DTV Player - DTV Time-shifted (continued)

If you are watching DTV content within the DTV player, you get ATI's permanent indicators like in the TV player. The only problem we had was that sometimes we didn't pick up the parental rating for a TV program, but this seems to be a result of the broadcaster rather than ATI's HDTV Wonder or DTV player.



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Because DTV streams contain more data than analog signals, broadcasters also distribute program information, which is why ATI doesn't need GuidePlus' Gemstar EPG for the DTV player. The limitation is that the broadcast program guide information is limited to the currently playing program or the one following it. For a more comprehensive listing, an EPG is still needed, which is why we were constantly referring to the installed EPG to find what and when something was playing (we just checked the equivalent analog signal in the EPG).



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Whether it is a good or a bad thing, ATI has decided to implement TV-On-Demand/time-shifting for the DTV player. This option cannot be disabled. And because time-shifting is always on, there needs to be hard drive space allotted specifically for ATI to perform temporary storage in their proprietary VCR format (format cannot be changed for time-shifting).

The preset storage location for all DTV timeshifted and recorded content (scheduled or manually recorded) is on C drive at C:\document and settings\application data\ATI MMC. If you select X drive in the set-up wizard, the DTV player will simply create a X:\document and settings\application data\ATI MMC data path for storage. We recorded a typical hour long HDTV show in 1080i format with non-HDTV commercials that ended up being 8.7GB (actually 1 hour and 5 minutes long to catch trailing content). With a 100% 1080i 30 minute segment of a baseball game, we were running at about a 4.2GB file.



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Another benefit of DTV signals is that broadcasters can send out multiple audio streams for a signal program, which is mainly a benefit for those who need to hear the program in another language.



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DTV Player – DTV Time-shifted (continued) DTV Player – DTV Time-shifted (continued)
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  • enricong - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    How does this compare to the MyHD2

    I have this card too. but I'm dualbooting WinXP64 because they don't have 64 bit drivers. I figure ATI will be more likely to make 64bit drivers
  • bblake12 - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    Fact: There are several companies making HD Tuner Cards. One of the major cards out there is MyHD

    http://mcm.newark.com/NewarkWebCommerce/mcm/en_US/...



    "In fact, the only major company that we are aware of making an HDTV tuner for PCs is Hauppauge, but the WinTV-HD hasn't sold in the same volumes for Hauppauge as their analog WinTV tuners. Add in the vacuum of HDTV supported multimedia software (MCE, Beyond TV, SageTV, Multimedia Center, Forceware Multimedia, etc...), and you get a recipe for a PC market not ready to embrace HDTV technology."


  • AndrewKu - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    #12 - 480i is the approximate quality of analog TV broadcasting. As for the tubes in some of your TVs, some do display the signal in a lower res, like 512x400. There should be several websites that have this in their information docs. Try "analog tv 480i" in google or something. So we are both kind of right… :)

    #13 - I think you make a good point, and this was something I was debating myself. My consideration was based on three other points: pricing, availability, and future software support. On the pricing issue, HDTV Wonder is at the cheapest pricing point I have heard of for a PC HDTV tuner. No other HDTV tuner can be bought or will be able to be bought at a retail store for the near future, at least according to our last talks with the stores a while back. And future software support is something that a company like ATI will have to do in order to keep their product in retail stores (i.e. EazyShare DTV). Hope that explains our line of thought a bit more.
  • joeld - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    My take on the card - it had better be darned good/stable/etc for me to pay 200 dollars on a non-hardware HDTV tuner card. I bought a DVICO FusionHDTV last year (or maybe before that) and it was only 140 bucks or so.
  • mcveigh - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    this is too limited to have earned an editor's choice.

    Andrew check out what the people at avsforums thinkof the card and it's competitors.
  • joeld - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    I've only read to page four and I'm not too impressed with the article so far. It seems that a little more research should have been done or something before bringing the article to print. Hauppage isn't the only company bringing HDTV tuner cards to the market. I haven't been interested in HTPC's in a year at least, and I remember looking at products from MyHD and buying a tuner card from DVICO (their original FusionHDTV).

    I stopped reading this article after reading that analog signals are 640x480. It's been a while since I've researched this topic, but I know this is not true.
  • Kaido - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    AndrewKu - I'll have to give MMC 8.8 a try. EazyShare looks really cool...does it require a good video card to run the server? I have enough spare parts to build another box, I just need a motherboard and a cpu ($29 for a cheap mobo off newegg and about $50 for a 1.8ghz athlon). I don't want to blow another $100 or $200 for a video card for a server tho.

    Also, should I install the latest version of Catalyst, or should I install 3.x like in the MMC article?
  • AndrewKu - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    #2- It cannot function as the second device to support PiP/MultiView, but it should in a later release of MMC.

    #6 and 8 - You are sending a digital signal of a digital signal to your digital monitor. DVI output comes via your video card, not the HDTV Wonder as #7 mentioned.

    #8 - If you are talking about PAL support, this is an NTSC version. As we understand it, this is for the North American market only. This isn't really for the gamer per say; this is just a nice way to get DTV into your home without having to pay the expensive cost of a HDTV. And yes, you can just plug in an antenna to the RF connector that is what I mentioned in the review. An antenna is not necessarily analog or digital; it is the signal that is categorized as such.

    #9 - If you are having trouble with EazyShare, you might want to try looking at our MMC8.8 review. We worked out and tried to manipulate every single bug occurrence. In our experience, your system configuration should be stable with MMC and a TV Wonder Pro. Though, I am not sure what your specific issues are.
  • Kaido - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    I have an ATI TV Wonder Pro with Remote Control...the only thing good about it is the remote control, lol. The TV software was fairly buggy for me, plus the required specs aren't really true - I had a 1.4ghz Athlon, 1gb ram, and a radeon 9600xt, and it'd still skip while recording if I even opened Internet Explorer. That and I didn't care for the GUI.

    I hope ATI has a trade-up program for their TV tuners like they do their video cards...anyone know if they do? I may go with Hauppauge next tho...their USB2 TV tuner is looking pretty good.
  • justbrowzing - Tuesday, June 22, 2004 - link

    A few pretty basic questions from France, where DTV lags the US:

    Reception: can you just plug in an antenna to the digital jack for capture?

    Will it work in Europe, too?

    Can you use a 9600se card & still get the noted benefits? This is an extremely expensive solution ($400 USD or 500 Euros) for us non-gamers, btw, though a tidy racket for ATI.

    No DVI? So then you're sending an analog version of a digital signal to your digital-capable monitor?

    You mention Hauppage's DTV tuner, it would have been nice to have known more about its capabilities & how it compares & sacrifice a few photos of the tuna salad surprise.

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