First Look at the DirecTV SAT-GO 97
cblount writes "DBSTalk's Earl Bonovich got his hands on one of the first portable DIRECTV receivers. The DIRECTV Sat-Go incorporates a TV, DIRECTV Receiver and DIRECTV Antenna into one conveniently portable design for camping, tailgating, RVing, sitting by the dock or even watching at home."
Camping?! (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Camping?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the type of "camping" that they are marketing to is not the kind of camping you are probably thinking of. I don't know many campgrounds these days that provide for RVs and general car camping that aren't packed in with very few trees and too many "comforts of home".
I am guilty of this type of camping frequently as my wife isn't into backpacking and what I consider more serious camping where we don't go near another human for 5+ days. I am happy to make the concessions that we unload the car at the site and don't touch it again until we leave. At least it gets her into the tent for the weekend.
I just returned from a 5 day geocaching trip to a competition in Missouri (we take it annually) and several RVs were parked in the area that had DirecTV satellite dishes out front. I'm not sure why DirecTV is offering this solution when it's apparent that their standard dishes can be used by these types of campers w/o much issue.
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My guess- is that they're really going for the Yurt/Kamping Kabin set. You know, the kind of high tech people who pack the laptop, a BBQ Grill, and this box into a Prius, rent some rustic cabin or Yurt at a KOA or a State Park and pretend to be "Camping" just because they have to walk more than 20 feet to the communal bathhouse.
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Another example is where I live, by the beach. The state beach has ample parking for RVs and every weekend in the summer there seems to be a trek of RVs coming from inland. They find a parking spot and pay for the weekend. They setup the RV and have an oceanfront cabin. Not a horrible thing, I would think--if I lived inland, I'd consider buying something like that. All the comforts of home in front of the beach--now including your satellite TV!
Also, with any luck, it'll keep the rugrats inside w
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A multi-LNB dish is a bit more work, because you're trying to aim at 3 spots at once. And the new 5 LNB systems are just insane; you won't have much success without a sat-finder. (I've seen an experienced, professional installer take over an hour to aim a DISH 1000+.)
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Because I'm sure their "portable" solution is more expensive than just using the standard equipment, and by offering a "portable" solution, customers will mislead themselves into th
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And I dont care what any die-hard backpacker tells y
Wrong.... (Score:1)
BWilde
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But doesn't the dish need line of site with the satelite? I know on cloudy days, we sometimes loose reception at our company cafeteria. Imagine what a tent or RV roof will do for reception.
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What I don't understand... (Score:3, Insightful)
When the "I camp for REAL." crowd starts wrapping an animal skin around their waist and s
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Doing anything out of this basement is already an achievement for me, even if it is just watching tv.
Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
The promo picture is awkward (Score:5, Insightful)
Not awkward...depressing (Score:2, Interesting)
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Tanning in the dark (Score:2)
And come on, what else are you gonna do at a dark beach with your kids besides cuddle up around the warming glow of the TV? Ok, don't answer that.
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Go ahead and feel "depressed and conflicted"... (Score:1)
Sure are sensitive, ain't ya?
Multiple Beams (Score:5, Insightful)
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-Peter
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Clueless!!!! (Score:1)
Time division multiplexing. I have one of these.
There's an astounding amount of bandwidth there. Study up! Google!
"likewise how they could provide local channels to so many different cities"
Same signal to each subscriber... duh. I also have one of these.
Camping?!!? WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a bit of a luddite and not really a nerd (I don't code, don't like sci-fi, not a gadget nut, etc.) so I guess I just don't understand but if you are going to camp, then camp, otherwise just stay at home. Seriously..
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What the heck are you doing on slashdot? You sound like my father in law- who has yet to allow his second wife to have internet in the house because he's heard all these news reports about how computers cause viruses.....
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I love spending time away from the city, in various national parks, beaches, etc. I'll hike all day, cook my food outside, but once it's dark, and there's only so much more sitting around the fire to be done, I like to sleep indoors and I enjoy relaxing with television. I'm not an RV kinda guy, but that's what motels are for. Just because you want to cut yourself off entirely from the world doesn't mean everyone does.
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You win the prize for posting in the most inappropriate place ever.
I mean, that's great for you and all... but... seriously.
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OK
I know some Visiting Nurses who have RV's and camp for 2-3 months at any given site before they pack up and head for another state where they're needed.
Different requirements, different tools, different solutions. It's all good.
