|
Humax PVR-9300T
Hi,
I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Regards, Rob. |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Rob Gibson" [email protected] wrote in message
... Hi, I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Nice box but I'd go for the newer HD model (in fact I have!). Look for "Humax Direct" - I got mine as a "manager's special", which is the way I brought my previous 9200T. Been very happy with both boxes. Paul DS. |
Humax PVR-9300T
Rob Gibson wrote:
I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. -- SteveT |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery
wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Mark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. Hi Guys, Thanks for the comments. Research continues! Rob. |
Humax PVR-9300T
What do you want it for? Its not much good as a mounting block for horses,
and really not that good as a doorstop either. Brian -- Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email. graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________ "Rob Gibson" [email protected] wrote in message ... Hi, I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Regards, Rob. |
Humax PVR-9300T
On 28/09/2011 08:36, Steve Thackery wrote:
Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. Well, although thus far my Humax Foxsat HD PVR has been generally OK, my experiences with the slightly lower-specced 9150T Freeview PVR left me unimpressed. The boxes continually failed to get a fully populated EPG, which meant that recordings were sometimes missed -- my other non-Humax Freeview PVRs had no such EPG issues. I would get occasional glitching on playback of recordings from the hard disk and 11 months in the box woke up at 0400 one morning its fan running full tilt, and nothing else -- dead box. A replacement lasted about a fortnight before it died in the same way, fan at full tilt. The box design is quite old now. Personally, I'd go for something else. At the sort of money you could pay for the 9300T you could pick-up a 500GB DigitalStream dual tuner PVR that has full HD support. Clem |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Mark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. Nope. The lastest software made it worse tim |
Humax PVR-9300T
Well, although thus far my Humax Foxsat HD PVR has been generally OK, my
experiences with the slightly lower-specced 9150T Freeview PVR left me unimpressed. The boxes continually failed to get a fully populated EPG, which meant that recordings were sometimes missed -- my other non-Humax Freeview PVRs had no such EPG issues. I would get occasional glitching on playback of recordings from the hard disk and 11 months in the box woke up at 0400 one morning its fan running full tilt, and nothing else -- dead box. A replacement lasted about a fortnight before it died in the same way, fan at full tilt. How up to date was your software? I had a 9200T and the latest software improved the EPG (it stored it finally rather then restarting from scratch each time). The 9300T had an initial problem with overly enthusiastic fan which was also solved by a software upgrade. As someone who writes software for a living, every single piece of "intelligent" hardware I own irritates me [1], but the Humax 9200T did the job for me fine. However I have to say that even at SD resolutions, the picture from the new Humax Fox HD PVR does look noticeably better - probably better, more powerful video processing to upscale. The new box also has a "copy off/on from USB pen drive" feature which is handy if you occasionally want to take a program with you on your laptop, say. Can't say I'm that impressed by HD (but only a 32inch set) but I did notice that the football on ITV HD now seems to be played on grass and not, as it used to look in digital-SD, a "flat" subutteo pitch. Much more watchable. 5.1 sound (when it's transmitted) can be quite fun too. Paul DS. [1] Actually the new Humax is based on Linux so there are lots of projects adding extra function (better media server etc) to the standard package. I've not tried it because the box does all I need but if you like that sort of tinkering... |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 20:06:47 +0100, "tim......"
