Tivo Quadcard Promises Thousand-Hour PVR 286
edrock200 writes "The folks over at 9thtee are developing a quad card for Tivo series 1 and Tivo/DirecTV combo units...it will allow you to
add 4 hard drives to your Tivo and also break the 133gb limit for each drive....this will effectively give you a 1200-hour unit with 4 320GB drives. Theres also a fairly detailed thread of the development process over at the AVS forums." Gonna need the space since scifi has decided to air 4 episodes of SG1 a day!
MPAA???? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:MPAA???? (Score:2)
Re:MPAA???? (Score:3, Funny)
Let's see...this device allows you to watch over 1,000 hours of television programming without viewing the commercials? If Dante Alighieri were president of MPAA, the Tivo people would roam a ring of hell inbetween Mohammed Atta and the deMedici family. Valenti, on the other hand, will probably make some comparison to the Boston Strangler instead.
Brain Bandwidth (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:2)
Blipverts! (Score:2)
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:3, Interesting)
Turn on close captioning on your TV or VCR. That's what I do.
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:2)
I find that if I ingest large quantities of caffeine -- more than 250 mg at one sitting -- that everything seems faster. That'd be me recommendation for increased brain-bandwidth. Or at least the perception of increased bandwidth.
Large quantities of caffeine make me feel like I've got a speed-up control on my forehead and I can tweak it anytime I want. Up, down. Up, down. Up, up, up, down. Up, down.
I also find that huge quanities increase my ability to concentrate on a single thing -- an episode of the Sopranos from my Tivo, for example -- and I swear that it *seems* faster when I'm cranked. Everybody talks faster, cars move faster, Tony beats his bartender over the head with an ice-bucket in hyperspeed. The result is that the episode makes a lot more sense yet seems to go by in light speed.
I'm cranked now, for example. The medicinal Red Bull is residing in my digestive system, marching out all its evil little enzymes into my 'System'.
I feel like Dr. Mullion Blasto.
I feel like I could watch a shitload of TIVO in a split-second.
Too much stimulation in the System, I guess.
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:2)
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:4, Funny)
That's so fucking true.
It's like if you speed up a movie camera, you essentially shoot slow-mo, right? (If it's played back at normal speed?)
Wow.
That changes everything. My poor fucking brain. I gotta take another Red Bull and think this over.
Re:Brain Bandwidth (Score:2)
Simple math leads to the discovery that one would have to be on AOL for 22 hours, 13 minutes a day to take full advantage of the offer.
Quit work, have a month's food stocked at the computer (or arrange for delivery), use the remaining 1 hour 47 minutes per day for dealing with disconnects, sleep, and other necessities....
It's not temporally impossible to fully use this offer, but it would be quite a challenge.
Slackers (Score:5, Funny)
HDTV? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:HDTV? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
Then again that might just be in the DirecTV world.
Tivo's don't do HDTV, yet. (Score:5, Informative)
Dish network is working on an HDTV PVR, the 921 [dbstalk.com], and Sony is rumored to be working on an HDTV unit as well, but no word whether tivo technology will be used on that.
You should check out this forum [tivocommunity.com] For the latest on tivo technology. A few tivo employees are active contributers-- and the news always hits this place first.
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
By the time HDTV is in wide use, we'll probably have terabyte drives on our desktops. :-)
But in reality, I would rather have the quantity instead of the quality. I mean, this is TV after all. Is there anything worth watching in high-definition? My friend has his TiVO networked throughout his house, and he has a 61" Mitsubishi HDTV set, and it is awesome. He gets some HDTV broadcasts, and he said you can really tell the difference. But in my mind, it isn't worth it. TV just isn't that interesting to me most of the time. What advantage do I get watching Iron Chef in high def? Now Blue Planet on the Discovery Channel would be incredible. But at this point, to choose between capacity or quality, I would go with capacity. In general, stations broadcast more crap instead of good programs. So if you are really that into TV you probably have many different shows you want to watch.
But then again, I don't even have a TiVO. And watching the Simpsons on DVD is weird, it is too crisp and clean. The poor broadcast quality of Fox adds some charm to it. :-)
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
Try reducing the sharpness on your television. Most people have it set way too high, and most broadcasting is more pleasing to the eye a little bit softer.