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For a lot of folks - and not all of them seniors - the RV or the boat is where you live, it is where you work. Mobile Internet Satellite [kvh.com]. Magellan Ground Control [groundcontrol.com]
Then there are the purists who would claim that line-of-sight to a tower is not really camping.
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I leave the cell phone home. It's out of range most of the places I hike in the Cascades. I take a GPS. When I exit the woods onto a road, sometimes it's hard to tell if the car is parked a mile up or down the road. It's out of sight, but which way? Setting a waypoint where you parked the car is a good idea. Remember, deep in the woods the signal is of
Does it come with... (Score:1)
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70W! This thing is as portable as your car... (Score:5, Informative)
Didn't say if that max is atypical, or what the average would be.
I don't view anything over 20W as "portable".
And anything over 25W is REPREHENSIBLE in a TV Receiver. Those Comcast Cable boxes use 35W ON or OFF which is probably more juice than your new refrigerator is using. How many Coal power plants in the US are dedicated exclusively to keeping the little red lights on the ComCast box lit up?
So this is supposed to be a better solution for campers and RV's than the standard DirectTV they are already carrying around. But it doesn't sound like the dish aim procedure is easy- you can get automated systems that work while you are driving. This one wont work unless you are stationary.
My DirectTV Tivo uses 29W ON or OFF, day or night, so thats about $70/year in electricity. But that is a fair sight less than the 70W claimed for this unit! I don't understand why making it portable would double the power consumption.
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Your TIVO doesn't have a built in screen, is my guess- backlight on that LCD could double the power consumption.
bad comparison (Score:2)
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Your executive edition subzero side by side it taking 1-2Kw when running. and typically costs 2-3$ a day to run at current midwest electrical prices..
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Happily your numbers are out-of-date. Not too out of date, either. But substantially!
The EPA's Energy-Star cerification program and the improving regulations have been astoundinly successful, each year for the last 5 or so.
As you can tell here
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?fuseaction=ref rig.search_products_submit [energystar.gov]
you can get a nice mid-size side-by-side Fridgidaire that consumes only 45W.
Skimp a little and get the best in class and you are down at 3
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I think a lot of people are missing the market (Score:1)
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This Thing Will be BIG... in 2003... (Score:2)
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What the articles didn't say (Score:2)
Is whether or not this thing is the same crap hardware, with the same flaky drivers, as DTV's piece of shit set-top DVR's.
Who else has had a DR-15 slowly nbuild up lag to any input (from the remote or the face buttons) and eventually stop altogether over about 3 months time? How about 4 of them in a year?
Wonder if this is a test into the vehicle market.. (Score:2)
I wonder how long before DirectTV has a automotive package that can yank omni-directional service on the go...
Storm chasing (Score:1)
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If you are serious about this sort of thing - and you'd had better be serious, given the risks - what you need is a tracking antenna for your vehicle. TracVision Mobile Sattelite [lightav.com] $2000-$3000.
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You know... (Score:1)
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This is the cheap version. It is not electronicaly steered. You have to manualy point it. It has no tracking. This is useless for in-motion use.
The TracVision 7 is much more advanced. (Score:2)
The KVH TracVision 7 [automotivedesignline.com] antenna for DirecTV reception is much more advanced. The device mentioned in the article has to be aimed at the satellite by hand. The TracVision units aim automatically. Two axes of mechanical positioning, plus a phased array antenna, are used. Rate gyros, a GPS receiver, and an excessive amount of computer power aim the thing. They even use slip rings, so that if you make too many turns in the same direction, you don't lose signal while the antenna cable unwinds. Only 5" thick,
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Good for NFL fans who have dish averse landlords (Score:1)
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Find a window with a Southern view. Nobody said the dish has to be outdoors. It just needs to have an un-obscured view of the sky. Set it on the floor in front of the window and enjoy. I have had occasions to do hidden antennas in the past. I have hidden a fringe reception UHF Yagi, FM, Shortwave longwire, and CB antennas from view with good results. Some satelite dishes can be hidden just fine in urb
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Osborne 1? Compaq Portable? (Score:2)
Why not just hang a USB-based satellite antenna off a laptop? They're doing it for HDTV, why not this?
I predict utter failure for this. Years from now it'll figure in a PCWorld article listing the 100 worst tech products ever.
Lame. (Score:1)
What's really needed is... (Score:1)
This could be used for mobile purposes (RVers) w/ a std DirecTV receiver. Probably in the works now.