Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

April 06, 2004

Unmediated PVR Data Collection Project

MythTV
Let's use the comment thread of this post to aggregate all commercial and open source projects related to Personal Video Recorders (PVRs). Perhaps once we have a substantial list, I'll parse through it and write it up all pretty and nice and we can post it as the first Unmediated White Paper.


Posted by Eli Chapman at 10:14 AM


Comments

Anyone here taken a look at Freevo? URL is http://freevo.sourceforge.net/about.html

Posted by: Eli Chapman at April 6, 2004 10:19 AM

I guess the next would be MythTV.

http://www.mythtv.org/

Posted by: yatta at April 6, 2004 01:27 PM

PVRBlog is a good source for PVR-related news. One of the authors is Raffi Krikorian, the guy who wrote the TiVo Hacks O'Reilly book.

http://www.pvrblog.com/pvr/

Posted by: yatta at April 6, 2004 01:29 PM

The PVR Guides

Help and advice on setting up your personal video recorder

http://pvrguide.no-ip.com/

An interesting HOWTO site that i've meaning to sift through.

Posted by: yatta at April 6, 2004 01:30 PM

Open source:


In addition to Freevo and MythTV, there is VDR (http://www.cadsoft.de/vdr/), which is intended specifically for digital broadcasts, and ETV (http://etv.sourceforge.net/), which is "designed to accomodate European TV habits."


Commercial:


Everyone knows TiVo and ReplayTV, of course, but there is also the Roku HD1000 (http://www.rokulabs.com/products/hd1000/), a Linux-based PVR+ intended for HDTV.


There are also companies like Digeo (http://www.digeo.com/) which sell PVR and iTV tech to cable and satellite providers, who build it into their own branded set-top boxes.


Microsoft is pushing XP Media Edition as a PVR solution (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/mediacenter/evaluation/tours/default.asp), and I wouldn't be surprised to see this stuff in the Xbox2.


Finally there is stuff like Akimbo (http://www.akimbo.com/), which sells a box for watching Net video on your TV (sounds kind of lame now, but in a couple of years could be way cooler than any of the above).

Posted by: Ryan Shaw at April 6, 2004 11:30 PM

After struggling for a few weeks trying to get MythTV up and running, and then trying myHTPC, which works but wasn't too great, I'm now using sage.tv, commercial software that costs $60, on a WinXP machine I built for the purpose of creating a PVR. So far, so good. Their 2.x versions (currently in beta) have a much-improved interface over earlier releases and their feature list compares nicely with Tivo (including supposedly smart recording of shows it thinks you might like - haven't really tested this yet). It's stable, easy to set up, and works, for the most part.

Posted by: Dan Melinger at April 8, 2004 03:26 PM

This software runs on off-the-shelf PC hardware. From their site (http://www.spectsoft.com/products/ravehd/): RaveHD, from SpectSoft (http://www.spectsoft.com), is a second generation, open source, Linux based, hybrid digital disk drive recorder and video editor geared toward the high end film and graphics industries. It utilizes open standards and protocols to achieve a products that is elegant, easy to integrate, and totally customizable. It features a data agnostic core that allows it to work with today's uncompressed standard and high definition video as well as tomorrow's super high datarate video.

Posted by: Eli Chapman at April 9, 2004 11:42 AM

Excerpt:
Post a comment









Remember personal info?