Moxi competition, TiVo long ago reinstated its lifetime service option that was so popular in the product’s early years. However, those who have opted for this plan through TiVo’s major platform upgrades over the years have endured more lifetime sentences than many a felon.

Continue reading Switched On: Thumbs up, thumbs down at TiVo Premiere

Switched On: Thumbs up, thumbs down at TiVo Premiere originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Mar 2010 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo returning to the UK thanks to partnership with Virgin Media

It looks like TiVo’s freshly minted Premiere hardware will soon be setting sail eastwards as The Daily Telegraph is reporting Virgin Media’s next generation set-top box will be built around it. Loyal readers of Engadget HD will already be aware that TiVo and Virgin hooked up last November and this latest news relates to the first hardware to be spawned from that relationship. According to TiVo CEO Tom Rogers, the Premiere will “heavily inspire the development work” going into Virgin’s next TV appendage, which may or may not mean that the cable company will simply rebadge the well-received new boxes. What’s assured though is much greater integration with online content, with search linking you out to Amazon, BBC’s iPlayer, YouTube or good old standard broadcast channels. The whole thing’s about unlimited choice, apparently, and should be showing up on the Queen’s isles by the end of this year. We can wait, but we’d rather we didn’t have to.

TiVo returning to the UK thanks to partnership with Virgin Media originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Mar 2010 09:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo’s $200m damages award in EchoStar case affirmed, EchoStar to appeal (again)

Yes, there’s a certain other patent brouhaha in the news right now, but we’re not lying when we say these lawsuits take years to fully resolve. Take TiVo’s endless time warp patent lawsuit against EchoStar, which started in 2006 and involves just a single patent: the court of appeals just today affirmed the $200 million contempt judgment against EchoStar from September. Of course, EchoStar is going to appeal to the full appeals court — it always appeals — and if that doesn’t work we’d wager that this case will eventually be appealed to the Supreme Court for a second time. Don’t worry, everyone keep can keep recording Idol — this shouldn’t affect TiVo or DISH Network customers at all. Statements from both TiVo and EchoStar after the break.

Continue reading TiVo’s $200m damages award in EchoStar case affirmed, EchoStar to appeal (again)

TiVo’s $200m damages award in EchoStar case affirmed, EchoStar to appeal (again) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 12:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo Premiere and Premiere XL usher in a brand new interface, optional QWERTY remote

Over three years after the original Series3 launched, TiVo’s back with Series4 — say hello to the new TiVo Premiere and Premiere XL, which will arrive in early April. The new slimmer hardware is nice, but the big news is the totally revamped HD interface built on Flash — yes, Flash — with all kinds of new options for discovering content from recorded, on-air, and internet sources. The new UI is only for the Series4, and TiVo’s pitching the Premiere line as a single-box solution for getting content on your TV, so although there’s long been support for services like Netflix and Amazon Video on Demand, it’s now being pushed to the front — content will show up in searches and be exposed on the main screen. There are also new partnerships with Pandora and FrameChannel, both of which will also come to Series3 boxes. And yes: there’s finally a capacity meter. We could kiss the ground.

Both models will do up to 1080p output and have single multistream CableCARD slots and eSATA jacks for storage expansion; the $299 Premiere will do 45 hours of HD recording on the 320GB internal drive, while the $499 XL will do 150 on 1TB and adds in THX certification. The bad news? There’s still no support for tru2way, so you still won’t have access to your cable company’s video on demand service — although one of the screenshots has a Comcast logo on it, so we’re intrigued.

There’s also a new optional Bluetooth slider QWERTY remote, which will ship later this year for an undisclosed price — we played with a hush-hush prototype at CES and we can say that it’ll be a must-buy for Premiere owners. We’re actually a little miffed that it’s not packed in the box as the standard remote — all that searching almost demands it. Same with the new Wireless N Adapter, which will be $90 and go on sale with the Premiere; it should at least be included with the Premiere XL. We’re okay with the omission of the new optional phone line adapter, though, it’ll be $30 and only sold online. Press release after the break, a full set of pics in the galleries, and PDF spec sheets at the read links.

