SonicBlue Going w/ReplayTV 4000 Despite Lawsuit 212
Ughhgu writes "Looks like SonicBlue is going to go ahead and start shipping. The Cnet article even has a quote from SonicBlue. It seems they can't understand why the industry would sue them. Sign me up for one!" I'd dearly love to test one of these.
It's the future man... (Score:1)
RZ
Excuse my ignorance... (Score:1)
How is a SonicBlue any different from TiVo. Isn't Tivo just a digital video recorder?
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:1)
replay tv allows you to send the copy of the show that you recorded to someone else with a replay over a broadband internet connection
No wonder the TV industry doesn't like it. Another difference is that the Replay TV has a "skip forward 30 seconds" button, and the Tivo doesn't. Both of these are examples of how Replay TV is just trying to please the consumer and doesn't really care what the TV industry thinks of them (which I guess is how we got the VCR), whereas Tivo is trying to get the industry on board, chiefly by holding out the carrot of being able to get much more detailed information than Nielson provides about who is watching what (not on individuals, but in aggregates).
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:1)
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:2, Insightful)
I personally think this whole "Send your friends TV shows over broadband" feature of ReplayTV needs some serious rethinking. At its lowest quality setting, an hour of TV takes up around 1.2GB of disk space on your Tivo. At the best quality (called "Best"
More than likely, ReplayTV is hoping to use this connection so they can push commercials and other promotional video clips to your unit (if you check ReplayTV's website, they say you *must* have broadband and you *must* make your box accessible from the internet - meaning you can't put it behind your firewall or NAT box.)
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:1)
Oops. I didn't. Damn. What the hell are they gonna do about it?
Re:Excuse my ignorance... (Score:1)
Some prefer ReplayTV, others Tivo. Competition is a good thing...
(BTW, I prefer Tivo, mainly for its UI and ease of use.)
ReplayTV 4000 official site (Score:3, Informative)
Ever heard of "capitalism"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Translation: "Our business model is antiquated, and instead of trying to find a new way we're just going to sue anyone who takes advantage of it." Methinks the networks want immunity from the darwinian aspect of capitalism. As I'm sure has been said on /. before, perhaps it's just time to find a better way.
Re:Ever heard of "capitalism"? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not sure there's every been an era of "pure" capitalism, which actually makes me hopeful that by historical standards, the current attempts to create competitive advantage by outlawing actions and ideas anathema to the established corps isn't so bad. Right.
Re:Ever heard of "capitalism"? (Score:2)
Re:Ever heard of "capitalism"? (Score:2, Interesting)
We could only hope! Network TV is a black hole of intelligence so the sooner these dinosaurs disappear from the landscape, the better. Of course the networks are only pleasing their viewers. All the smart viewers have gone elsewhere...
I'd rather see these major media companies bleed through their network outlets and not have the profits to pour into further eroding individual rights and freedom. Hopefully, devices like this can get a marketplace foothold such that a legal block is impossible.
But then, I dream a lot lately!
Re:Ever heard of "Obnoxious"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, perhaps the idea of putiing commercials into breaks in the programming so that it does not interfere with the content is over. Commercials will be integrated into the program so that it cannot be skipped without skipping the program.
Yes, we now get to see a station badge in the lower right corner, and now we will have a marquee running across our shows too. "Make 7 Up Yours!"
Hammy
Re:Ever heard of "Obnoxious"? (Score:2)
Re:Ever heard of "Obnoxious"? (Score:2)
that's fine - i'll grab a widescreen to 4:3 converter that chops off the sides.
Re:Ever heard of "Obnoxious"? (Score:3, Funny)
It'd be cheaper to just tape a couple of pieces of paper over the screen.
VCR (Score:2, Redundant)
When is the industry going to realize that the only difference between digital and analog, in the eyes of the consumer, is ease of use?
I mean, given a VCR and some electronics skill, it would be a simple enough task to send video over a phone line, 100% analog, right?
This is the same idea.
And how do the networks lose money if people record their shows?