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
That said, the difference would be noticable between HD and standard broadcast, and you might want to preserve that at higher quality settings (Tivo has four: Low, Medium, High, and Best) so that you see something as close to the original as possible.
You won't use any extra space for recording an HD feed (in fact, you may take up less, since you'd be forced into letterboxing it, and VBR recording would probably make that more efficient) but you'll probably use the higher settings at about 2GB/hour just because it would look better.
Personally, given that much free space, I'd record everything on high or best quality just because I'd hardly worry about running out of space. However, the Tivo is slow when it comes to dealing with long lists of shows, so I'd also use higher quality settings just because I'd be forced by space limitations to keep the number of shows down.
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
And while there are currently no HDTV Tivo's available, Tivo has shown a prototype one. When will it be available? Probably as soon as it becomes worthwhile ($$$) for Tivo to sell them. Tivo/Replay/etc. are having a hard enough time selling boxes that handle a format that at least 95% of the population of the US can handle!
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
Given that it isn't worth it for them to sell regular TiVo's, it could take awhile! They are still losing money.
Re:HDTV? (Score:2)
Furthermore, there's a ton of HD programming out there. HBO and Showtime are broadcasting about half a dozen movies per day in HD, via satellite, and the OTA networks are rolling out more HD programming all the time. Most of CBS's prime-time schedule is simulcast in HD, and a good deal of ABC's is as well, including big-ticket items like Alias and Push, Nevada. NBC and Fox have been relatively slow to adopt HD, but they're coming along.
There's something on in HD every night of the week. And I'm not counting demo loops.
Finally, I have it on reasonably good authority that TiVo demonstrated an HD version of their Series 2 device at NAB back in April. It's rumored to have been a closed-door demonstration, so I didn't see it myself, but many others corroborate the story. So "not even in alpha planning stages" isn't quite right.
Man, you were wrong three ways!
Hours are great, but.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Reasons it's good/usable: (Score:2)
-Record entire seasons. I would have loved to record the 24 straight hours of "24" at highest quality, and kept them around for when friends come over/etc!
-Go wish-list crazy. I love cops, and it's always showing on 243 channels at once. I could just set it to go cop-crazy, and not worry about it filling up my tivo and pushing other stuff off.
Re:Reasons it's good/usable: (Score:2)
You'll so regret this.
My wife and I both have TiVo's, and I've upgraded both of them with a second 80G drive, giving us something like 130 hours at lowest quality.
We both have around 18 season passes or wishlists, and whenever we shuffle them around in priority it can take up to 5 minutes for the TiVo to sort things out.
These are both original v1 TiVo's with the speedy 40 MHz PPC CPU, so a v2 box with a 350 MHz MIPS CPU might be better off.
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:5, Informative)
First of all, 1200 hrs = about 700 hrs of high quality (your 60hr tivo has closer to 35hrs of high quality record time).
Secondly, 1200 hours of tivo action would give you greater flexability with how you use your tivo. You wouldn't need to delete good shows just because you had already seen them. You could keep a collection of HBO movies instead of buying the DVDs. The entire season of Sopranos, whatever. Tivo is smart, if you already have a show, it won't re-record it (assuming the guide has the epiosde information).
Tivo doesn't have a way of cropping a video such that only a desired scene is kept (one of my suggestions for upgrade), so you need to, for example, save the whole Conan just for the 10 second bit on The guy who's protected from three inch bees. I love that bit, but my 30 hr can't afford an hour for every scene I want to keep around to show my friends when they visit, neither could my 60, or even 120 if I had them. I'd still have the world cup on my tivo if I could, if just to illustrate what I was talking about to my friends when I complain about Kahn crushing my country =(.
With 1200 hrs, maybe tivo will release some software that allows us to put some of our programs into archives, or have some kind of sorting tools. All they have now is a filter for the now-showing guide.
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:2)
For varying reasons I stopped watching Conan (after being an avid viewer) about a year ago - would it be worth my time to start watching again?
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:2)
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:2)
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:2)
Re:Hours are great, but.... (Score:2)
I believe the phrase "duct tape" is an appropriate rejoinder.
