program guide-related stories
Posted Aug 7th 2007 1:18PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire, Software

Come September,
MythTV,
Media Portal, and
GB-PVR users could be stuck staring at a blank screen. That's when
Zap2it Labs will stop offering free program guide data in the easily parsed XML format used by those and other PC-based PVR applications.
The developers of
CTpvr, another software-based personal video recorder are
developing a product that will offer data that is nearly identical to that currently offered by Zap2it. TV listings will include data like genre, cast, crew, advisories, and original air dates.
CTpvr hasn't announced pricing yet, but the company will charge users a monthly or annual fee for access to the data. For that reason alone, I suspect that this system will be used by CTpvr customers, while free and open-source applications like MythTV will look elsewhere.
Several MythTV, XMLTV, and MacProgGuide developers have already come together to form
Schedules Direct. The group, previously known as
EasyTV Data, is looking at alternatives to the Zap2it Labs data that can be easily plugged into PVR software to provide you with that electronic program guide goodness you've come to rely on.
Posted Feb 28th 2007 11:40AM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire

I've spent a lot of time as a journalist covering City Council sessions in Philadelphia, but I've never sat in on a hearing quite as geeky as this. A Lincoln, Nebraska City Councilman
will hold hearings in March on Time Warner's PVRs which as pretty much anyone in the country who uses them can tell you, kinda stink.
Councilman Jonathon Cook -- a Time Warner customer -- says subscribers "are not getting what they paid for," with Time Warner PVRs. Apparently the city's franchise agreement with the cable company allows City Council to hold such hearings. It's entirely clear what actions the city could take against Time Warner in response to the hearings, but if there's one thing I learned during my aforementioned years covering legislative sessions, it's that you don't need actual power to hold a public hearing, you just need the urge to grandstand on a topic.
Lincoln Time Warner customers have complained that a new program guide rolled out by the cable company is both ugly and buggy, and that the cable boxes are slow to react to button presses on a remote control, all of which sound par for the course for generic cable company PVRs.
The Lincoln Journal Star, which reports the story also has a
page filled with customer complaints/suggestions for Time Warner.
[via
digg]
Posted Feb 9th 2007 12:32PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire

Sure, those new
SideShow-enabled remote controls look pretty cool. But what if you don't want to leave your computer on all the time just so you can do nifty things like check out an electronic program guide on your remote control?
The
tvCompass remote control includes 802.11b/g, a 2.2-inch QVGA LCD, and a speaker for listening to audio alerts or sound files. You can control multiple devices, and can even receive equipment codes and electronic program guide data over the air. Your data can be backed up to a tvCompass network server.
You can also use the built in WiFi to access games, videos, and web content directly on the remote control.
No info on pricing or availability just yet, but I'd say it'll make the Logitech Harmony remote look cheap.
[via
Mobile Magazine]