The only "bad" feature, as far as I can tell, is the commercial skipping option. If it were removed, I'm sure there would be nothing even remotely illegal in there. Of course, that won't stop a lawsuit
Re:VCR (Score:1)
Re:VCR (Score:3, Informative)
But we all know how big money..err..companies owns the legal system now <Insert MS jibe>
Re:VCR (Score:1, Insightful)
The bandwidth of a POTS line is less than 4kHz (limited by ADCs and DACs in the central office, which sample 8bits at 8kHz; the effective bandwidth is about 3kHz), whereas an NTSC video signal (broadcast quality) is about 6MHz. You would need 2000 "100% analog" POTS lines to send a video signal. One POTS line would get a full-resolution frame in just over one minute (67 seconds per frame versus 30 frames per second). Remember home video phones and how successful they were?
Even the best compression algorithms and the fastest modems still produce really crappy video over phone lines. DSL gets higher speed by bypassing the ADCs/DACs. Even high speed DSL connections use an effective analog bandwidth of about 1MHz.
Re:VCR (Score:2)
Never, because that's not the only difference. If it was the only difference, I wouldn't have two copies of several movies, one on VHS and the other on DVD. Digital is better. It looks better and it sounds better. To Hell with the bonus material -- they could sell us most of it on a 2nd VHS tape if they really wanted -- I buy DVD for the digital sound and picture.
As for ease of use, VHS is better, because I fast-forward through the FBI warning and commercials, then note the time on the counter and write that on the label. From then on I just FF to 10:15 or whatever and press Play. So it's:
DVD: Insert disk, press Play, wait through the warnings and ads, watch video.
VHS: Insert tape, FF through the warnings and ads, press Play, watch video.
Same difference, really.
Re:VCR (Score:3, Funny)
In fact, you'd think the industry would be happier with formats that only lasted a few years as opposed to DVDs which might last 20 years or more.
By ease of use I meant the easy ability to modify, copy, and otherwise deal with digital information as opposed to analog.
Re:VCR (Score:1, Insightful)
Digital is not inherently better than analog, but digital copies are perfect copies. You can make a copy of a copy of a copy, etc. and the 1000th copy is exactly the same as the original. Try doing that with a VCR.
Of course, the TV stations are already broadcasting the original analog data over the air for everyone to see for free. They wouldn't be making much money if they weren't doing this.
Things would kinda suck if everyone had one of these SonicBlue PVRs, since there would be no advertising revenue, so TV would no longer be free.
Re:VCR (Score:2)
In fact, you'd think the industry would be happier with formats that only lasted a few years as opposed to DVDs which might last 20 years or more.
Even this industry has to be a little concerned about what the consumer wants. Remember the failure of DIVX and the self-mutilating DVDs. Once consumers have something (like long-lasting CDs) they don't want to go back to something inferior (VHS tapes that wear out), but they will go to something better. DVDs last a long time like CDs, but also have the capacity to store movies like VHS tapes. The industry can't turn back, it can only limit how slowly it moves forward.
Re:VCR (Score:1)
If you're not goign to get into it, why did you bring it up? This isn't a vynil vrs cd convo, its a digital vrs analog. CD's sample rate is 44100. Records sample rate is 48000. Ok, so vynil will sound better the first few times...and?
Also, note that the whole "analog is better" arguement ends once a single conversion is made. If, at any point, its been converted to digital...then putting it back to analog is pointless. For "true" sound yes...analog is better. But its hard to find things that are analog and have never been digital.
And to make my point clear...how do you think most methods of saving video occur? Think its analog? Nope. Guess again. So your post is pointless. And...another clue for ya: digital can most certainly handle the quality of feed you get from your TV antenae
Re:VCR (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, the biggest difference, in the eyes of the huge media companies, is something that too many Slashdotters tend to dismiss as an invalid argument: you can make perfect copies of digital material, with no loss.
Before anybody dismisses it: try to think like a big media company for a minute. You have rights over works that you've bought or hired people to produce, called "copyrights." They're exclusive, with certain exceptions. (You'd like to forget the exceptions of course, but that's beside the point right now.) One nice thing about the current media formats (a few years ago) is that copies degrade, even without copy protection measures. Books are really hard to copy cheaply (so anyone who does it likely has deep pockets and is quite sueable), and audio and video tapes get noticeably worse with each generation.
