External TV Tuners/PVR Devices Tested 136
Solomon writes "TV Tuners for the PC have existed for a long time but with the ever increasing popularity of TiVo-like services and the possibility of replicating such features on your Windows PC with little effort and a small investment, tuners have been getting a lot of attention this year.
Today there's three-way shootout posted at TechSpot with products from Digistor, Transcend and a very appealing offer from RTV called the VEG that lets you play consoles in your monitor. Although neither of these devices can match TiVo completely, they do give you a very cheap alternative."
wow (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, I have a 9600 all-in-wonder, and I really really like the cable tv tuner deal. I desperately need to upgrade, but I am having a hard time parting with the built in tuner. I suppose these would be a good alternative.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Re:wow (Score:2)
No discovery, no learning channel, no history channel. So 99.9% of what I watch (other than Cops) is still in NTSC).
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Re:wow (Score:3, Funny)
I'd have written it, "CBS, NBC, ABC, and some other crap," but, to each his own.
Re:wow (Score:2)
Actually, I think all of the networks are crap. I just don't get ABC in HD, which is the one I would want to be in HD if I had the choice.
I'm with you on the Fox dig, though. Cops is the only thing they've got going for them.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
I thought it was unwise - (Score:3, Interesting)
So? Is this true?
-thewldisntenuff
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:2)
Re:Mod the parent comment down (Score:2)
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:1)
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:1)
Does anybody RTFA?
-thewldisntenuff
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:2)
6 Mbps using MPEG4 encoding is even better, you have plenty of bandwith for great quality video.
Of course this is assuming a single tuner device - for multiple tuners, you'll probably need high-speed USB.
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:3, Informative)
A USB high speed (2.0) interface is good enough by itself.
Use Firewire then. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Use Firewire then. (Score:1)
Not that Firewire makes 400Mbps in sustained rate either, but it's sustained rate is higher [g4techtv.com] than that of USB2. Why do you think digital video production uses Firewire instead of USB2?
To paraphrase the reply before you: typical PC user, only looking at the numbers marketing shows you.
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:2)
Get a Hauppauge PVR-250 or PVR-350.
The Hauppauge PVR-150 and PVR-500 do not work now under Linux. They may work within several months..
Re:I thought it was unwise - (Score:2)
I bought a PVR-350 in October 2004 and haven't been able to use it when I am using Linux.
The old PVR-350's work great when you are using a 2.4.x kernel but the stable version of the ivtv drivers do not work with the 2.6.x kernel. It has been over six months since the last release of the ivtv drivers and I haven't been able to get the unstable ones to wor
My PVR-350 works fine. (Score:2)
Get a newer ivtv driver [no-ip.com]. As you know, the stable drivers are way out of date. The official ivtv site is worthless for new hardware. I use one of the 0.2.0-rc drivers.
Get a newer kernel for its tuner.c because the newer PVR-350 cards have a new tuner, the LG TAPE iirc. I did not want to recompile the whole kernel. I grabbed tuner.c from 2.6.9, stuck it in my kernel source tree and compiled the modules.
I sug
Hauppauge WinTV USB2.0 works great... (Score:2)
I run it with SageTV, as all the other options I tried (BeyondTV, GB-PVR, etc couldn't handle the older hardware.)
Be careful (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Be careful (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Be careful (Score:2)
Doesn't include the best product (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Doesn't include the best product (Score:2)
this is a narrow target market (Score:2, Insightful)
The author mensions the word 'quality' quite a few times... some hardware encoded screenies would have been a good way to measure those statements.
Notes from A MythTV User (Score:5, Informative)
I have an old non-mpeg tuner card, and it works great with MythTV. Dedicate a box to the task. Get a nice TV-Out card that you can live with. Get the remote control, or a longer-range wireless keyboard.
MythTV blows my mind everytime I use it: KnoppMyth [mysettopbox.tv]
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, you really need to sit your friend down and have a talk with him.
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:4, Informative)
They're not great gamer cards, btw, so you might be better off looking at an nvidia chipset if you want to play games on your homebrew pvr.
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2)
The PVR-150 MCE/OEM is similar to the PVR-150, but without the IR blaster or receiver, and no 3rd-party software. It also includes and FM tuner.
The PVR-250 [hauppauge.com] has Coax and S-video inputs, and a 1/8" stereo plug for audio input. It also has a IR input for the remote control.
The PVR-250 MCE (OEM) [hauppauge.com] edition has Coax and S-video inputs, and RCA jacks for audio
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2)
C'mon, lirc's not so bad. I built a Myth box running debian but couldn't find myself a lirc deb, so I downloaded it, compiled from source, and followed the instructions. Detected and configured my WinMCE remote and receiver just fine. They even have a default remote layout available on their site for practically every remote available (or programmable). Very handy.
PVR-150 does not work with MythTV. (Score:3, Informative)
I hope the PVR-500 becomes supported by ivtv. It has two tuners on a single card, a great gain for people building compact MythTV systems.
Be very careful when purchasing hardware for MythTV. It is a fantastic package, but only with the right hardware.
Useful sites (Score:2)
http://ivtv.no-ip.com/ [no-ip.com] The ivtv driver is under heavy development. This site by a developer named Chris Kennedy has newer releases of the driver. 0.2.0-rc works well for me.
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:1)
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2, Interesting)
It took me quit
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:3, Informative)
I've used avidemux2 to edit out commercials and have burned that content to DVD just fine.
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2, Informative)
I haven't tried avidemux2 (I don
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:3, Informative)
I go the $29 route myself. In fact my computer is recording a show at this moment. I don't see the point of paying $150 for a hardware compressor when a CPU powerful enough to do the job costs half of that. Plus I can use any new gee-whiz codec that comes along.
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:1)
What tuner card are you using? My Xmas present to myself is a MythTV/Freevo box, and I'm looking for suggestions. Starting small seems the way to go for me.
Thanks!
Ken
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:1)
Re:Notes from A MythTV User (Score:2)
See
no interest whatsoever (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean things like:
replicating such features on your Windows PC with little effort and a small investment
doesn't make me shiver or feel anything besides deep sadness for the (again) experienced ingorance wave.
First, I don't care how newbies are just discovering that their computers can do more than playing nobrainer video games for the price of a used car.
Second, still don't really care how greenhorns can make a Windows PC record anything. I mean
Re:satellite (Score:1)
Re:satellite (Score:2)
Re:satellite (Score:1)
CI slot in FTA receivers.
NIH would be a factor in why dish and dtv didn't go that way.
Dish net is fully compatible with FTA gear (except for the requirements you list
Have you actually used tivo (Score:2)
I've played around with snapstream and mythtv and they work ok, but getting reliable guide data can be a pain in the ass.
I know i spent more than 1 hour a month trying to keep snapstream running - hence tivo is cheap too.
Re:Have you actually used tivo (Score:2)
Re:Have you actually used tivo (Score:2)
The other way to look as this is that tivo + lifetime subscription costs about the same as a decent HTPC box...
TV tuners (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:TV tuners (Score:2)
Go South Park!!!
Re:TV tuners (Score:2)
was interested in TV tuners and PVR software and so forth for a while, but then I realized that being able to watch and record TV on my computer still does nothing to improve the actual content that passes for entertainment on TV.
True. But there already is pretty decent content on TV. There are plenty of good movies, documentaries, series, etc. being shown. The problem is that it's at inconvenient or ever-changing times, or at the same time as something else, or painful to watch due to the many commerci
Blah,blah,blah, I am an elitist, blah, blah.. Blah (Score:2)
Movies, music, documentaries, news (or wahtever rocks your boat).
Elitist people are terribly annoying, when they describe their niche likes one discovers that normally they are as despicably unintersting and boring as the tastes they deride so easily.
Re:Looking for one for Mac OS X (Score:1)
DANGER WILL ROBINSON, DANGER! (Score:5, Insightful)
There was also no mention whatsoever of hardware MPEG2 encoding.
If it doesn't encode MPEG2 in hardware, it's not worth buying. Period.
Re:DANGER WILL ROBINSON, DANGER! (Score:2)
Re:DANGER WILL ROBINSON, DANGER! (Score:3, Informative)
The lucky people in the USA can get our MPEG2 streams free with an antenna and OTA HD tuner. But awareness of this capability is still quite limited. It seems as though the cable and satellite companies have succeeded in convincing most people that HD is only available by paying a monthly fee.
Re:DANGER WILL ROBINSON, DANGER! (Score:2)
Do it cheaper/better with Linux? (Score:5, Informative)
Cheap? (Score:3, Insightful)
How cheap is it really going to be by the time you've added everything up.