50 Days (Score:3, Insightful)
It's cool, but come on, it's unnecessary. If you are 1200 hours behind in programming, you are just not going to catch up, period.
I suppose this would be cool though if you had 4 smaller hard drives around that you weren't doing anything with, to increase the capacity more without having to buy another hard drive, or swap out one that you were already using for the Tivo.
Mark
smaller hd's is better (Score:2)
the true value of this will be the average person who has a bunch of extra hd's and would like a little more room on their tivo.
Also on the swapping angle: I wonder if you could store the "Kids in the Hall" marathon, or "Law and Order" marathon on a harddrive, remove it and put it on ice for a while, then the next time you have a long weekend and nothings on plug that bad-bwoy in and watch,watch, watch, go pee, watch, watch, watch some more, etc.
Re:50 Days (Score:3, Interesting)
It's cool, but come on, it's unnecessary. If you are 1200 hours behind in programming, you are just not going to catch up, period.
Actually, there are certain shows that I save to videotape for later referece. Sometimes I get a lot of shows that I intend to dump to VHS backed up on my drive and it takes a couple of weekends to dump them. If I had 1200 hours of programming, the TiVo itself could become my video library. There are of course some issues regarding backing up the data and such but still, I'd love to have my entire library of VHS tapes sitting on one harddrive instead.
Also, when you live in a household with more than one person, you'd be suprised how much space you can eat up. I have 80 hours of capacity on my TiVo and it very rarely actually has space to record TiVo suggestions.
What I really need to do is get an ethernet card installed and figure out how to share the video files but I say bring it on, I'll take all the space I can get.
Re:50 Days (Score:2)
Re:50 Days (Score:2)
Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:3, Informative)
(B) You can fit an ethernet card in TiVo. With software version 3 and a Series 2 TiVo it's not even a hack - builtin USB port and builtin ethernet support means you can plug a USB Ethernet adapter into your TiVo.
Either way, TiVo has a lot more, uh, aftermarket products available. You _can_ do the whole adding-harddrives thing to ReplayTV too, but it's a lot more accessible with TiVo.
Also, you've got the TiVo+DirecTV combination, which is what put it over the top for me. Capture the MPEG stream rather than recompress, and dual tuners.
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2)
Unfortunately you can't get a lifetime subscription for a DirecTiVo, which means paying whatever the current monthly fee is forever (and that fee can go up).
We have two TiVo's, both with lifetime subs. One has already paid for itself, the other will do so within a few months.
I may finally be able to get DirecTV, since I think that the tree that was blocking my view of the satellite fell on my house [tripod.com] last weekend (hint - this is not a good way to get DirecTV), but I'm not real interested in DirecTiVo's because of the ongoing cost.
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2)
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2)
When I got my DirecTV system, the installer came over and said that there was no way it'll work, because of the trees. He didn't even bother checking. I have the dish up now (self-install... well... I got my boss to come over and install it for me). It's pointing RIGHT INTO a huge maple, and I get excellent signal.
Which is all a moot point for you right now, really...
Anyway. Are you sure you can't do a lifetime subscription with DirecTiVo? I recall being offered that when I signed up.
Also, while it's true proces can go up, they've recently gone way down - the TiVo part of DirecTiVo is now like $5/month.
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2)
I have had a DirecTivo for about a year and unfortunately I lost my modem in a lightning storm. It would not even boot up but just hung. I ripped the drive out, commented out the modem test scripts, installed and network card, and was back in business. All in all it has worked out well for me.
-sirket
Re:Tivo vs ReplayTV? (Score:2, Interesting)
When our remote died, they sent us a replacement for free - even though we were off warranty.
I'm more confident of ReplayTV's privacy policies than TiVo's.
Don't forget the cost of the service (realistically, you'll buy the lifetime version) when you do cost comparisons. The boxes lose a lot of functionality without the TV guide service.
If you really _do_ intend to hack the box, sure, get TiVo. But if you just want a box you can plug in and record things, I like Replay.
with only one tuner? (Score:4, Insightful)
Are there any tuner hacks to TiVo?