Continue reading TiVo Premiere and Premiere XL usher in a brand new interface, optional QWERTY remote

TiVo Premiere and Premiere XL usher in a brand new interface, optional QWERTY remote originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Mar 2010 18:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTiVo Premiere, TiVo Premiere XL (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

Entelligence: Two DVR features I’m waiting for

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

I love DVRs. I have been using them for over a decade, and my original model is still in use. Whether it’s a PC-based solution, something that comes from your cable provider or the granddaddy of all DVRs, TiVo, a DVR totally changes the way you watch TV, especially if you don’t like watching a lot of TV but care a lot about the TV that you do watch.

Last week TiVo sent out word of an event coming in March with a mysterious tagline. Even as good as my current TiVo Series 3 is, it could even be better, and while we speculate about what TiVo will announce, there’s two features I’d like to see.

Continue reading Entelligence: Two DVR features I’m waiting for

Entelligence: Two DVR features I’m waiting for originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Feb 2010 17:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo granted patent on recording Season Pass subscriptions by priority

It’s been a ten year process, but TiVo just won a patent on managing DVR recording schedules and resolving schedule conflicts using a list of shows ordered by priority. US Patent #7,665,111 covers “recording, storing, and deleting of television and/or web page program material” by generating a prioritized list of shows that contains both shows chosen and ranked by users and shows the DVR think you’ll like, matching that list against the program guide and available recording space, and resolving conflicts based on priority. Yeah, that’s what essentially every DVR on the market does now — but before you run off screaming into the woods, remember that this was all basically uncharted territory when TiVo applied for this patent way back in 1999, the same year it launched one of the first DVRs.

Now, TiVo has been anything but shy when it comes to suing over its other hard-fought DVR patents, so we’ll have to see how the company decides to use this new bit of IP leverage; patents that have been pending for this long aren’t exactly secrets to anyone, and we’re sure TiVo’s competitors have been thinking of clever ways to design around it. (One bit that jumps out: the priority list has to contain both “a viewer’s explicit preferred program selections for recording” and “inferred preferred program selections for recording,” so DVRs that don’t auto-record like TiVos could potentially be excluded.) Of course, we’d rather just see TiVo retake the lead in the DVR space with some entirely new ideas — we’ll see what happens next month.

TiVo granted patent on recording Season Pass subscriptions by priority originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 15:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PS3’s Torne DVR adapter gets moved up to March in Japan

PS3's Torne DVR adapter gets moved up to March in Japan, still never elsewhere

Well, look at that. After a suite of delays and a confirmed launch in May, the Torne DTV DVR adapter for the PS3 (OMG, TLA overload) is actually getting released two months ahead of schedule. It’ll ship on March 18, to be exact, which just so happens to be the birthday of a certain Engadget editor — a certain editor who certainly won’t be expecting one of these as a present, as it’s highly unlikely that this device, or the all-inclusive bundle with a 250GB PS3, will ever see American shores. Meanwhile those in Japan can expect to pay ¥9,980 ($110) or ¥42,800 ($466.52) for the “limited edition” bundle, which we hear makes a lovely unbirthday present.

PS3’s Torne DVR adapter gets moved up to March in Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 10:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo patent points to new sharing and interactivity built around closed captions

The rumors are already flying for that upcoming March 2nd TiVo event, but a recently granted patent gives us one idea of what TiVo’s been up to of late. The basic idea of the patent is to use embedded meta data in TV broadcasts, primarily the closed caption text, to create “event identification data” that makes the DVR — when synced up against related data online — smarter about the content. Example uses include overlaying interactive ads from the content provider, creating “tagged” video files for viewing on a portable device, extracting tagged clips, or even “sharing” segments with other TiVo users. Some of this info, like the commercial detection, is already in use, but the opportunity to “share” a sequence with a friend would be a powerful workaround for existing limitations from broadcasting companies that don’t want users sending copyrighted content to each other. Using the TiVo to merely “tag” the relevant portion of something already recorded by a friend (hopefully with the addition of our helpful “OMG” and “LOL” commentary) makes a lot of sense, and even if we don’t see it in this upcoming revision, it could be a pretty nice win for TiVo in the ongoing war between the well dressed, successful people who create our content and us schlubs who are trying to consume it conveniently.

TiVo patent points to new sharing and interactivity built around closed captions originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Feb 2010 11:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Davis Freeberg’s Digital Connection  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments