Echostar 'PocketDish' to Playback Video from DVR 111
Trip Ericson writes "Echostar has released its PocketDish, a portable multimedia player that will store audio, video, and images. Coming in up to 40GB flavors, with varying screen sizes up to 7 inches, the real news is that it allows for the transfer of content directly from a Dish DVR onto the player. From the article: "The PocketDish can download content from Dish Network digital video recorders (DVRs), enabling users to watch TV shows on the go. An hour of content can be transferred to the PocketDish's hard drive in about five minutes." Looks like Echostar is trying to beat the long-rumored iPod Video before it even hits the market."
i wonder.. (Score:5, Interesting)
i really wish they had added THAT function
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
One major problem... (Score:2)
Re:One major problem... (Score:1)
Of course, it voids your warranty and is a pain in the ass, but there ya go.
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
I'm laughing over here - it's not Dish's content providers, it's just content providers. The RIAA, MPAA, *IAA has tried to stop every single time-shifting device ever created. Comcast/Dish love DVRs - it's an extra $10/month for every unit. Consumers love DVRs because they allow them to express their fair-use rights. But content providers?
ha.
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
Then, every time it's played back, they decrypt it using a smartcard and hardware MPEG decoder just before outputting the video.
The two major features of this process are:
1. Lower disk storage requirements for the compressed version.
2. The content stays encrypted, even on disk.
Some newer Dish DVRs have USB and firewire ports. The current s
Re:i wonder.. (Score:1)
Are you 100% certain about this? If this were true then they could never do complete keychanges, there would always have to be a 'dvr' key which would unlock old content, and new content would have to include thi
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
I know that it was possible to change the smartcard authorized in the system for a given receiver. My guess would be that the key for authorization of signal is stored on the smartcard and that authorization for programing is on the receiver itself. I know that if you recorded a
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
This is wonderful news, in a way - as long as content is stored in a "black box" of sorts, it is extremely difficult to get to (look how difficult it has been to hack series 2 TiVos with OS7+). But as soon as the content is transferred from one device to another, it lea
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:i wonder.. (Score:1)
Re:i wonder.. (Score:2)
It's not too tough to do with the DirecTivo. The standalone Tivo incorporates a function called "TiVo To Go" that lets you copy DRMed recordings to a PC. But DirecTV wouldn't allow that in their version of the TiVo because of contracts with content providers.
The community over at DealDataBase [www.dealdatabase] has figured out how to hack the 6.2 software on the DirecTivo. You can login to get a bash shell and install software that lets you copy the MPEG-2 files over the network (USB2 NIC) to your computer.
This is part
Does anyone actually use these? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course the real genius of this is you don't need the computer to get the content off and transcode it. Great idea, although I can't comment on the execution (which is usually where th
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
We take the Archos with us on plane rides, car trips, etc. My wife holds it and I use an FM transmitter to play the sound in the car. Generally we bring along shows that I don't need to *watch* to get the gist of while I drive.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
I don't pay attention and just do it overnight. I never found that Tivo2Go was all that speedy anyway.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
I do a decent amount of traveling with my little guy. I would use this for cartoons (because DVDs get stale watching the same thing). Great for hotel
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:5, Informative)
I commute into NY from NJ via commuter rail and then take the PATH subway to my destination. I see a good number of people watching movies on portable devices. The potential customer base is huge.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
While they may be more usable on a commuter train, which generally offer some space, I doubt the usability of such devices on buses or tubes.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:1)
Yeah right... I can see it now...
Mugger:"Hand over your money!"
Passenger:"Shht, I'm watching Bachelor"
Mugger:"OH, is that hot blond still in there?"
Passenger:"Yeah, now hush I'm trying to watch this."
Mugger:"Sorry..."
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Atlanta not a great market (Score:1)
We have MARTA here in Atlanta, and it's a joke. There are basically two rail lines, and neither go far enough in any direction for it to be much of a factor. There are people who need to ride it (carless), and those who ride it out of principle (saving the environment, etc...), but I'd be surprised if MARTA had more than 10% of the daily traffic of a city like Washing
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Hey, we've got a mass transit system here in Bozeman, Montana. Of course, it's only two busses [msn.com] for the entire city, but it's a start
You must not have children... (Score:4, Informative)
I've captured a bunch of stuff off my DirecTivo (via analog capture) and reauthored it onto disc. It not only helps on long car rides, but also expands the number of shows available when we're at home without filling up the TiVo needlessly.
Children do not need TV to be entertained. (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Children do not need TV to be entertained. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Children do not need TV to be entertained. (Score:2)
Re:Children do not need TV to be entertained. (Score:1)
TV is not an exclusive entertainment (Score:5, Insightful)
On a 6 hour trip, kids will get bored. My 3 year old "reads", colors, and watches TV on long trips, as well as listens to some childrens books on cd/tape. You may also be confusing Rugrats and GTA for more educational TV and games (you're allowed to put Sesame Street on if you feel that learning spanish and memory skills from Dora is too progressive). If you think that TV is not educational, I would say that you're not using it right. I would suggest you need to watch a bit more childrens television to find the programs which are useful. I've found very few "educational" books for my daughter that didn't require active adult participation. No that adult participation is bad, but reading stuff to kids for 6 hours in a car is not my idea of a relaxing trip.
I grew up when it was common place for kids to crawl around the back seat and count licence plates, do Mad Libs, color, sing, and ask "are we there yet" every fifteen minutes. I remember being bored out of my mind for most of the time, regarles of the number of games we had. I suspect that an hour or two fo Superfriends would have gon a long way to my childhood trips being more enjoyable. I can only imagine that beingn strapped into a 5-way harness as required by law can only make the process less enjoyable today.
Re:TV is not an exclusive entertainment (Score:2)
We are currently living in the golden age of television. There is literally more educational television airing that even if you watched 24/7 you couldn't watch it all. The quality of the educational television is also dramatically better than those in the past. Heck, there are at least half a dozen channels that have 100% educational programming, and another half dozen that have at least 50% educational programming.
Heck, even the entertainment programming is far and
Re:TV is not an exclusive entertainment (Score:2)
And kids shows...there are some real gems out there. Charlie & Lola, a series of 10 minute shorts, has got to be one of the "nicest" si
Re:You must not have children... (Score:2)
Going on a trip? Take the TV with you, enjoy the blissful silence of your kids brains leaking out their ears.
How about your wife handling the kids? Playing a game with them? Cards? Boardgames? Reading them a book?
Keep the TV out of your home. Keep the TV out of your car. Keep the TV away from your kids.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? Yes! (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
That said, anyone who is not driving can use this. Kids, the wife, you when your wife is driving, yes on the train, plane, lunch hour, ect.
There is also content that a driver could bring that is more audio centric like talk shows, local news, espn where the content is visual but still has valuable audio...
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:1)
No, just twelve million people. Rounded down, this is zero.
There's a built-in market; I just wonder if Dish's price-driven offerings attract the sorts of buyers that an $800 toy requires. I think maybe not.
Re:Does anyone actually use these? (Score:2)
OH FU
Do you hear that? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Do you hear that? (Score:2)
You mean the MPAA hasn't filed suit yet?
40GB ought to be enough for anybody (Score:3, Insightful)
Memory is cheap, for $599.00 why not maximize its storage size to make it a worthwhile 21st century product?
Re:40GB ought to be enough for anybody (Score:1)
Re:40GB ought to be enough for anybody (Score:3, Informative)
2.5" maxes out at 100GB/7200RPM or 120GB/5400RPM, and is the standard laptop form factor.
3.5" maxes out at 0.5TB/7200RPM, and lower capacities up to 15KRPM.
Re:40GB ought to be enough for anybody (Score:1)
As for the rest - very informative!
Re:40GB ought to be enough for anybody (Score:2)
I have over a thousand CDs.
And well, just having my favorite movies would fill up such a unit quickly.
Repackaged Archos? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Repackaged Archos? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Repackaged Archos? (Score:3, Interesting)
So is the real news that Echostar PVRs can function as USB2 drives?
Re:Repackaged Archos? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Repackaged Archos? (Score:1)
DRM - ie Broadcast Flat? (Score:1)
Re:DRM - ie Broadcast Flat? (Score:2)
Re:DRM - ie Broadcast Flat? (Score:1)
Re:DRM - ie Broadcast Flat? (Score:2)
Re:DRM - ie Broadcast Flat? (Score:1)
ReplayTV - No DRM (Score:2)
ReplayTV's show sharing is DRM-free. Using a client such as DVArchive [dvarchive.org], you can stream and move shows to any Java-equipped device. And watching them on Archos/Echostar PVPs is trivial. Has anyone cracked the Tivo2Go DRm yet? That would really put me off buying one.
USB ports on DVR (Score:1)
What happened to 1394 connections (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What happened to 1394 connections (Score:2)
Xesdeeni
USB to my DishDVR (Score:3, Interesting)
a side note: on the DishNetwork website, under software, there's already a lineitem for the PocketDish software and updates. Apparently you have to hook it up to your 942 receiver, and software updates will process through your 942. Sounds like they may use their some type of authentication at their receiver to lock out other methods of attempted USB access. Dish Network Software [dishnetwork.com]
Re:USB to my DishDVR (Score:2)
*** Note that the Dish522, like the Dish501, 508, 510, and the older 7000 series, have no DRM or other encryption of the video ***
The dishrip folks are very serious about not tolerating any discussion that could invoke the DMCA and shut down their forums. The newer models, like the Dish
Re:USB to my DishDVR (Score:1)
Re:USB to my DishDVR (Score:2)
From what I read about PocketDISH yesterday, when you first plug in a PocketDISH device to your DVR, the PocketDISH adapter would upgrade the firmware on your box.
Also, I do not believe that DishDVRs can receive firmware upgrades via satellite. I suspect that they are only possible via the attached phone line. This, of course, is one big reason why mine has never had a phone line attached... something that I'm glad Dish Ne
Reserved for future use. (Score:1)
(1) USB 1.0, *for future use (http://tech.dishnetwork.com/receivers/522/index.s html [dishnetwork.com])
This states that its USB 1.0 which certainly doesn't have sufficient throughput for transfer of this size of files.
I can only imagine (because the spec sheet doesn't SPECifify) that the Dish DVR 921 (HDTV DVR) has a USB 2 port on the front.
I wonder if only a software upgrade will be needed for my DVR.
I've seen the demo... (Score:3, Informative)
FREAKIN FINALLY (Score:1)
Re:FREAKIN FINALLY (Score:2)
Archos is the Manufacturer (Score:2, Informative)
interesting... (Score:2)
Re:interesting... (Score:1)
First things first. I'd like to FTP first. (Score:1)
I'm so glad someone understands their customers... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'm so glad someone understands their customers (Score:2)
Re:I'm so glad someone understands their customers (Score:2)
Re:I'm so glad someone understands their customers (Score:2)
Re:I'm so glad someone understands their customers (Score:2)
Re:I'm so glad someone understands their customers (Score:2)
The 942 also includes a second UHF remote for the TV2 feature, basically the receiver acts in two modes, in single mode both TV1 and TV2 show the same
Nothing New (Score:1)
Re:Nothing New (Score:1)
How does this handle the Broadcast Flag (Score:1)
Interesting Approach to "DRM" (Score:2, Interesting)
If I read correctly, the "DRM" on this machine is largely that you can put whatever you like in the portable device, but you can't take stuff off, only delete it. Since you always have your dish DVR as your backup, that has a certain simple appeal.
Of course you can crack the usb interface all day, blah blah blah, but the "one way" approach is the most sensible thing I've heard of in this space, especially since it is just an extension of a larger backup device.
I'd buy this if it was under $200.
Rebadged Archos PVPs - E* Bought 25% of Archos (Score:2)
Re:Rebadged Archos PVPs - E* Bought 25% of Archos (Score:2)
Re:Rebadged Archos PVPs - E* Bought 25% of Archos (Score:1)
They aren't the only one's doing them... (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:1)
Re:Hardly anything new (Score:2)
That's still not too bad as you can simply dock it and start the transfer.