Re:with only one tuner? (Score:5, Informative)
The DIRECTV with TiVo combo units have 2 tuners.
Record 2 shows while watching something else you already recorded. Life is good.
You're watching? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:You're watching? (Score:5, Funny)
They're also boycotting the RIAA untless N'Sync releases a new CD.
You see, the plan is to boycott only quality entertainment, and watch/listen to only crap.
That way the industry execs get terribly skewed statistics on buying trends, and go bankrupt when they jointly produce "Star Wars vs. Star Trek II - Lance Bass's Big Adventure".
I think the point of this.. (Score:5, Insightful)
What makes Tivo so popular to "hackers" is that Tivo does not seek legal action on every little hack that is developed. Of course, if one would create a hack that bypasses the subscription process; that's a different story, but they seem to be pretty open to hacks such as these.
Too bad we can't say the same for xBox. I would really love it if I could also use my xBox as a MAME console.
Re:I think the point of this.. (Score:4, Interesting)
now.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:now.... (Score:5, Funny)
Mark
Re:now.... (Score:2)
Great, but (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the nice thing about this would be if you could arrange for a whole season of (say) Stargate to be on one physical disk (doesn't have to be huge). Then pull out the disk, stick it on a PC and archive it to DVD or whatever. However, I don't know that the Tivo's filesystem and apps allow for this. Anyone know?
Re:Great, but (Score:3, Informative)
There's a catch... (Score:2)
1500 _DAY_ TiVo (Score:2, Informative)
SAN box can present as many 120G devices as you want, thus missing the ATA limit.
TiVo root FS allows you to add a number of devices to assimilate, so you just add all the iSCSI disk devices. I think there is 8K of device name space.
The only problem I see is that the TiVo probably
doesn't have the CPU horsepower to drive a software based iSCSI initiator fast enough to record...
plus i haven't ported any of the iscsi initiators to PPC.
one of these weekends....
B
Cheaper better solution... (Score:2, Troll)
Step 2. Record TV shows using point and click interface in VCD format...
Step 3. Use software that came with CD-R drive to burn VCD's of your favorite movies and TV shows... (74 min per CD and playable in nearly any DVD player!
This is a cheap and effective alternative to TIVO of any sort considering that you probably already have a CD-R drive, and the AIW card is relatively inexpensive... Also, you can store 1000 hours of programming for far less than a single 320 GB drive will cost *when* it becomes availiable. As an added bonus, the VCD's that you burn are very portable and can easily be taken to friends' houses as well as stored for years to come...
Re:BETTER Cheaper better solution... (Score:2)
BTW if it were just for PVR, AIW Radeon is overkill. My *vintage* AIW does the task of capturing live streams just fine.
AIW 128 would be reasonable. USB versions get enough throughput to do the job well, too.
Re:BETTER Cheaper better solution... (Score:2)
Re:Cheaper better solution... (Score:2, Insightful)
And you'll need one big-ass cabinet to store 1200 disks.
The difference between a TiVo and a PC with a TV tuner card is like the difference between a 1950's B&W console and a home theater.
Puhleeze! (Score:5, Insightful)
Although it would be nice to have an easy way to pull and archive video off TiVo, it's not crucial, and if it was, I could use one of the TiVo net hacks to implement it.
Re:Cheaper better solution... (Score:2)
Step 5: go buy some dedicated hardware to solve this problem.
or maybe this:
Step 4: Run my MSVC compile during Buffy.
Step 5: My old Underpowered P3 can't keep up with the MPEG-1 encoding and the compile at the same time.
Step 6: Buy faster processor and new motherboard (no longer as cheap...)
What does every Tivo story have this thread? (Score:3, Insightful)
Get old (486/Pentium/PII), install capture card, xxx GB disk, xyz software, burner and its "as good as Tivo".
Occasionally you can substitute in "install linux, xwindows, etc" in there someplace.
$100? (Score:2)
All I see is $250 used!
Neat, but kind of messy... (Score:4, Interesting)
From one of the linked pages:
I know from my own Tivo that heat is definately a problem in these things with only two drives.
