RE: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-24 Thread Khanh Tran

> 
> On a fast machine using a decent filesystem there's not much of a
> delay.  That being said, traditional channel surfing, where one hits
> chan up/down repeatedly is silly on a Myth box since you *know* whats
> on the other channels by using the guide.  Find a show that interests
> you then then change the channel to it, don't change the channel
> looking for a show.
> 
> Then again, I used DirectTV and Tivo for so long that I grew
> acusstomed to the paradigm.


I agree completely, but I still like to actually see something which is
why I really only use the Mythbox as a high-end VCR.  While the
descriptions are OK, often I find that I'll watch something purely based
on what's on the screen that catches my eye.  For example, History
Channel descriptions are great and I'll watch something based on that.
However, some of those other randome music/entertainment channels, like
the digital cable channels just catch my eye and the descriptions aren't
great.

-Khanh

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RE: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-24 Thread Derek Conniffe
Is Myth able to watch channels and automatically change tuners now?  I think
that it wouldn't do this for me with MythTV 0.16 with a PVR350 and a Nexus-S
- I think I had to manually press the t key on the [nonexistent] keyboard
which kind of put a stop to channel surfing.

Derek 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Donavan Stanley
Sent: 24 June 2005 14:46
To: Discussion about mythtv
Subject: Re: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

On 6/24/05, J. Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf and try to figure out
what to watch via their mythtv box. First of all, you'll have to watch
commercials (blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause between
channels, not to mention the fact that your box is running hard for no
reason, having to compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it from
the disk, decompress it, and deliver the video output.

On a fast machine using a decent filesystem there's not much of a delay.
That being said, traditional channel surfing, where one hits chan up/down
repeatedly is silly on a Myth box since you *know* whats on the other
channels by using the guide.  Find a show that interests you then then
change the channel to it, don't change the channel looking for a show.

Then again, I used DirectTV and Tivo for so long that I grew acusstomed to
the paradigm.
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Re: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-24 Thread Donavan Stanley
On 6/24/05, J. Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf and try to figure out 
> what to watch via their mythtv box. First of all, you'll have to watch 
> commercials (blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause between 
> channels, not to mention the fact that your box is running hard for no 
> reason, having to compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it from the 
> disk, decompress it, and deliver the video output.

On a fast machine using a decent filesystem there's not much of a
delay.  That being said, traditional channel surfing, where one hits
chan up/down repeatedly is silly on a Myth box since you *know* whats
on the other channels by using the guide.  Find a show that interests
you then then change the channel to it, don't change the channel
looking for a show.

Then again, I used DirectTV and Tivo for so long that I grew
acusstomed to the paradigm.
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Re: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-24 Thread Leigh
On Friday 24 June 2005 09:35, Mathew Mrosko wrote:
> On Thursday 23 June 2005 09:05 pm, J. Scott wrote:
> > I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf and try to figure out
> > what to watch via their mythtv box. First of all, you'll have to watch
> > commercials (blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause between
> > channels, not to mention the fact that your box is running hard for no
> > reason, having to compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it from
> > the disk, decompress it, and deliver the video output.
> >
> > At our house, on the rare occasion that we watch live TV, we just bypass
> > the MythBox. On the even more rare occasion that we find something on
> > live TV that we might want to pause or be able to rewind, we'll just
> > switch over to Myth. I'd say that happens maybe once every 60-90 days,
> > max.
> >
> > Maybe I'm in the minority, but 'Live-TV' is by far the least used
> > function on my Myth.
I'd disagree I'm afraid,
while I use my Myth box more for recording programs, watching vids, listening 
to music etc (with Goom  :-)  ), I also use it for Live-TV, and find the 
pause/rewind etc very handy at times (sod's law that someone decides to pay a 
infrequent visit or phone me just in the middle of a really good program).
As for the channel pauses, it's no worse for me than the pause I get changing 
the channel on my cable box, perhaps it's not as bad elsewhere in the world.. 
(I'm in the UK on Telewest Digital cable)

I've not once regretted the time & hair pulling I spent getting the box 
working as it is now.
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Re: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-24 Thread Mathew Mrosko
On Thursday 23 June 2005 09:05 pm, J. Scott wrote:
> I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf and try to figure out
> what to watch via their mythtv box. First of all, you'll have to watch
> commercials (blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause between
> channels, not to mention the fact that your box is running hard for no
> reason, having to compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it from
> the disk, decompress it, and deliver the video output.
>
> At our house, on the rare occasion that we watch live TV, we just bypass
> the MythBox. On the even more rare occasion that we find something on live
> TV that we might want to pause or be able to rewind, we'll just switch over
> to Myth. I'd say that happens maybe once every 60-90 days, max.
>
> Maybe I'm in the minority, but 'Live-TV' is by far the least used function
> on my Myth.

Good for you.
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Re: [mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-23 Thread Joe Votour
LiveTV is a very useful feature (that I use all the
time), in a couple of circumstances:
1. I don't really want to record the show - I'll watch
it if I catch it, but I don't want to deal with the
hassle of deleting the unwatched recording
2. I'm kind of bored, and not necessarily looking for
something in particular to watch.

Note that in (2), I don't even try to channel surf - I
mean, that's what having a program guide is for,
right?

I use LiveTV several times per week, in fact, I'm
using it right now.  Mind you, the TV is pretty much
background noise as I type this.  :)

-- Joe

--- "J. Scott" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf
> and try to figure out what to watch via their mythtv
> box. First of all, you'll have to watch commercials
> (blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause
> between channels, not to mention the fact that your
> box is running hard for no reason, having to
> compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it
> from the disk, decompress it, and deliver the video
> output.
> 
> At our house, on the rare occasion that we watch
> live TV, we just bypass the MythBox. On the even
> more rare occasion that we find something on live TV
> that we might want to pause or be able to rewind,
> we'll just switch over to Myth. I'd say that happens
> maybe once every 60-90 days, max.
> 
> Maybe I'm in the minority, but 'Live-TV' is by far
> the least used function on my Myth.
> 
> (That will be $0.02 please)
> 
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[mythtv-users] Channel Surfing is a Myth

2005-06-23 Thread J. Scott
I'm not real clear on why anyone would channel surf and try to figure out what 
to watch via their mythtv box. First of all, you'll have to watch commercials 
(blech!). Second, you have to deal with the pause between channels, not to 
mention the fact that your box is running hard for no reason, having to 
compress a video signal, write it to disk, read it from the disk, decompress 
it, and deliver the video output.

At our house, on the rare occasion that we watch live TV, we just bypass the 
MythBox. On the even more rare occasion that we find something on live TV that 
we might want to pause or be able to rewind, we'll just switch over to Myth. 
I'd say that happens maybe once every 60-90 days, max.

Maybe I'm in the minority, but 'Live-TV' is by far the least used function on 
my Myth.

(That will be $0.02 please)

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