If anyone was going to pay for the material in the first place, they'd want a good copy, so they'd get it from your publishers. You can almost forget about the pirates' fair use excuses - nearly no impact on you, right?
So along comes the digital media. It looks and sounds great forever! But...you can copy it! Perfectly! No degradation! All of the sudden, you have a new brand of pirates: the ones that don't have much money. And there are a lot of them, at least potentially, and they're really, really hard to track down.
Now, I'm not saying that all of their actions and arguments are excusable, justified, and sane. I am saying that, at least in this one thing - the difference between analog and digital - they have a good point. It's something more people in the tech crowd should at least acknowledge if they don't want to look like punk 13-year-olds when they argue copyright issues.
Re:VCR (Score:1)
Re:VCR (Score:3, Insightful)
VHS to VHS ulitimately makes a poorer-quality copy that few people are willing to pay money for (except before release on VHS format). Digital to digital (any form factor) results in perfect copies. People don't have to give up quality for a lower price like they do in analog.
The media companies fear, and I think it is a valid fear, that perfect copies will cut into their profits to a much greater degree than the analog formats of days past.
Where this fear loses its foundation is when you consider that most people who purchase pirated copies of media (digital, analog, software, videos, music, books, whatever) probably would not purchase the item if the (cheap or free) copy was not available.
Put another way, I will never buy a legal copy of Microsoft Office. In my opinion, the quality of the product is not commensurate with its price (I have a legally licensed copy of WordPerfect Office 2000 that I am very happy with). On the other hand, if a copy were made available to me at a low price (read: free), I may consider it. Profits be damned.
But then, it's none of your business how I spend my money, now is it?
looks cool to me (Score:1)
Re:looks cool to me (Score:4, Interesting)
Fishy policy, I'd say...
Re:looks cool to me (Score:2)
Actually, what caught my attention first was the previous line that you left out.
When in use, the Commercial Advance(TM) feature may not skip all commercials.
I wonder what that means...you just bought a $1700 appliance that selectively skips commercials? It doesn't skip the ones that are produced by companies affiliated with Sonic Blue I bet...
Re:looks cool to me (Score:2)
Dork! (Score:3, Funny)
Moderators, this is not Flamebait, it's common (freaking) sense.
Yeah baby! (Score:1)
*jizz*
Re:Yeah baby! (Score:4, Funny)
Excuse me, I think my screen must have gone blurry or something. Did you just say "DivX AVI's" and "perfect digital quality" in the same context?
Look up the term "lossy compression" some time. (:
Where do I go to buy one? (Score:2)
Re:Where do I go to buy one? (Score:3, Informative)
Get rid of your TV (Score:3, Insightful)
Fix that squeaky door hinge. Eat a banana. Buy a Japanese orange. Lay into some sweet ill-nana.
Log onto the web. Shave your head. Watch the tides flow and ebb. Don't be caught dead
watching that damned tv.
Life is waiting.
on the other hand (Score:2)
It's all good, and stuff...
"Pretend" ReplayTV (Score:5, Interesting)
These units have the capability to send shows from one ReplayTV unit to another. There's not a whole lot of detail given about this functionality, but I wonder whether it can be fooled into thinking your PC is a ReplayTV unit. I slobber uncontrollably when I think about a DVR that would let me archive shows to my file server.
I've been a Tivo owner for almost a couple of years now, and in that time I've modified mine with extra disk space, a web interface, an ethernet port, and a shell prompt on a serial port. :> And there is some work going on right now to play raw video streams from the unit streamed over the network (Andrew Tridgell of Samba fame is the main culprit there), but something like this -- and the stand that SonicBlue is taking on this issue -- makes me sorta want a ReplayTV 4000.
For those interested, there's very little information on the "Send Show" functionality listed on the ReplayTV [replaytv.com] web site, but I am curious how a user with multiple ReplayTV units and a broadband hardware firewall would allow people to send video to them. I assume it's a TCP session and let-'er-rip, but the site is annoyingly lacking on details. I'd love to know.
Re:"Pretend" ReplayTV (Score:2, Informative)
You mean like a stand-alone Tivo with a network card [9thtee.com] added along with a web server [lightn.org] running on it?  Then you can make an MPEG-2 file [sonnik.com] from the data stored on the Tivo.  The downside is that there currently isn't a way to get the data back to the Tivo for viewing.
make iffy uses disabled by default (Score:2)
Then make it easy for the end purchaser or retailer to enable those contentious functions by having say a mini screw switch on the PCB acessed by a tiny round hole in the back one could sloyt a csrew driver down.
Just like DVD players in Oz are virtually all sold with multi-region re-enabled, even though officially they are all only region 4 capable.
Controling trade... (Score:2, Interesting)
I find it interesting that many of these companies could be throttling this sort of device as an oligarchy, yet have little or no influence on the use of the technology. Actually that's a good thing, because of many concerns about there eventually being only a few companies, some years down the road, through which internet service will be provided and dictating what technology would be available and how it could be used by consumers.
I'll buy it when... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'll buy it when... (Score:2)
If you are REALLY interested in change, put your actual money where your mouth is. Identify a company that is going in a direction you like and purchase their products. The only person a company listens to is someone it has a financial relationship with, not just a 'potential'.
When the first thoughts of networking computers was realized, the US Government did not say 'well... I'll fund this only if it does super reallistic streaming video.' They decided that they liked the potential that a non-centralized communication system had, so they put their money into developing something that originally could barely send plain text.
Look where we are now? Bottom line, spend money, don't make vague demands.
Re:I'll buy it when... (Score:3, Funny)
Umm... Yes I will. I thought I was pretty clear.
> Like most people, you're trying to throw the virtual weight of your 'maybe dollars' around to influence people.
Umm... No I'm not. I'm not trying to influence anybody. I'm stating what product I will buy if it ever becomes available. Wow, you're really not good at this mind reading thing, are you?
> Identify a company that is going in a direction you like and purchase their products.
I think a personal-use orbital-capable vehicle would be really neat. Do I have to buy a Space Shuttle now? It's not what I want, but it's going in a direction I like.
> When the first thoughts of networking computers was realized, the US Government did not say 'well... I'll fund this only if it does super reallistic streaming video.' They decided that they liked the potential that a non-centralized communication system had, so they put their money into developing something that originally could barely send plain text. Look where we are now?
Yeah, they paid for and got exactly the product they wanted. A network that was non-centralized and could be routed around nuclear destruction. Many years later the new technology in it evolved into something even better than what they paid for. I'll buy a PVR that uses network drives and many years later maybe it's descendents will do holograms.
> Bottom line, spend money, don't make vague demands.
Vague? How much more specific can I be? Record and play video on an SMB or NFS mounted disk. Do you want specs for SMB and NFS?
Do you always tell people what to do?
Re:I'll buy it when... (Score:1)
Re:I'll buy it when... (Score:2)
Well, Babylon 5 is 110 hours, the B5 movies add another 8, and Crusade is 13. Plus, there is a new B5 movie coming out. And then there's Buffy...
With many shows coming out on DVD, there's not the need to archive TV shows yourself anymore.
I'll believe it when I see it. (Yes, I've preordered the first B5 DVD.)
Re:I'll buy it when... (Score:1, Interesting)
Bah! You miss the big picture. You only record a small amount right now, because that's what you've been limited to. With this unit, you can program it to record entire seasons of shows. You can query based on an actors' name, and THEN select the movies you'd like to record.
After recording an entire season of Sopranos, you can then dump the entire thing down to your VCR. As for the DVD solution, I'm still waiting for the third season of Sopranos to come out. Wish I woulda had one of these units back then.
Linux? (Score:1)
Re:Linux? (Score:1, Informative)
Just another in a long chain... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just another in a long chain... (Score:3, Insightful)
As we all know, VCRs helped most of the movie companies prosper. Now look at the executives. Video sales and rentals helped a bunch of executives climb the movie company corporate ladders. Which means turnover at the top.
The folks choosing to bring the lawsuits, might be afraid that their company will suffer, or more likely, they're afraid that they personally will suffer.
This just DRIVES QUALITY (Score:2)
In fact, VCR IMPROVED attendance at movie theatres overall. It widened the scope for the movies, bringing a wholenew audience in. I'm not a huge movies fan, but watching crappy VHS copies just kind of makes you want to go to the BIG SCREEN and soak the thing in. It improved the possibility of getting a small film funded because the direct to video revenue stream was viable.
