I want to arrange to record TV shows for playback when the traffic clears up enough for me to actually get home. In the Golden Olden days, I would use a magic box called a “VCR” to do this. I would insert a smaller magic box, called a “VHS Tape” into the VCR, then do some minor programming with a remote control, and my show would be recorded. The big magic box only cost about $40! And you could reuse the small magic box over and over.
They don’t sell VCRs anymore! What tha? Options seem to be
[ol]
[li]Hope and pray that my shows are online somewhere. (They aren’t).[/li][li]Buy a TIVO for $200, then pay them monthly for the rest of my life[/li][li]Buy at subscriptionless TIVO for $600.[/li][li]What about a DVD recorder? Would this do what I want?[/li][li]Never watch Big Bang Theory again[/li][/ol]
If you have cable or satellite TV, your box may already have a DVR function built in. Otherwise, you might want to look into to buying one. I have DISH, and programming the thing is simple. Select a show on the program grid, highlight, choose to record it one time, new episodes only, or all episodes. The box will then search all channels and record the show in accordance with my instructions. Much easier and more reliable than any VCR I ever owned.
Get an intern in AV studies. Tell them they’ll get college credit to record your shows.
Use computer to download speeches from Stephen Hawking. Learn about the real Big Bang Theory.
Get a job at Blockbuster. Suck up to the supervisor with DVD selection privileges.
For a complete transcript of tonight’s episode send a self addressed stamped envelope and $10 to CBS Studios Address: 7800 Beverly Boulevard Los Angeles, CA. 90036
You can find VCRs just about anywhere, but they’re combo VCR/DVD player units. I was at Wal-Mart and Best Buy in just the past week and saw 'em.
DVD recorders are an option, but the VCR/DVD combo is cheaper. Also, the DVD recorders available at most big box outlets don’t stand up to daily recordings. Expect about a year. If you’re really lucky a year and a half. Then they start going bad.
I can’t imagine going back to using the PC to record my shows according to a schedule. Pretty much the only reason I pay my cable subscription is a sense of moral correctness - if there’s a show on that I follow I’m just going to grab a divx file.
That being said, my DVR that comes with my satellite service is the best thing ever. Really. In fact, if there’s something that’s on and I find out about it while I’m at work, I can go online and tell my DVR to record it. I don’t even have to be home. Not just using your remote to schedule something, totally separate online programming.
I second this. If you are running Windows 7 Home Premium or Ultimate (or similar versions of Vista for that matter) you’ve already paid for this, so don’t let it go to waste. It is just as good as TiVo, and doesn’t cost a cent in additional monthly fees.
Getting the TV signal to your PC is the tricky part. If the shows you are interested in are available over-the-air, you can find tons of $40 USB HDTV tuners that will do the trick, but I’ve found them finicky and poorly supported (not to mention it’s kind of awkward having an antenna tethered to the PC).
The HD Homerun is ideal for this scenario. It has two tuners, and you can put it anywhere (e.g. up in the attic, in a spare bedroom, etc.) as long as you have ethernet, power, and an antenna there. The driver installs on any PC on your network (or multiple PCs, although only one machine can access each tuner at a time), and the device shows up in Media Center just like any other TV tuner. All of this with no subscriptions required.
There are similar options available if you want to record content from your cable. The HD Homerun will work with cable (i.e. connecting the cable straight to its tuners rather than using an antenna), but you’ll only get whatever unencrypted channels your provider transmits (typically the same local broadcast stations you can get OTA for free). The forthcoming Prime version dispenses with the tuners and uses CableCards (as the HD TiVos do) to effectively replace your cable box entirely. Alternately, there are similar boxes such as Slingbox (which I’ve never used) and Hava Monsoon (which I have) that will interconnect your cable box (via audio/video cables and IR blasters) and ethernet network to achieve the same result.
I’ll third using your PC as a hometheater/media streaming server.
HD Home run, or any of the newer Hauppauge tuners will connect to your existing cable or over the air antenna and allow you to watch/time shift/record TV programming.
Windows Media center features a much better and more responsive UI than anything found on some expensive rental cable box, or TiVO too.
If you absolutely need to have your full HD cable content, along with the upcoming HD Homerun built for that particular scenario, there is the Ceton Tuner. I have one of those and 1 device records up to 4 different channels simultaneously, full HD all of my cable content. Don’t have to pay rental fees for the cable company’s crappy DVR’s.
All the information in your post is correct, except this bit. No, it is NOT as good as TiVo for the simple reason that, between the two of them, TiVo and ReplayTV patented most of the good ideas and everyone who came later had to work around those patents. Any time you run across a particularly boneheaded design decision in your Windows Media Center or DirecTV DVR or Dish Network DVR or what have you, you are running into a workaround for a TiVo or ReplayTV patent. That’s why DirecTV bought the corpse of ReplayTV (then drove a stake through it’s heart) and why Dish networks had to change their DVR. Ask any DirecTV owner who was forced to accept the shitty DirecTV DVR replacement for their beloved DirecTiVo.
Spend a week with all of them and you’ll understand. I have several ReplayTVs and several DirecTiVos and have used all the imitators, and none of them match the quality and ease of use of the real things.
Just a word of warning, around the time of the switch to all digital, they stopped putting any tuner at all into these things. If you plan to actually record, you’re going to need to hook it up to a tuner box of some type (cable, sat, or over the air digital to analog convertor) and set that box to the channel you want to record, and hope no one changes the channel between when you set things up and your recording starts. Also, unless your tuner has some sort of function to change channels on its own, forget recording more than one channel while you’re out.
Digital transition made everything so wonderful, didn’t it? :rolleyes:
All that said, if you aren’t planing to archive any of the shows, just time shifting, the easiest thing to do is just cough up the fee and pay your provider for their DVR box.