A dual tuner DirecTV tivo with 80 hours space is $100 and $5 a month covers up to 8 of them on an account.
I doubt you can get a pc with sufficient horsepower, storage, and a couple of these capture dongles for that.
Re:Cheap? (Score:2)
Re:Cheap? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cheap? (Score:4, Insightful)
They are comparing a STB box tivo for analog cable with one of these... besides, what self respecting geek doesn't have a spare hand me down PC laying around... to throw a tuner/capture card in?
FWIW the best benefit to building a PC based PVR isn't cost/subscription savings... it's CONTROL over the content. No one is going to be expiring six feet under DVR recordings [boingboing.net] without my consent on my PC DVR.
*shrug*
Re:Cheap? (Score:1)
PVR without the monthly fee? (Score:2)
Re:PVR without the monthly fee? (Score:1)
Re:PVR without the monthly fee? (Score:2)
And wouldn't I be a sucker if I paid for their "lifetime" subscription plan, since tivo isn't [tivo.com] HDTV ready, and analog transmissions are scheduled to end [fcc.gov] in 2006?
DVB ? (Score:2)
sort out the DVB drivers and you make more sales right now anyone who buys anything to do with DVB that is not a Set Top Box gets burned
(the linux drivers are new and in 2.6.10-rc3-bk16 and sothe old truth is once again new = buggy alot of great work is done but more to do )
regards
john jones
yuck (Score:3, Informative)
What about hauppauge wintv usb 2 or plextor convertX PVR [byopvr.com] (which has both PC and Mac pvr software)
For internal devices I like the wintv pvr250. Yes the pvr150 is cheaper and comes with a better remote/ir blaster, but the pvr250 is better supported in linux with the ivtv drivers being pretty mature/stable for that card.
*shrug*
rampy
My silly TiVo/Mac setup (Score:1)
I don't know why it took me so long to do this, but I eventually just bought a cheap used TiVo with a lifetime membership (about $200) and hooked it up to my Mac. The benefits are that it's not using any of my 4 internal drives or FireWire/USB ports. It has all the advantages of TiVo...suggested recordings, remote programing, home media, etc... but I view it on one of my monitors either full screen or
OS X support? (Score:2)
Has anyone done this?
Re:OS X support? (Score:2)
Elgato does not have a digita
Re:OS X support? (Score:2)
Re:OS X support? (Score:3, Informative)
Linux USB2 MPEG-2/4 tuner/encoder? (Score:2)
USB HDTV (Score:2)
Standard def is so last century
Re:USB HDTV (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:USB HDTV (Score:1)
Just bought me a TiVo (Score:2, Interesting)
So yeah $500 is a lot for a glorified VCR... but I have to say that the damn thing is so easy to use it was worth it.
I set the thing up to my wireless network in minutes. Now I can stream MP3s onto it from my server. Photos too.
Sure you can piece your own together using MPEG decoder cards and free (or not) software, but you're gonna spend
DVB or nothing (Score:3, Interesting)
If not, I'd get a satellite set-top box/PVR dealie. For 300$ cdn, you get one with a 80gb HD in it. It works *out of the box*. No OS install, no patching/upgrading/rebooting, no drivers needed, no setting up the remote control manually for your apps, no codecs required, no PVR software to install, no BSODs, none of that - plug it and it works. And just like DVB capturing, it's lossless (they both record the mpeg from the transportstream).
I've given up on analog capturing about 4 years ago, and I'm NEVER going back to that. I'd do OTA as well if there broadcasts in my area.
bad article choice.. (Score:1)
there is no clear indication of if they use software or hardware encoding. and no indication of whether they work under mythtv or MS media cneter 2005 edition.
Getting TV into the PC is easy (Score:2)
It seems the best way is still to get a cheap gf4 with tv out and live with the hideous interferences.
Do you really have to have a TV with VGA in for thousands of dollars ?
VDR + DVB-S (Score:1)
Useful if you live in Europe
Re:What about my TV's tuner (Score:2)
However it's unlikely that the problem will jump out at you, and modern tv's use fairly compact circuitry that'll not be easy to work with.
Re:What about my TV's tuner (Score:1)
Re:What about my TV's tuner (Score:1)
Re:What about my TV's tuner (Score:2)