What broadcasters need to do is produce better BROADCAST television, so we find some benefit from watching live / watching through their hardware. Other than sporting events I cannot think of an example of a TV show I'd pay extra to watch 'live'
OR they need to find a different charging mechanism than subscription / advertising.
Actually. All TeeVee should be funded like the BBC [bbc.co.uk]. The BBC is great!
forgive my ignorance... (Score:2, Interesting)
I guess the same argument could be made for Napster, and look where that ended up.
-B
TiVo on steroids (Score:1)
Re:TiVo on steroids (Score:1)
Hackability? (Score:3, Interesting)
What is needed is a way to have a fully functional system that doesn't take the software upgrades that will inevitably be coming to disable the sharing features and other features that the networks are complaining about. To compare it to TiVo, to use the full TiVo features you must leave a phoneline plugged in to "phone home" and take whatever software upgrades are forced on you. Pull the phone line for more than 30 days and you basically have yourself a glorified VCR. At some point in SonicBlue is going to be forced to send a software update to disable or alter some of the features of the 4000. Unless there is a way to hack the software to have a fully functional system without taking software updates, you're just wasting your money on this.
Truth in advertising... (Score:2)
If SonicBlue ever sends down an update that takes away functionality that is advertised (printed on the box, mentioned on their website, etc), then they would do this at their own peril. It'd be like shouting, "I hope all of our customers get together and file a class action lawsuit against us!"
I think the MPAA or similar organization could get an injunction stopping the sale of these units, but could they force SonicBlue to send out an update taking away functionality that was promised to the customer during the sale?
Talk about prompting a backlash... yeesh.
Re:Truth in advertising... (Score:5, Insightful)
As someone else pointed out in this thread, the legalease on their site states "SONICblue reserves the right to automatically add, modify, or disable any features in the operating software when your ReplayTV 4000 connects to our server."
What I envision happening at some point is a judge declaring that ReplayTV 4000 can only share programs that the networks allow them to, sort of an opt-in for the networks. So technically Sonicblue wouldn't be guilty of false advertising since you can still share *some* programs. At any rate, the disclaimer above seems to cover them removing features as they please.
Re:Hackability? (Score:2)
These scripts that you speak of are only for TiVo boxes and DirecTV/TiVo combo boxes, although they do work wonderfully. The dealdatabase.com link you provided is a very good resource for anyone interested in doing some advanced hacking on their DirecTiVo box.
Inaccurate summary (Score:2)
Re:Inaccurate summary (Score:1)
So-and-so states: "I hate Microsoft". How about that.
That stuff in italics is actually what the submitter wrote. So Hemos himself isn't actually responsible for the statement "It seems they can't understand why the industry would sue them," the submitter of the article is. Now Hemos could have possibly corrected the submitter in the part after the italics, but he didn't. I don't know that I would say that he was being subjective by not taking the time to correct the subjective statement of the submitter...
Re:Inaccurate summary (Score:2)
IMHO, when /. staffers post articles, they have an obligation to do a little further digging to ensure that the summary they post (which is all many on /. see) is accurate. Conclusion: even though Hemos is not the drafter of that statement, he is responsible by posting it.
It is not a question of being subjective versus objective - those terms are properly applied only to opinions and analyses. It is merely a matter of being factually accurate.
Re:Inaccurate summary (Score:1)
Re:Inaccurate summary (Score:2)
Umm... (Score:3, Funny)
Ya... exactly which hard drive costs over $1,000?
Re:Umm... (Score:1)
But yeah, the prices are still a bit high for essentially the same hardware as the low end model, with a larger HD.
Assuming you can modify ReplayTV as easily as you can Tivo, there would be nothing stopping you from buying the low end, then modifying it to your heart's desire.
The why (Score:2)
" Unlike its competitors, Sonicblue will not charge a monthly service fee. "
"The boxes will display digital photos and skip commercials automatically, which differs from the ability in current ReplayTV boxes to fast-forward through commercials"
The first statement, that they would not charge, would knock tivo down. The second would literally destroy the way that television content is paid for and profitable. Nuts, but true. Just thought I would point out as to why the companies are suing, although I do love the idea and plan to get one as soon as it hits the market.