wrote: "Mark" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. Nope. The lastest software made it worse In what way? I haven't noticed anything worse (yet). -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 08:28:54 +0100, "Paul D Smith"
wrote: Well, although thus far my Humax Foxsat HD PVR has been generally OK, my experiences with the slightly lower-specced 9150T Freeview PVR left me unimpressed. The boxes continually failed to get a fully populated EPG, which meant that recordings were sometimes missed -- my other non-Humax Freeview PVRs had no such EPG issues. I would get occasional glitching on playback of recordings from the hard disk and 11 months in the box woke up at 0400 one morning its fan running full tilt, and nothing else -- dead box. A replacement lasted about a fortnight before it died in the same way, fan at full tilt. How up to date was your software? I had a 9200T and the latest software improved the EPG (it stored it finally rather then restarting from scratch each time). The 9300T had an initial problem with overly enthusiastic fan which was also solved by a software upgrade. I heard the 9300 also used to suffer from the same EPG issue but this was solved before I bought one. As someone who writes software for a living, every single piece of "intelligent" hardware I own irritates me [1], ditto. but the Humax 9200T did the job for me fine. However I have to say that even at SD resolutions, the picture from the new Humax Fox HD PVR does look noticeably better - probably better, more powerful video processing to upscale. The new box also has a "copy off/on from USB pen drive" feature which is handy if you occasionally want to take a program with you on your laptop, say. The 9300 does not have a USB interface BTW. Can't say I'm that impressed by HD (but only a 32inch set) but I did notice that the football on ITV HD now seems to be played on grass and not, as it used to look in digital-SD, a "flat" subutteo pitch. Much more watchable. 5.1 sound (when it's transmitted) can be quite fun too. Paul DS. [1] Actually the new Humax is based on Linux so there are lots of projects adding extra function (better media server etc) to the standard package. I've not tried it because the box does all I need but if you like that sort of tinkering... I didn't know there was any way of customising the Humaxes. Is there anything for the 9300? -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
Humax PVR-9300T
....snip...
The 9300 does not have a USB interface BTW. You're not missing much. The 9200 acts as a "slave" to a PC master and appears as a "special device" that requires extra software on the PC. Downloading is both slow and not that reliable and I don't think you can upload video at all. When I migrated there were a couple of films I wanted to move from the 9200 to the HD box and it took 8 attempts (each faster than realtime, but still around 4 hours total!) to download one 2 hour film, even using the freeware "better than the Humax offering" software. By contrast the newer HD boxes are real USB masters so drive a pen drive (or external USB drive) directly using standard(ish) Linux. Much faster and seem much more reliable. I didn't know there was any way of customising the Humaxes. Is there anything for the 9300? Not that I'm aware. I don't know what the 9300s are based on but I suspect it's a custom OS and not Linux. The give away would be if you could find anything mentioning Linux or GPL in the docs. or on-screen menus. If you use Linux there are restrictions that make you publish your software (your bits can be compiled code so you can't re-write the EPG for example) but you can access the standard Linux stuff thus adding new packages etc. - but only on the newer HD Freeview and Freesat boxes. Paul DS. |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Rob Gibson" wrote in message ... Hi, I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Regards, Rob. Sadly, I've found Humax Customer Support to be anything but. One of the worst companies IME for responding to queries and complaints. |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 13:01:47 +0200, Martin wrote:
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 11:59:16 +0100, Mark wrote: On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. and watching via the TV decoder! My TV is analogue only so I can't watch it any other way. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. How do you get software updates for a Humac PVR? The cable system I am connected to only provides updates to those who bought the PVR from them at their special enormous rip off price. I have had a few filing errors, otherwise I am very pleased with it. On my freeview PVR they transmit updates over the air. They're supposed to work automatically but I had to activate it manually. Otherwise I can download the update and install it via a serial interface (remember those?). Noone should be charging for updates. I don't know much about cable TV tho. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
Humax PVR-9300T
....snip...
