I'm in the same boat, been thinking about making the jump to a cable card system but, the SDV keeps popping in my head holding me back. I just hate to spend $700-1000 on a system then spend $500-700 for 2-3 cable card tuners just to find out 6 months from now they wont work with my cable company goes to SDV (or at least don't have the opitions for the new HD channels because of this).
Does anyone know the standpoint on this with Microsoft or anything else in the pipeline ? Will the current ATI cable card tuners work with it with maybe a bios update ?
-Dave
MCP, MCSA, MCSE 2003 Windows Vista Connected Exp:Home Theater for Technologists Windows Vista Connected Exp:Home Theater for Sales professionals
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JonDeutsch: Vendors like TiVo have smartly gotten ahead of this and are promising a solution for their users.
Considering SDV is already being used in many areas across the US, I wouldn't say Tivo was ahead of this. Tivo had to respond as Cable Companies started planning for SDV usage. But they are still behind, as many Tivo users already can not get certain channels, same as the VMC users. Microsoft of course is even further behind.
The only ones lucky so far, are those of us using FIOS. If I were you I'd do one of the following:
1) Go cable card and FIOS
2) Wait for the Direct TV tuner
3) Wait for the SDV resolver, and see if it works with VMC's.
-D
Over in Lost Remote the post on SDV asked us to write the providers re SDV. I sent an email to Brian Roberts as follows:
While I applaud the movement to Switched Digital Video (SDV) from Non Switched Video, without the adoption of new CableCARD technologies it leave those of us who are heavily invested in this technology out on a limb. The issue is that technologies exist, e.g., Tru2Way, to allows two-way communications between user devices and Comcast, but you have made no effort to provide for the technical infrastructure for these devices. What this means to me is that once Houston goes to SDV, my only alternative is to go back to the ascetically displeasing and functionally terrible devices provided by your DVRs and STBs or have no HDTV.
To try to be fair, yesterday I picked up a STB from Comcast and compared to both TiVo and the Microsoft Media Center. As before, it is dismal. The function and usability is terrible and the features are almost totally lacking compared to either of these systems.
My request is that Comcast lead the way by rolling out new CableCARD technologies, along with SWD.
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Tony Werner responded and another person, Bill Warga, responded to that, as follows:
We are testing devices now that we call tuning adapters. We expect to take quantity deliveries of these devices in october. They will interface to Tivo DVRs and at some point Media Center PCs. The MCE pc requires some software to be written by microsoft.
Bill what is the model numbers of the tivo products that these will support?
Tony
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The 2 TiVo models that the adapter supports is the Series 3 and the TiVo HD. These are the 2 models that use CableCARD's.
Regards,
Bill
I'd check with your local cable provider. I was told that Comcast in my ares isn't going to start switching to SDV until the Feb 2009 cutover date, and then it would be a year or so until they turned off my old CableCard.
Phillyjaq:I'd check with your local cable provider. I was told that Comcast in my ares isn't going to start switching to SDV until the Feb 2009 cutover date, and then it would be a year or so until they turned off my old CableCard.
Actually Jon,
I'm in Arlington, VA. My company moved me out of philly a couple of years ago. You may want to check with your local provider.
Core i5 with 8gb of ram, ceton infinitv tuner, 2 hdhr OTA tuners (4 total tuners). 3 xbox 360 slims.