debugging the TV room
Mar. 23rd, 2011 09:53 pmMy TiVo is reporting that it's not seeing any input. This happens from time to time with the Series 1 TiVo, but this time rebooting it didn't fix the problem. I checked all the connections and power-cycled the DTV box (just in case), but no luck. (Also changed channels "blind" using the remote; no effect.) Next up was to test whether TiVo is the problem; connecting the input to first a VCR and then the TV did not make the bits flow. Swapping cables did not make a difference either.
The only things I can't isolate for testing are the antenna and the DTV box; I only have one of each. Apparently one of these is failing, but how do I tell which? My guess is that it's the DTV box; Google has served up some complaints about reliability there. But it's just a guess. Have any of you seen that happen?
Before I go buy a new DTV box, let me tap into the collective wisdom of the LJ brain trust. My goal is to watch, via time-shifting and on my TV (not computer), occasional TV shows, inexpensively. "Occasional" means one or two current-run shows at any given time. I am not interested in cable or satellite services.
I currently have the following ingredients: (1) an amplified antenna that had been serving my reception needs (and may still be for all I know). (2) That DTV box. (3) A Series 1 TiVo, which does not have a digital tuner card in it (hence the DTV box). (4) A VCR (ditto). (5) A 10-year-old TV (does not speak DTV, HD, or the newest connectors). (6) Wireless internet, but running ethernet cable to the TV room would be hard. (7) A Roku box.
Options:
The only things I can't isolate for testing are the antenna and the DTV box; I only have one of each. Apparently one of these is failing, but how do I tell which? My guess is that it's the DTV box; Google has served up some complaints about reliability there. But it's just a guess. Have any of you seen that happen?
Before I go buy a new DTV box, let me tap into the collective wisdom of the LJ brain trust. My goal is to watch, via time-shifting and on my TV (not computer), occasional TV shows, inexpensively. "Occasional" means one or two current-run shows at any given time. I am not interested in cable or satellite services.
I currently have the following ingredients: (1) an amplified antenna that had been serving my reception needs (and may still be for all I know). (2) That DTV box. (3) A Series 1 TiVo, which does not have a digital tuner card in it (hence the DTV box). (4) A VCR (ditto). (5) A 10-year-old TV (does not speak DTV, HD, or the newest connectors). (6) Wireless internet, but running ethernet cable to the TV room would be hard. (7) A Roku box.
Options:
- I could replace the DTV box or, if that's not it, the antenna. Short-term this is the cheapest (if it's the DTV box, anyway); is it the wisest longer-term?
- I could get a new DVR with digital tuner card (eliminating the need for the DTV box). TiVo + lifetime subscription is too expensive (new, anyway); word on the net is that I can't use the TiVo for recording without the service plan. I don't mind recording manually; I don't need the smarts that the TiVo software comes with. "Record channel 3 at 8PM on Thursdays" is fine. There are, of course, other DVRs; most seem to come bundled with cable service. Pointers to DVRs that I can just plug an antenna into and use would be most welcome.
- I could buy individual episodes from somebody using the Roku box and forget about getting live TV, relying on the internet for breaking news that I might actually want to follow. Feels sub-optimal, and my test run (Big Bang Theory) didn't turn up anybody selling the current season (including Hulu Plus).
- I could do something with a laptop, some new connector, and wireless internet. I think my iBook is probably not up to that.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-03-24 12:50 pm (UTC)I've been playing with some of the freeware DVR programs for installing on a PC, and don't recommend that option. We're paying for basic cable ($20/month; but we got a $20/month discount on internet) and I still haven't gotten it working well. We're streaming CBS shows from their website and it's awful. If you watch anything from CBS, forget the laptop plan.
In fact, the only way I can figure out to buy current CBS shows is on iTunes, and it's $60 for a season of NCIS (for example). CBS is really tight with their licenses. Fox and USA can usually be found on Hulu (regular; since we have the PC in the living room that's fine). I think N watches some NBC and scifi shows from Hulu as well. We had to buy last season's Doctor Who from Amazon, but it wasn't terribly expensive ($10 or $15 for the season). I'm hoping the new season will be a similar price point.
Clicker.com is a good place to look up the availability of your shows on the internet.
ETA: Oh, and if you go a route where you want internet at your TV, we really like the PowerlineAV adapters. I can point you at the ones we have, but I think since then they've come up with 500 Mb/s upgrade (which is likely faster than your internet, but if you move files around locally it may be useful). We have a router device in the living room (HTPC, PS3, and TV), a single device in the bedroom (Blu-Ray) and the source device in the library (goes to the switch and then router).
(no subject)
Date: 2011-03-25 02:00 am (UTC)I hadn't realized that CBS was particularly problematic. Big Bang Theory is on that network.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-03-25 01:27 pm (UTC)I'm considering waiting for DVD on my CBS shows (NCIS and NCIS:LA). They're crime procedurals, though, so not a big deal to catch them late.