How do you get software updates for a Humac PVR? The cable system I am connected to only provides updates to those who bought the PVR from them at their special enormous rip off price. I have had a few filing errors, otherwise I am very pleased with it. On my freeview PVR they transmit updates over the air. They're supposed to work automatically but I had to activate it manually. Otherwise I can download the update and install it via a serial interface (remember those?). Noone should be charging for updates. I don't know much about cable TV tho. The newer Humax's can be upgraded by putting the new firmware on a USB memory stick, inserting and then powering up. Paul DS. |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Doctor D" wrote in message
o.uk... "Rob Gibson" wrote in message ... Hi, I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Regards, Rob. Sadly, I've found Humax Customer Support to be anything but. One of the worst companies IME for responding to queries and complaints. Was that Humax or Humax Direct? The latter does respond but it can take a day or two. Paul DS. |
Humax PVR-9300T
On 29/09/2011 08:28, Paul D Smith wrote:
Can't say I'm that impressed by HD (but only a 32inch set) but I did notice that the football on ITV HD now seems to be played on grass and not, as it used to look in digital-SD, a "flat" subutteo pitch. That is of course not because it's HD, but because it has less inadequate bandwidth. Even on SD the grass is fine when the camera holds still for a bit. Andy |
Humax PVR-9300T
Doctor D wrote:
Sadly, I've found Humax Customer Support to be anything but. One of the worst companies IME for responding to queries and complaints. Except that all the other companies are even worse. ;-) -- SteveT |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Mark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 20:06:47 +0100, "tim......" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. Nope. The lastest software made it worse In what way? I haven't noticed anything worse (yet). Far more randomly missed recordings than before (if you don't us AR). There's a new failure mode and I've been present when it does it. It flags up the recoding as started but doesn't copy it to disk (or perhaps it does copy it to disk but forgets to put the program details in the play list!). (This is in addition to the "randomly deciding not to record something" which it still does) If you do use AR, a short experiment with it suggests that they have changed the way they deal with overrunning programs clashing with another recording by chopping it off at the booked end time so that it's ready to start the second recording when it arrives. This even happened when the two programs were on the same channel and there was no risk at all of the second program's start flag being missed. So after the second time I (unnecessarily) missed the final few minutes of a program I turned it off (yet again) as (for me) this is the worst option that they could have selected. You'll note that they still prioritise collecting the live buffer in preference to overlapping recording and you get the above annoyance even if you have a spare tuner available for the second recording. They even do this if the box is in standby where there is no possibility that someone is utilising the live recording? This is a pants decision, but they just can't see it! (Like their persistence with the stupid banner and muted audio when a recording starts in the background). My analysis is that the Humax is perfect for someone who records 6 programs a week. It is not (perfect) for someone who records 10 a day. I suspect Humax thinks that the second person doesn't exist. but he does! IME Vestel software is far ahead on the Humax, but unfortunately the hardware is miles behind. tim |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Mark" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 13:01:47 +0200, Martin wrote: On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 11:59:16 +0100, Mark wrote: On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. and watching via the TV decoder! My TV is analogue only so I can't watch it any other way. I've got a "freeview" TV, but it's implementation of screen size options is so useless I only use its tuners if absolutely necessary tim |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Paul D Smith" wrote in message ... ...snip... The 9300 does not have a USB interface BTW. You're not missing much. The 9200 acts as a "slave" to a PC master and appears as a "special device" that requires extra software on the PC. Downloading is both slow and not that reliable and I don't think you can upload video at all. When I migrated there were a couple of films I wanted to move from the 9200 to the HD box and it took 8 attempts (each faster than realtime, but still around 4 hours total!) to download one 2 hour film, even using the freeware "better than the Humax offering" software. By contrast the newer HD boxes are real USB masters so drive a pen drive (or external USB drive) directly using standard(ish) Linux. Much faster and seem much more reliable. I didn't know there was any way of customising the Humaxes. Is there anything for the 9300? Not that I'm aware. I don't know what the 9300s are based on but I suspect it's a custom OS and not Linux. The give away would be if you could find anything mentioning Linux or GPL in the docs. or on-screen menus. If you use Linux there are restrictions that make you publish your software I don't know where you have got that idea from but it's rubbish. There are thousands of products that use "embedded" Linux and an RTOS and none of them publish the code for their real time application, it would be a ridiculous restriction to impose. tim |
Humax PVR-9300T
Sadly, I've found Humax Customer Support to be anything but. One of the worst companies IME for responding to queries and complaints. Was that Humax or Humax Direct? The latter does respond but it can take a day or two. Paul DS. Humax themselves. I bought a 17" DTTV from them about 4 years ago when they still produced TVs. This has the worst software of any appliance I have ever owned and usually crashes on switching on despite having up to date software. As it was installed on the bedroom wall with hidden cabling it involved a walk down the landing, into the room behind the bedroom where the mains connection was every time we wanted to use it. I tried phoning, emailing and writing to see if there was a known software problem with these TVs - no-one ever called back or responded. This went on for over a year. I think the truth is that they produced something which was so bad it embarrassed them. I replaced it with a very cheap Tesco Technika 22" which is excellent and the Humax now resides in the guest bedroom where it normally remains unplugged! |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Friday, September 30th, 2011 at 08:32:46h +0100, Tim.... wrote:
There are thousands of products that use "embedded" Linux Including Samsung TVs. |
Humax PVR-9300T
"Martin" wrote in message
... On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 12:16:32 +0100, Mark wrote: On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 13:01:47 +0200, Martin wrote: How do you get software updates for a Humac PVR? The cable system I am connected to only provides updates to those who bought the PVR from them at their special enormous rip off price. I have had a few filing errors, otherwise I am very pleased with it. On my freeview PVR they transmit updates over the air. They're supposed to work automatically but I had to activate it manually. Otherwise I can download the update and install it via a serial interface (remember those?). Noone should be charging for updates. I don't know much about cable TV tho. I couldn't find updates to download. Do you have the URL? http://www.humaxdigital.com/uk/suppo...port_intro.asp for all the Humaxes. http://www.humaxdigital.com/uk/suppo...ategory_seq=63 for the 9300T, version 1.00.26. -- Max Demian |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Thu, 29 Sep 2011 10:56:23 +0100, "Paul D Smith"
wrote: ...snip... The 9300 does not have a USB interface BTW. You're not missing much. The 9200 acts as a "slave" to a PC master and appears as a "special device" that requires extra software on the PC. Downloading is both slow and not that reliable and I don't think you can upload video at all. When I migrated there were a couple of films I wanted to move from the 9200 to the HD box and it took 8 attempts (each faster than realtime, but still around 4 hours total!) to download one 2 hour film, even using the freeware "better than the Humax offering" software. To transfer a file that large from a 9200 to a PC I split it into smaler files: MenuRecordRecorded Programme(select programme with up/down buttons)Edit Trim etc. With luck each file will transfer successfully on the first attempt, but even when more than one attempt is needed the overall time is shorter with, say, four files than with one. I then stitch the sections together again (and get rid of ads) using VideoReDo. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
Humax PVR-9300T
On Fri, 30 Sep 2011 08:26:04 +0100, "tim...."
wrote: "Mark" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 20:06:47 +0100, "tim......" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:36:13 +0100, Steve Thackery wrote: Rob Gibson wrote: I encountered one of these for the first time last week - indeed it was the first time I'd encountered any PVR! It seems to be just what I want. Any comments from the group? Basically it's a minor evolution of the famous 9200 - a classic of its day. Bought one for my mum just a few months ago. Compared with the current Fox models, it has rather a primitive user interface. Compared with all its contemporaries, it's brilliant. I'm talking like this simply because it's really quite old now. Having said that, if you don't care about HD, then it's still (in my opinion) the one to buy. I (mostly) agree with this although in hindsight I may have gone for the HD version for futureproofing. The 9300 works well almost[*] all the time but does have some minor UI issues. These may not bother you but I find some of them irritating. The worse one is that is displays a large banner right in the middle of the screen every time it starts to record /anything/. Sometimes it also halts the picture/sound for a short time too. This applies even if you are watching a different channel. [*] Hopefully these issues are now fixed with the latest software update. Nope. The lastest software made it worse In what way? I haven't noticed anything worse (yet). Far more randomly missed recordings than before (if you don't us AR). There's a new failure mode and I've been present when it does it. It flags up the recoding as started but doesn't copy it to disk (or perhaps it does copy it to disk but forgets to put the program details in the play list!). (This is in addition to the "randomly deciding not to record something" which it still does) If you do use AR, a short experiment with it suggests that they have changed the way they deal with overrunning programs clashing with another recording by chopping it off at the booked end time so that it's ready to start the second recording when it arrives. This even happened when the two programs were on the same channel and there was no risk at all of the second program's start flag being missed. So after the second time I (unnecessarily) missed the final few minutes of a program I turned it off (yet again) as (for me) this is the worst option that they could have selected. You'll note that they still prioritise collecting the live buffer in preference to overlapping recording and you get the above annoyance even if you have a spare tuner available for the second recording. They even do this if the box is in standby where there is no possibility that someone is utilising the live recording? This is a pants decision, but they just can't see it! (Like their persistence with the stupid banner and muted audio when a recording starts in the background). My analysis is that the Humax is perfect for someone who records 6 programs a week. It is not (perfect) for someone who records 10 a day. I suspect Humax thinks that the second person doesn't exist. but he does! You've investigated it more thoroughly than me. Personally it's a bit better that it was but it has lost the beginning of one programme. I don't want to turn off AR since programmes often run late. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Due to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking some articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. |
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