What might fit the ticket a little better would be a firewire (or serial ATA ?) interface and external drives in a separate case, with separate power supply. Unfortunately, I calculate USB to be a bit too slow for simultaneous record/playback at high quality.
Or, even better, how about SCSI with external drives? Well, maybe it's not better, given the price differential on SCSI drives. Hmmm.
The truly scary line in all this- (Score:2)
I think it would officially _suck_ to spend 1k+ on all this, only to have a software update render it unusable.
Missing the point (Score:3, Interesting)
But what makes this compelling to me is as a permanent storage medium. You can store entire seasons of many of your favorite shows. Every Seinfeld, Buffy, +20 other shows episode available within a few seconds, in perfect broadcast quality for ever.
I'd pay for that!
Re:Missing the point (Score:2)
eBay the TiVo. Go outside. It's an amazing world out there.
Re:Missing the point (Score:2)
So, to extend your line of thinking, anyone who buys a Sopranos season 1 DVD set or a Simpsons season 1 DVD set, etc is inferior to your mad social skillz and needs to get a life, yo.
Local Storage Is Not The Answer (Score:2, Interesting)
Why this is cool: it enables a new mode of usage (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't think of it like your current Tivo, where you record shows to watch later in the week; instead, think of it as a video archive machine. I was just going through my old video tapes last night, and was amazed by the things I have on tape that I totally forgot about. Imagine that instead of having every episode of the Simpsons on tape somewhere, you have every episode archived and instantly available on your Tivo. And heck, you would probably put all of your home videos on it; now you can re-watch the birth of your son at the push of a button!
Of course, this probably actually requires more space than 1200 hours (you would want redundancy, so RAID eats some of that, and you would want to record in a higher-quality mode, eating even more.) This is ridiculously expensive today, but I bet that in 5 years, the "Tivo video archive" will be common.
Terabyte appliances (Score:2)
Ooo neat.. (Score:2)
Why you need 1200 hours (Score:5, Interesting)
Mine has 120 hours of capacity and I've always got some Hitchcock and Woody Allen movies along with the regulary Buffy, Simpsons and West Wing stuff.
More capacity means I can keep stuff on the TiVo much longer and still use it like muggle TiVo owners do.
And no, you CAN NOT make a PC do this with ANY capture card. TiVo's software rocks. It's like Mac OS X vs. DOS. It's got Coax, RCA and S-Video inputs. It's got Coax, RCA and S-Video outputs. It's virtually silent. On-screen programming guide. Two-button recording. Wish lists. And a whole bunch of other stuff you just can't appreciate until you have one.
In unrelated news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In unrelated news... (Score:2)
Speed probs (Score:2, Informative)
What we REALLY need.. (Score:2)
But in the end (Score:2, Insightful)
With only 2-3hrs/week of TV, yeah, you'd be fine.
1200HRs of TV means you are look at the TV too much. Even over a year.
Re:But in the end (Score:2)
it's still the internet. And without the internet, your life would not entirely suck.
With only 2-3hrs/week of the internet, yeah, you'd be fine.
1200HRs of the internet means you are look at the internet too much. Even over a year.
feel free to replace theninternet with Books, movies, walking, etc...
so why is it too much?
Extra RAM will be needed for this . . . (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem is, when you get up to only 100+ gig of storage space on it, even with the memory modifications, the TIVO takes a while to bring the recording lists up (~1-2 minutes on my full 120 single drive unit). Having all that space isn't really going to do much if it takes 5-10 minutes everytime you want to look through your recording list. On the bright side, the guys at 9th tee know this already so I have high hopes for a solution when the drive expansion unit becomes available
My own station. (Score:2)
Star Trek, Farscape, South Park in the day...
Hot Les Porn at night.
$1 / month service charge, no commercials, anyone interested? Heh.
Not developed by 9thTee (Score:5, Informative)
NOT!
The QuadCard, like the AirNet and TurboNet adapters also sold through 9thTee, were developed by a TiVo user named Nick Kelsey (known as "jafa" on the TiVo Community Forum.) 9thTee is the distributor - though I don't want to take anything away from them, they have been remarkably supportive of the TiVo community and they deserve kudos for taking the financial risks of selling these add-ons.
It is truly amazing what Nick has been able to do with his electronics expertise.
