Posts with tag tv listings
Posted Jul 14th 2007 12:55PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire, Software

A few weeks back,
Zap2it Labs announced that they would
shut off their free XML TV listings in September, due to abuse of the service. This could spell big trouble for
MythTV,
GB-PVR, and other personal video recording software packages that rely on Zap2it for their electronic program guide data.
A group of developers from MythTV, XMLTV, and MacProgGuide have formed
Easy TV Data in response to the announcement. The group is engaged in some super-secret behind the scenes development to provide reliable TV listings after Zap2it cuts the cord on September 1st.
The simplest alternative is to use screen scraping software that would visit TV listing web pages and grab the data. But this is not as reliable as the XML data Zap2it currently provides, since web services can and do frequently change their site design. Hopefully the Easy TV Data group have something a bit more exciting in mind.
[via
Download Squad]
Posted Jun 20th 2007 10:04PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire

Zap2it Labs has announced that it will
no longer offer free television listings after September 1st. You may be wondering what the big deal is. After all, there are a million web sites where you can get your TV guide data.
But Zap2it Labs provided listings in an easily indexable formula, making it the program guide data source of choice for
MythTV,
GB-PVR, and
Media Portal. These programs are also capable of handling
XMLTV data, but there aren't really any good programs right now for scraping program guide data for U.S. television listings. We can probably expect to see that change in the very near future.
There's an
active discussion taking place in the GB-PVR forums about alternative data sources, such as
Yahoo! TV or
TitanTV. But GB-PVR's lead developer says he doesn't have plans to design a program to scrape the data. Rather he suspects the much larger developer community working on MythTV will lead the way.
[via
Brent Evans]
Posted Apr 12th 2007 1:00PM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire, Web
IceTV offers Australian subscribers access to electronic program guide information. Sounds simple enough, but Australian broadcasters are less than happy about that fact. The country has a law that considers program guide data to be the property of broadcasters, making Australia
one of the most PVR-unfriendly countries around, because a good PVR requires access to television listings.
So what does IceTV do? It one-ups things by planning a new
service that will allow IceTV subscribers to download TV shows and movies. The company is working with movie studios to secure content, but those deals won't engender any good will from the already annoyed Australian broadcast companies.
The service will initially work with PCs running Windows Vista and Windows XP Media Center Edition. Mac compatibility is being held up due to DRM issues, but should be available in the future.
Posted Mar 5th 2007 10:00AM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire
Snapstream, the company behind BeyondTV, has launched a new product called Couchville. Odds are Couchville is the evolution of the secretive
Columbus project Snapstream began beta testing last year.
So what is Couchville? Well, to put it simply, it's a TV guide. But it's a bit more than that. First, Snapstream has integrated BeyondTV Buzz. If you click the Buzz button, you'll see the top 15 programs recorded by BeyondTV users over the last week, as well as the top scheduled recordings for the next few days.
The other thing that sets Couchville apart from other TV listings sites like
TVGuide.com or
Zap2it is that it has a web 2.0, AJAX feel to it. Instead of clicking on a "next page" button to get more listings after a page refresh, you can click and drag the guide much like you would drag a map in Google Maps.
Continue reading Snapstream launches Couchville: A new kind of TV guide
Posted Feb 9th 2007 10:32AM by Brad Linder
Filed under: PVR Wire, Web
MeeVee at its most basic level is a web site offering personalized TV guides. You select your favorite progams, and MeeVee will let you know when they're on. It will also examine your taste in TV shows, movies, genres, and actors and let you know when programs you might want to watch are on.
Now MeeVee has added online video search to the mix, locating videos on YouTube and network web sites that relate to your preferences. So if you select
BattleStar Galactica, you can find out when the next episode is on and you can also watch video clips and fan-made videos all in one place. Well, sort of in one place. MeeVee actually has separate tabs for "On TV," "Network Video," and "Community Video." And seeing as how a lot of the content on sites like YouTube is video clips uploaded by users, there's really not much difference between the Network Video and Community video sections.
That said, I like where this is going. I'm not sure there'd be a better way to integrate online video and television listings. But I like that you can select "comedy" as an interest and receive information on upcoming comedy programs and links to funny videos online.
[via
DownloadSquad]