August 16, 2006
Broadband Reports says Verizon today unveiled a new option for those lucky enough to be within reach of FiosTV: the Motorola QIP6416 multi-room DVR, which will stream programming to up to three standard definition televisions. The unit, which features dual HD tuners and a 160gig hard-drive, is available to FiosTV subscribers for $20 a month, plus $3.95 for each TV you'll have connected to it.
The recorder is bundled with Media Manager, a new feature that lets customers
easily access photos and music from their personal computer. Both
functions are made possible by software and technology already built into
the FiOS platform on Verizon's fiber-to-the-premises network.
The launch of Home Media DVR follows the June 1 introduction of FiOS TV Widgets, a free interactive feature that lets subscribers display text-based local weather and traffic information on their TV screens.
Verizon's DVR set-top box (the Motorola QIP6416)
functions as the media hub, which records and streams the video, and its
standard-definition set-top boxes (the Motorola QIP2500) are the remote
terminals.
To watch recorded programs on the media hub and up to two remote terminals simultaneously, customers pull down the menu, click "recorded TV" to find and select their program, and then press "play." The media hub also functions as a dual-tuner DVR on which viewers can watch one program while recording another.
Home Media DVR is $19.95 per month, $7 more than the monthly fee for the FiOS TV DVR. Customers also need a $3.95-per-month standard-definition set-top box for each TV that will receive recorded video from the media hub.
Meanwhile, AT&T's U-verse also plans a high def Motorola set top box to replace all of their Tatung boxes. The Motorola VIP 1216 will be used for the main TV and the VIP 1200 for all other TVs. The 1216 will contain a 160GB hard drive with the capacity to record both SD and HD content encoded in H.264 format.
AT&T's Homezone users can also schedule and manage DVR recordings on their 2Wire set-tops while they are away from home. AT&T U-Verse TV service over "Project Lightspeed", in San Antonio gave customers only one DVR per customer. If a customer had a second (or third) TV, AT&T gave them another DVR as a receiver, but disabled the recording functionality.
Now Engadget and the U-Verse users website explore how customers were cracking open their systems to re-enable the DVR functionality. Calling this a "hack" seems generous - users simply have to apparently re-connect a hard-drive.



