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#21
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In article ,
Tim Downie wrote: In my limited experience, the software & ergonomics of the TiVo still stands head and shoulders above other PVRs. We have a Sony PVR as well which is a huge pile of poo by comparison. You can request it to record programs by genre or keywords in titles, a feature that I don't think is available in other machines. It's easy say to ask it to record anything with "cycling" or "athletics" or "sheep shagging" in the title. ;-) The Topfield has the ability to load in your own software - called TAPS. And there is a lot of it out there. Could be someone has written exactly what you need. -- *Two many clicks spoil the browse * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#22
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"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... 8 Really wishing I'd paid the lifetime though.... If everyone paid for a lifetime subscription the EPG would be dead by now. They wouldn't have any income so it would not be worth continuing. I know TiVos were well respected, though I've never used one, do they still have "killer" features that aren't available anywhere else? Killer feature? That is purely personal. In my limited experience, the software & ergonomics of the TiVo still stands head and shoulders above other PVRs. Have you tried Sky+? Sky+ is by far better than anything else i have used. We have a Sony PVR as well which is a huge pile of poo by comparison. You can request it to record programs by genre or keywords in titles, a feature that I don't think is available in other machines. It's easy say to ask it to record anything with "cycling" or "athletics" or "sheep shagging" in the title. ;-) Also, left to it's own devices, it will automatically record programs similar to ones that you've recorded in the past building up a library of "TiVo suggestions". These will never overwrite any specifically requested recordings and are the first to be automaticaly deleted if space is needed. IMHO that is no longer really needed, just use iPlayer, sky player, ITV player, etc. If you want to record programs to keep that a media centre PC is hard to beat, you can drop the programs onto another media (DVD, network drive, USB stick, etc.) with ease. The EPG is pretty good too. |
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#23
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In article , Paul Ratcliffe
writes On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 22:55:38 +0100, fred wrote: If it is U/S, would it be a likely cause of the symptoms? It has 2200 microF, 10V, HD(M), 105C and HD243 printed on it. Try these: http://uk.farnell.com/panasonic/eeuf...10v/dp/9691952 That's only 1000 instead of 2200. Ooops, sorry bout that, the one below is the right one and still pretty cheap. Any stock problems and these will also work and have a slightly better spec (at a slightly higher cost): http://uk.farnell.com/panasonic/eeuf...10v/dp/9691979 Seems to be the proper replacement, assuming it's physically small enough to fit. Yes, agreed Strangely: Farnell do these for 59p each exc. VAT, min. qty. 5, free postage, total £3.44 CPC do these for 55p each exc. VAT, min. qty. 1, postage £5.95, total £7.48 seeing as Farnell and CPC are supposedly the same company... Different cost models, free post offset by higher margins on the goods, quite handy for little orders like this one. -- fred BBC3, ITV2/3/4, channels going to the DOGs |
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#24
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[email protected] wrote:
"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... 8 Really wishing I'd paid the lifetime though.... If everyone paid for a lifetime subscription the EPG would be dead by now. They wouldn't have any income so it would not be worth continuing. I know TiVos were well respected, though I've never used one, do they still have "killer" features that aren't available anywhere else? Killer feature? That is purely personal. In my limited experience, the software & ergonomics of the TiVo still stands head and shoulders above other PVRs. Have you tried Sky+? Sky+ is by far better than anything else i have used. Have you owned a TiVo? I've tried Sky+ at a friends house. Still, IMO, not as good or as simple as the TiVo. Additionally, my friends got through 4 Sky+ boxes in about 4 years. Our TiVo is knocking on for 10 years old now. Has probably crashed about 3 times in all those years and only lost data only once when the HD needed replacing. We have a Sony PVR as well which is a huge pile of poo by comparison. You can request it to record programs by genre or keywords in titles, a feature that I don't think is available in other machines. It's easy say to ask it to record anything with "cycling" or "athletics" or "sheep shagging" in the title. ;-) Also, left to it's own devices, it will automatically record programs similar to ones that you've recorded in the past building up a library of "TiVo suggestions". These will never overwrite any specifically requested recordings and are the first to be automaticaly deleted if space is needed. IMHO that is no longer really needed, just use iPlayer, sky player, ITV player, etc. Rather missing the point. With those, you only see what you know about or can be arsed searching for. The TiVo will record stuff that you perhaps wouldn't have thought of recording but that you might enjoy (when there's b*gger all else on). If you want to record programs to keep that a media centre PC is hard to beat, you can drop the programs onto another media (DVD, network drive, USB stick, etc.) with ease. The EPG is pretty good too. I rarely want to archive programs forever, just time shift them and for that the TiVo excels in performance and most particularly reliability. The TiVo really is, IMO, the canines cojones of PVRs. I say "is" rather than "was" as I think it still outperforms the vast majority of PVRs even today. Just a shame you can't get a new one in the UK. :-( Tim |
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#25
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Tim Downie wrote:
Andy Burns wrote: On 15/09/09 20:39, Tim Downie wrote: With a view to bringing it back for the dead I thought I'd have a look inside the case for anything obvious. Well, I found this. http://www.zen31010.zen.co.uk/images...wcapacitor.jpg I know these things aren't normally worth attempting to repair but because TiVo have just about giving up supporting new Freeview boxes for the TiVo, I'd like to repair it if possible. I'm no expert in this field but would I be right in assuming that capacitor in the centre of the picture isn't right? Yep, capacitors (especially within PSUs are a common failure) Thanks to all for the advice. I've ordered a capacitor and will let you know the outcome. Tim Indeed. Most electronics is super reliable, and generally its one stray thing that goes. Identify it and replace it and all is well. Its the identifying that is the problem. I had a TV years agpo that randomly lost colors..hitting it restored them. One day even that failed to work. I ran it caseless and prodded things with a long plastic knitting needle. It became apparent that there were dry joints, so I looked at what I was prodding and found eyelets instead of plated through holes Yuk!. These looked distinctly dodgy, so I resoldered them on that card. That fixed one set of probelms. Thenh I got mad and resoldered every single eyelet on every board. The set was perfect for several years until the house took a direct lightning strike on the telephone wire. The TV went then as did anything else on 'standby'.. Sigh. I liked that TV. In your case that capacitors is almost certainly the output smoother of a SMPS. It has to take a LOT of high frequency ripple current, and is the one most likely to suffer if its even slightly suspect in the first place. It will get hot and eventually either short, or cease to do its job. I am pretty sure you have identified the correct cap. Old valve sets are similar - the caps all dry out. Many a valve radio will spring to life after all the paper and electrolytic caps are replaced.. |
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#26
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Roger R wrote:
"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the advice. I've ordered a capacitor and will let you know the outcome. You will find the job easier by using a desoldering device to remove the solder from both contacts before pulling the old capacitor out. Got one already thanks. A handy tool. Tim |
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#27
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"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... Thanks to all for the advice. I've ordered a capacitor and will let you know the outcome. You will find the job easier by using a desoldering device to remove the solder from both contacts before pulling the old capacitor out. A manual suction device is the the best thing. http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=97040 There are lots to choose from on the Farnell site: http://uk.farnell.com/jsp/search/bro...1003126+500006 from around 3.40 to over 22 pounds. take your pick - I found these ok: http://uk.farnell.com/miller-abeco/g...-gun/dp/419011 It will then be easy to mount the new capacitor passing the wires through the holes. Roger R |
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#28
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At 11:05:55 Wed, 16 Sep 2009, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Indeed. Most electronics is super reliable, and generally its one stray thing that goes. Identify it and replace it and all is well. Its the identifying that is the problem. How true... I had a TV years agpo that randomly lost colors..hitting it restored them. One day even that failed to work. My CRT monitor is on the blink. It will run perfectly for hours and then the picture goes almost black. The slightest tap on the casing is often enough to bring it back to life. Sometimes it takes a thump. I ran it caseless and prodded things with a long plastic knitting needle. I've tried that, but frustratingly I can't find the fault. The soldered joints on the PCB all seem to be sound. It will be shame to dump this monitor since it's less strain on the eyes than my flat panel screen. Old valve sets are similar - the caps all dry out. Many a valve radio will spring to life after all the paper and electrolytic caps are replaced.. I have a 9-valve National HRO that still works after 70 years... -- John Legon |
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#29
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"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... 8 I rarely want to archive programs forever, just time shift them and for that the TiVo excels in performance and most particularly reliability. The TiVo really is, IMO, the canines cojones of PVRs. I say "is" rather than "was" as I think it still outperforms the vast majority of PVRs even today. Just a shame you can't get a new one in the UK. :-( AFAICS the only thing TiVo offers above a media center PC is that it decides to record stuff by its self. If that is something you need then you need a TiVo. I prefer the better quality that you get on Sky+ and on MCE. |
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#30
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On 16/09/09 12:55, [email protected] wrote:
"Tim Downie" wrote in message ... I rarely want to archive programs forever, just time shift them and for that the TiVo excels in performance and most particularly reliability. The TiVo really is, IMO, the canines cojones of PVRs. I say "is" rather than "was" as I think it still outperforms the vast majority of PVRs even today. Just a shame you can't get a new one in the UK. :-( AFAICS the only thing TiVo offers above a media center PC is that it decides to record stuff by its self. I have built a mythtv box (will readily admit it's not suitable for everyone) it does the usual "pause live TV" tricks, can record specific programmes from the EPG, it does series-record, can record based on keywords, and save recordings to DVD if required. Because I have digital tuners it can record multiple programmes from a mux at once, and because I have multiple tuners it can record from multiple muxes at once, I can control it via an web interface (at a push view recordings remotely too). Occasionally I get a bit of grief from linux upgrades breaking something, usually audio glitches but smooth video playback breaks from time to time, but I wouldn't be without it really. |
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