Re:The why (Score:1)
Re:The why (Score:2)
That's pure bullshit. It might do this, not would, if almost everyone who watches TV bought that exact unit and time-shifted 100% of their TV viewing. That's a big honking, un-fscking-likely IF.
First, I doubt Sonic Blue has the capacity to provide a unit for all the TVs in the world. Second, not everyone wants to spend $600-$2000 per TV when you can get a VCR and TV for $100.
My wife and I are avid time-shifters, and even we only shift maybe 40% of the shows we watch. It goes like this- if we happen to be home when it's on, we usually watch it. But that doesn't always happen!
How about when you're over a friend's house, watching TV? We see the commercials.
How about when I'm watching TV in a public area, like sitting in the hospital waiting room? I see the commercials.
How about all the people who buy the unit who can't find the knob to turn off commericals, or simply don't care to turn it on? (Don't laugh, how many of you know people who can't set the VCR clock? It's a lot of people.)
How about when nothing compelling is on, and I'm channel surfing? I'm not watching anything in particular, it's unplanned viewing. I see the commercials.
Or when it's a premiere that you just can't want to wait to see, so you watch it live.
If you think about it, even if this unit is smashing success and "everybody" has it, there still will be PLENTY of ads seen by all. It wouldn't make a single stinking difference in the money the networks make.
Popularity (Score:1)
Sonic sent emails Tuesday... (Score:3, Informative)
Dear SONICblue customer,
Thank you for pre-ordering the ReplayTV 4000. A customer service representative will be contacting you shortly to confirm the specific details of your pre-order. In order to expedite the shipment of your ReplayTV 4000 model DVR, you are encouraged to call us toll-free at 1-877-ReplayTV (1-877-737-5298) to verify your desired shipping method and other details.
Our Sales department can be reached Monday through Friday, 5:00AM to 5:30PM (PST).
Thank you and Happy Holidays!
SONICblue Customer Care
I immediately called and waited about 20 minutes on hold. The main options for shipping ran $22 (ground) $55 (2nd day) and$80 for Next day, though he mentioned that they ship friday so next day would be Mon at the earliest. CA residents need to pay taxes.
work-arounds for ad-skipping (Score:3, Interesting)
* Make ads use non-standard and random time lengths, sizes, volumes, ect., so that ads cannot be programatically detected
* Interrupt TV, web pages, and even music CDs and movies with ads at irregular intervals so that ads cannot be even generally anticipated
* Supperimpose ads on the sidelines of shows, web pages, CD covers etc. with a constant, nagging presence so that it is difficult to escape from ads even after they have been identified
* Work ads into the background of the action of shows, web pages, etc. to make it more difficult to mentally "tune out" the ads' presenece
* Work ads into the hearts of the plots of fictions, the comments of characters, and the opinions of pundits so that it becomes difficult to even distinguish ads from non-ads
* Replace entertainment, information, opinion, and art with ads wholesale; completely removes the troubling burden of somehow "integrating" ads with non-ads
* Attempt to ban the use of all mass media except for ads; eliminates non-ad competition
What will they think of next?
Re:work-arounds for ad-skipping (Score:1, Offtopic)
And of course, most of that stuff will just drive me away from mass media entirely.
What they're really scared of... (Score:4, Insightful)
What the networks want is to get more money from the consumer by charging for video on demand replays of TV shows. Keep in mind that they're pushing for "locks" on digitally delivered programs so they can mark programs as "unrecordable" and "protected" at which point your VCR/whatever will refuse to record/show the time-shifted broadcast.
The only reason they could want something like this is to be able to charge you for a time-shifted showing.
"Not home for the big game? Well, you can't record it, but we'll let you watch it as video on demand for a small fee! Suck it down!"
With a network of digital recorders that can share programs you no longer have to ask of family and friends, "hey, did you tape ER on thurs.? I missed it and forgot to tape it." Instead you search and download...and if people can do that, why would they buy a rebroadcast from the network?
This isn't about protecting an old and out of date business model, this is about changing current laws and controlling the technology so that a new business model can take off.
Re:What they're really scared of... (Score:2)
I don't agree. As I've said before [slashdot.org], I think 99% of people would prefer pay-per-view video-on-demand over a PVR, because there's no several-hundred-dollar upfront hardware cost.