Shows the weakness of TiVo's software (Score:5, Informative)
It does work, but the results aren't something I'd like to deal with. One big list (at least you can change the sort order with the latest version of the software). No folders, no searching. Oh, and from what I hear, it can really slow down the TiVo. My un-hacked TiVo takes minutes to exit the season pass manager, and often stumbles for a few seconds pulling up the now playing list. I'd hate to think how long I'm staring at the "Please Wait" display if I had one of these uber-upgrades. Heck, it's bad enough on my unit: Which of the four South Parks is the one I haven't watched yet, and which three are the ones I'm saving for my SO to watch? No way to know from the list, and since it's a show on Comedy Central, there's no way to know without going into the program itself because guide data is sketchy.
Until TiVo really speeds up there system (assuming they can, there's not a lot of horsepower in your average TiVo box), and adds some more advanced options to organize and maintain shows, I think I'll just stick with my ~35 hours. 100+ hours is a nice idea, but IMO, TiVo just doesn't scale that well yet.
Some thoughts about this (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's what I see as the problem with this much storage:
If these issues can be resolved, I bet quite a few geeks would actually get some use out of 1200 hours of programs.
Re:Some thoughts about this (Score:4, Informative)
Slow-0(zero)-Record-Thumbs Up
This will give you an option on your now playing list for sorting by date, show and expiration date.
I'm not sure if you to have the backdoor mode enabled for it. More details are at: Tivonews backdoors [tivonews.com]
1200 HOURS! (Score:3, Funny)
however! please contact me when they have come out with a tivo that has an automated DVD burner in it - where I can schedule a show to be recorded - burned - deleted all while I am out at the beach!
What's with the Orinoco card in the photo? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's all well and good... (Score:3, Informative)
Unfortunately, the drive will be a 5400 rpm drive when it comes out some time around the end of this year. However, the article also mentions a 250 GB model that will run at 7200 rpm.
Re:That's all well and good... (Score:2)
# Runs the fan at maximum for best heat dissipation (SA version).
# 5400rpm drives recommended to reduce heat.
# Additional cooling recommended
Re:That's all well and good... (Score:5, Insightful)
Quad Card. Pshaw. (Score:2)
Re:Quad Card. Pshaw. (Score:2)
You think that's ridiculous? (Score:2, Funny)
No.
screw bounds checking, that ADA stuff is for dorks. Even the DOD dropped it!
Mekka- Do-dork-ahedron -B
Re:ridiculous (Score:4, Funny)
I'm pretty sure that you didn't spend 500 days outside last year either. . .
Re:1200 hours? why? (Score:2)
What these things really need is a form of media recorder which they can dump/archive stuff on, rather than superhuge hard-drives.
For all those that want to collect EVERY Star trek episode, a solution will come - phorm
Re:Napster II?? (Score:2)
Flags wave. People sing the national anthem. Technology gets better. VCR gets better. VCR is now called Tivo.
The whole I work 40 hours a week is to develop better VCRs! (Well, I work on other technologies, but I'm speaking for people who's job it is to make better and better methods of recording/playing TV
Frankly, if anything, I like these things because if they make less money off the shows, they have less money to _make_ the shows, and then the only things they can improve instead of special effects and hire-a-cameos are the plots and substance of televsion programming. Which sounds like a win to me. I'm willing to forgo special effects, text superposition, multimillion dollar paycheques and bluescreen for an industry that actually improves via the quality of the shows rather than the quality of the productions.
Which is to say, if anything, if this hurts the production industry, good.
Re:Forget 4 drives (Score:2, Informative)
They also have a wired adapter that is a much better deal. You do have to drill a hole for the cable to go inside, but you get wire speed then.
Re:Why would you do that? (Score:2)
Not necessarily. I didn't start watching SG-1 till it was airing before Farscape. So I'm looking forward to Sci-Fi showing the older seasons.
(Ok, so I've got the first 2 seasons on DVD already, but I've not seen any of season 3 and only some of 4 and 5 (they were in reruns for a bit after SG-1 started on Sci-Fi)).
--Ty
Re:Any Open Source PVR Projects? (Score:3, Informative)