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| UK Digital Video (uk.rec.video.digital) For the discussion of all aspects of digital video, including all digital video formats, camera use, editing, post production & all associated equipment, hardware and software. Advertising is prohibited. |
| Tags: dvdhdd , freeview , recorder |
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#1
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| Do any manufacturers make DVD+HDD recorders with a built-in Freeview receiver? Looking at Currys' and Comet's offerings, I noticed that Sony make a model that has DVD and Freeview (but no HDD) and another model that has DVD and HDD (but no Freeview). No other manufacturers whose products were on sale in those shops had built-in Freeview. A quick check on Pioneer, Sony, Panasonic and Hitachi web sites doesn't show any DVD/HDD/Freeview recorders. For my own use, a Freeview/HDD recorder would be fine for time-shifting, but I'd need to be able to archive programmes onto DVD if I wanted to keep them or loan them to anyone else. I'm amazed at this state of affairs. I wonder why no-one's done the obvious thing yet and produce a recorder which can record to HDD and DVD with a built-in Freeview decoder. I have a separate OnDigital box but it is a bit temperamental and has a habit of locking-up sometimes so it no longer responds to signals from the remote, and sometimes won't come out of standby to start a timed event. As long as I leave it on one channel, it seems to work fine. But long-term it's got problems, especially for unattended recordings when I'm not around to turn the power off and on to reset it when it gets into a funny mood. I don't want to have to buy another separate box (in addition to a DVD+HDD recorder) because having the decoder separate from the recorder seems a ludicrous state of affairs - imagine if VHS recorders didn't have a built-in tuner! Having to program the same event on both the recorder and the Freeview box is absurd. I think the scarcity of integrated TVs and recorders is going to be the biggest stumbling block to switching off analogue: many people (eg my parents) see it as a retrograde step in going from a VHS recorder that allows its events to be programmed by Videoplus to a set-top box that has to be programmed by entering date, times and channel - in addition to programming the VHS recorder by Videoplus but then remembering to correct the VHS recorder's channel to AV2 to pick up the Freeview signal. What is needed is the digital equivalent of the functionality of a VHS recorder, with a built-in decoder. |
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#2
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| Martin Underwood wrote: Do any manufacturers make DVD+HDD recorders with a built-in Freeview receiver? Looking at Currys' and Comet's offerings, I noticed that Sony make a model that has DVD and Freeview (but no HDD) and another model that has DVD and HDD (but no Freeview). No other manufacturers whose products were on sale in those shops had built-in Freeview. Sony will do, maybe in September http://www.avland.co.uk/sony/rdrhxd710/rdrhxd710.htm Some more here http://www.avland.co.uk/dvd/dvdr.htm Doc |
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#3
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| I have been looking for such a device for nearly a year now, and I only today do I get a hint that it's on its way. It seems strange that no one has put the combination together before now. As I see it both Sony and possibly philips are about relaese a product. I think the problem is that digital TV is a UK only transmission standard. x-- 100 Proof News - http://www.100ProofNews.com x-- 30+ Days Binary Retention with High Completion x-- Access to over 1.9 Terabytes per Day - $8.95/Month x-- UNLIMITED DOWNLOAD |
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#4
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| In message , Andrew Brown writes I have been looking for such a device for nearly a year now, and I only today do I get a hint that it's on its way. It seems strange that no one has put the combination together before now. As I see it both Sony and possibly philips are about relaese a product. I think the problem is that digital TV is a UK only transmission standard. I believe you're wrong there. There's a map of the countries who have adopted and implemented DVB-T at: http://www.dvb.org/graphics/internal...-Map_DVB-T.jpg And that's only DVB-T (Terrestrial) There's also other variants - DVB-S (Satellite), DVB-C (Cable) and MHP (provides interactivity on the DVB variants). -- Tony Morgan http://www.camcord.info |
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#5
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| On Thu, 07 Jul 2005 19:19:15 +0100, Simon Patten wrote: "Martin Underwood" wrote: Does it have to be "wife-friendly"? You aren't married, are you ? ;-))) Cheers - Neil |
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