Sham on the Television industry. (Score:1)
How do they miss this as a source of revenue? First they allow the cable industry to bite into the pie now another group of companies giving their "customers" services they would be more than happy to pay for. Sounds like just bad business moves.
Is the product illegal or wrong. Of course not. There is plenty of FREE TO DISTRIBUTE TV available. The local channels and PBS. A product cannot be illegal if it does not break the law simply by exsisting. The only real crime here as that their own "customers" will be going to companies that actually offer a piece of hardware for their services. A purchase of a TV and VCR can provide the same services they object to.
It is all about the money involved in our purchasing habits. American culture is constantly wanting more and more entertainment by digital means. The TV industry looks like a lame investment of money. Wake up and offer what the people ask for. Otherwise the product exists and it will continue. The american dollar always can purchase.
Nice DVR...only one thing missing. (Score:1)
An episode of *anything* more than 5 years old that hasn't been butchered (think MASH) to the point of unwatchability.
Intelligent commercials...some of the producers or whatever should be flogged with their own film...camera still atttached.
It was inevitable a device such as this came about...for all the talk years ago of V chips (violence chips) none of these idiots ever thought of a Commercial chip...well, here it is.
And maybe I am too much of a geek, ethernet is nice...what it really needs is a RAID tower and LVD 360M scsi...OOoooo.
Not broadcast material they are worried about. (Score:3, Interesting)
Ok, it is a little about broadcast material. It will allow transfer of information outside the advertisor's area. (look at the SHIVA laws regarding protection of local broadcast rights and the effect it is going to have on picture quality of DBS systems)...
But here is where it really matters. ALL PAY PER VIEW material. This includes Actual PPV, Premium Channels, DVD's, and Video's from blockbuster. Since the Replay will be able to record anything coming in on a given channel (like channel 3) at high resolution, and then distributed across the Internet to those that have not payed for the privelage, a technology like this, will result in less potential income to content producers. Less money to HBO, less to Disney, Less to Don King, less to the WWF.
The biggest difference between this and VCR is convenience and distribution. Distribution of Video tapes is so limited to not really matter in terms of money. When distribution becomes "easy" (And in this case, Napster is an appropriate analog), then non-payment use of PPV material becomes rampant and uncontrolled.
In this case it will only be a matter of creating "replay" groups that will create material that will be "easy" to get... "Hey, I missed the last episode of the Soprano's can someone send it to me?" "Does, any one have "Shrek?""
Fair use laws never intended to allow easy distribution of copies of material in a fashion that allows use outside of the intended commercial distribution method. It is meant to allow fair personal use.
IANAL but I think that they can demonstrate that this moves from personal use, to extra-commercial distribution of intellectual property, without compensation to the owners of that property.
Hackability (Score:2)
Free info, and my control. control of my viewing habit data.
Re:Hackability (Score:2)
As for the required "service", I don't understand your complaint, because unlike TiVo the service is included with the product with no service fee.
Also, if it is like my current Replay box (which I hacked by adding a second hard drive
-Aaron
Must have (Can't Have) (Score:1)
Congrats to SonicBlue for their bravery. Be very afraid of the IP Lawyers. Be Very Afraid.
Pause Technology Owns PVR Patent - Suing TiVo (Score:1, Informative)
Bandwidth for these things? (Score:2, Interesting)
I have karma to burn (Score:2)
I'd dearly love to test one of these.
So buy one, you cheap bastard, instead of whoring around for free samples with a /. submission.
Why don't they use it to their advantage? (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyway, just a thought.
"DVRs don't infringe, people infringe" (Score:2)
Just remember - DVRs don't infringe copyright, people infringe copyright.
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:1)
It is wrong, racist, and well flamebait.
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:2)
Which universe do you live in? Hell, I know more than 12 DirecTV hackers myself. There are thousands of 'em.
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:2)
I want some of what you're smoking. Hughes is beaming the signal, at their cost -- and you think it's unreasonable for them to want to get paid for it?
Launching a multi-million-dollar satellite into space isn't free, nor is keeping it running and fed with data. If they weren't paid for it, then nobody would have satellite TV.
