Some interesting news about Switched Digital Video

Remember back when Tom Rogers, TiVo’s CEO, made some interesting comments before Congress about SDV? No? Well, you can watch the video, but this quote sums it up:

[Rep. Anna] Eshoo said SDV, by not working with CableCards, would frustrate the FCC’s effort.“I am concerned that despite the implementation of this mandate, many cable operators will either hobble or render competitive set-top boxes unusable by deploying new channel switching technology that won’t work with other boxes,” she said.

Although he agreed, Rogers said that cable operators have assured him of their cooperation.

“There is good news. We have pointed out this problem to the cable industry. To their great credit, they have said, we want to work this out, we want to work this through, consumers should be able to get this kind of expectation that CableCards and new technologies like this will work and we are hopeful that it will be solved,” he said.

Rogers said he remained concerned that cable operators do not have a sufficient supply of CableCards and that they tend to require consumers to schedule installation visits when CableCards can be mailed and easily installed by the consumer.

An National Cable & Telecommunications Association official confirmed that the industry wanted to resolve TiVo’s compatibility issues.

“Cable is working with Tivo and others to try to develop a technical fix so one-way devices will be able to access the inherently two-way switched digital video signals,” the NCTA official said.

A tantalizing tidbit for those concerned about SDV and their TiVo Series3, or the new TiVo HD, especially with providers like Time Warner increasing their use of SDV. But since Mr. Rogers’s comments in May, TiVo seems to have been silent about this issue. While working on my TiVo HD review I asked TiVo about this, specifically referencing Mr. Rogers’s comments, but TiVo had nothing further to add at this time.

However, there is something else out there and it is quite interesting. On June 5, 2007, the Vice President and General Counsel for the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, Neal M. Goldberg, sent a letter to Marlene H. Dortch, Secretary for the Federal Communications Commission. And that letter is an interesting read indeed. To highlight something in particular:

3. Switched Digital Video. Switched Digital Video (“SDV”) is a significant bandwidth management technology employed by cable operators to offer more programming choices, more High Definition, Standard Definition, and on-demand channels; to deliver faster Internet access speeds and the innovative services those speeds enable, including digital voice service; and to deploy more interactive two-way services.6 When TiVo raised concerns that its one-way DVRs could not access two-way SDV linear channels, the cable industry responded promptly and engineers from cable and TiVo are working now to find a solution. TiVo’s President and CEO Tom Rogers recently testified that “There is good news. We have pointed out this problem to the cable industry. To their great credit, they have said, we want to work this out, we want to work this through…. We are hopeful that it will be solved.”

So there is more confirmation from the ‘other side of the fence’ that this issue is being worked on, set to the FCC roughly a month after Mr. Rogers made his comments.

There are other interesting bits:

2. Multi-Stream CableCARDs for One-Way Devices. Multi-Stream CableCARDs (“M-Cards”) enable devices to unscramble more than one programming stream so, for example, a viewer may record one descrambled program while viewing another descrambled program. CableLabs, with the assistance of consumer electronics parties, including representatives from TiVo, Motorola, Soleki Systems Corporation, Digeo Interactive, Digital Keystone, and ViXS, redesigned the test suite requirements for “one-way” retail devices (such as TiVo’s DVR) to enable such devices to use multistream CableCARDs in multistream mode, enabling viewers to watch one channel while recording another.5

It would seem this relates to the TiVo HD, as it supports M-Card. There is also some interesting mention of alternative security devices, like a standalone module, which would handle communication with cable, satellite, or telco networks (like U-Verse). It sounds like a device which is a tuner and security token, that would have a standardized interface to communicate with the consumer device. This would allow one device, like a new TiVo, to support the various networks via the network supplied unit. As opposed to CableCARD where the tuners are in the box, and only compliant networks can be accessed with the cards – i.e., no satellite on a TiVo HD.

Anyway, interesting stuff for the SDV debate.

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TiVo News #106: The future looks HD!

TiVo’s latest newsletter:
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TiVo HD – aka Series3 Lite – announced and reviewed

TiVo HD

Well, I teased you a bit earlier with the press release and scans of the TiVo HD flier.

I was really buying a little time since I had a couple of hiccups getting my full review up and ready to go. ;-)

As with the Series3 review I did last fall, I’ve reviewed the new TiVo HD. And, as with the S3, I took a large number of photographs of the unit, inside and out. There were certainly some surprises inside the unit, which should fuel quite a bit of speculation.

Speaking of speculation, some of the past speculation was on the mark – but some of it was off target.
From the TiVoCommunity.com post:

Unconfirmed Series3 “Lite” Specifications (TCD652160)
- BCM740x DVR CPU w/ integrated MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 decoders
- 1x dual MPEG-2 encoder (BCM7041 or possibly an encoder from LSI)
- 2x Samsung S5H1411-based tuners (analog/QAM/8VSB)
- 128Mb DDR SDRAM
- 160Gb SATA HD
- Smaller, lower-cost PCB
- Cheaper power supply
- No THX certification
- No OLED display
- Standard Tivo remote
- $299 MSRP

The CPU is correct – a BCM7401, the unit does have 128MB of RAM, and a 160GB SATA drive. The board is new and lower cost, as well as the power supply. No THX certification, no OLED display, an S2-style remote, and the $299.99 price point.

However, the speculation on the tuners and encoders missed the mark – read the review to see what’s really in there.

TiVo has re-done their homepage to feature the TiVo HD, you can pre-order it now. The official TiVoHD page is here, as well as the specifications, and FAQs.

WeaKnees and DVRupgrade are already offering the TiVo HD for pre-order. Both the basic 160GB unit for $299, as well as expanded units, up to 1TB. It looks like DVRUpgrade has better pricing on the larger models, and purchasing from DVRupgrade through these links supports the site.

If you order the TiVo HD from Amazon it supports the site as well. You can also pre-order the basic box directly from TiVo or from Best Buy.

Dave Zatz has posted the new boot video to YouTube.

As always, if you activate a new TiVo, the TiVo Rewards Referral is appreciated.

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Some non-TiVo HD news

PRWeek is reporting that TiVo has retained ad firm Ruder Finn for their consumer marketing.

Forbes is reporting that Kaufman Bros. analyst Todd Mitchell switched his ‘Sell’ rating on TiVo to ‘Buy’, and lifted his 12-month target price to $9 from $5. This appears to be based primarily on the coming launch of TiVo’s OCAP software on the Comcast network and from the growth in TiVo’s advertising business.

And there is an interesting tidbit in a Movieweb article on CBS’s new Eye-alert system. Eye-alert will alert uses via cell phone, email, or other means when a program is going to start later than its planned time slot. This is the interesting part:

You’ll get buzzed at 6:30 on a Sunday night or 7:15, and you’ll know exactly when your favorites shows are on. I will also say we’re working with TiVo because one of the big complaints from DVR owners is that they missed the shows because you were set up to record the show at 8 o’clock, and it doesn’t come on until 8:27 on a Sunday because of football delay. We’re working with the technicians at TiVo to develop a system that you can register and the TiVo signal will be re-programmed for you. So that’s out there in the future, but we’re working on that to that bring that along. So that’s what we have.

I could see this being tied into TiVo’s online scheduling system, and broadband connected TiVo’s could receive these last minute alerts and adjust their recording schedule.

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TiVo HD flier

TiVo HD flier front TiVo HD flier back

Just a teaser – click on the images for a larger version. More coming…

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