If you want the shit to be free, you build the frickin' satellite, put it in orbit, and let everybody in North America use it for free. Otherwise, give it a rest. This "information wants to be free" crap is getting pretty old when all it really means is "I don't like paying for anything".
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:3, Insightful)
If I mail something to you unsolicited, I can't require that you pay for it, even if you actually want it and decide to keep it.
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:2)
And this is
I'll try to use smaller words this time.
If - nobody - pays - for - satellite - TV - there - will - be - no - satellite - TV.
That's all I'm saying. If stealing the signal (i.e. decoding it without paying for it) were legalized, the net result would be that satellite TV would instantly disappear. It would no longer be in anybody's interest to broadcast it. Unless you're arguing that the world would be a better place if this happened, or expounding upon a scenario in which it wouldn't happen like that, you aren't making a useful point.
People need to make money, folks. They provide a useful service, you pay 'em for it. If you don't want to pay them, you'd better not expect service. This isn't a new phenomenon.
Re:This is soooo typical (Score:2)
And this is
I'll try to use smaller words this time.
If - nobody - pays - for - satellite - TV - there - will - be - no - satellite - TV.
That is true of the business plan I described as well, but it doesn't make it a good business plan.
Re:I'll say it again... (Score:1)
Re:I'll say it again... (Score:3, Insightful)
Monday: Stargate SG-1
Tuesday: 24
Wednesday: Enterprise, The Amazing Race
Thursday: Survivor
Friday: whatever
Saturday: whatever
Sunday: Stargate SG-1 repeats, Simpsons
Friday and Saturday, there's nothing on. Most other days, there's all of an hour of TV.
There are also TV shows I watch when I'm bored, or nothing else is on, or I'm paging through the channel list and see them, and nothing else is on, or are on every day.
Earth: Final Conflict, Andromeda, Relic Hunter, CounterSpin, the CBC National news.
The thing is, these are really good shows, but are not good enough to justify rearranging my schedule. Likewise with the X-Files, which I just stopped caring about.
If I had a DVR, I would record these TV shows when they were on (during the day, middle of the night, etc); as well I would record movies that were on Movie Central (there are quite a few good movies on this month, but never when I want to watch them, it seems).
After I had them recorded, I could then watch them whenever I wanted. Lazy days off, while working at home, when my favourite shows are pre-empted by hockey games, and so forth.
Ideally, I'd like to be able to convert some things to MPEG-2/DivX and store them long-term, but the vast majority of things I would do this for are CounterSpin (like CrossFire on CNN or HardTalk on BBC, only better), and the national news.
I honestly don't think the CBC, which is largely funded by my tax dollars anyway, would object to me storing news for the long-term. It's not exactly a hot trading item on IRC fservs, and it won't get me any accounts on hotline, to be sure.
Also, I would like to use such a feature to store television shows that I -cannot- buy seasons of on DVD. I'd rather buy a season on DVD than record, encode, and store (on hard drive or via iDVD), but if necessary, I would buy an 80 gig hard drive (or three, and RAID them) to store these episodes.
It would also be nice if they stopped charging so much for the damned DVDs. I mean, they cost me more than VHS tapes and they probably cost about $0.50 to press. Come on, cut me some slack here!
--Dan
Re:I'll say it again... (Score:2)
The PVR would need to tell the digital box to tune to a particular
channel, and this isn't possible right now.
This is not true, in fact. My digital cable box has a serial port that the TiVo can connect to and change the channel via. Interesting technology. Now, if only the TiVo could get the channel lists via this port (but that would lose them subscription dollahs, wouldn't it?)
--Dan
Re:I'll say it again... (Score:2)
thousands of pounds into.
Well excuse me, but I happen to like my crap programs and repeats.
Haven't you heard of things such as hobbies?
I have several hobbies, but when one comes home from work (or in my case, is working at home), one does not necessarily feel like going kickboxing or learning a new language. Television, music, and books are the three easiest, lowest-energy ways to relax, and I can listen to music and read books whenever I want. WHy can't I watch TV whenever I want?
Yeha, it's a luxury that I don't need, but so's my computer, so's my stereo, so are my books. Doesn't mean I'm not going to give up on literature.
--Dan