Trey Ethridge wrote:

Is anyone currently running mythtv and using Time Warner cable?  I'd
like to know what channels I can receive by just hooking up the cable
to a pcHDTV 5500 tuner card (I'm considering buying one).  I believe
that I can receive some channels since they use QAM.  Could I receive
digital channels in addition to the analog and HD channels?

Right now, I have the digital cable package and the HD PVR from
Scientific Atlantic.  I would like to replace it with a mythtv box, but
I don't want to loose functionality.  If I would have to watch just HD
channels and analog channels, then I think I'll stick with what I have
now.
Thanks,
-- Trey
So this isn't really what you asked about, but I'll throw it out anyway. Since moving out to CA, and recently acquiring a 50" plasma TV, I've started tinkering with MythTV. I picked up a pcHDTV 3000 a while back, and it works reasonably well to receive QAM256 cable from Comcast, locally. I only have basic cable (2 through 30-something, and some other high-order channels thrown in, 82, 86, golf, home shopping, whatever), yet I'm able to get almost all of those cables over the QAM256 modulation, as well as some that I can't tune via normal NTSC cable broadcast. This includes more than 10 HD channels, even some I was very surprised to find on my basic cable (ESPNHD, ESPN2HD, etc).

So, this is where the words of caution start. Up until mythtv 0.20 (released just recently), it was *very* *bad* at dealing with errors in the mpeg stream. By very bad I mean the front end would simply freeze, crashing out-right, and occasionally the backend would crash as well. Errors in the stream seems to be a frequent problem with Comcast, and I think it's something stupid the local guys are doing, as the errors often occur on the break between national and local commercials (thus, commercial skipping is sketchy, and fast forwarding through the commercials often results in a crash -- very annoying). Having said that, it's better with 0.20, in that it often can make it past the errors in the stream, but it's still occasionally a problem. At this point, I might make it through watching a single program, successfully skipping commercials, 20% of the time. 70-75% of the time I'll hit a snag, and crash at least once during a program, but can navigate past that point with careful use of the time skipping (ie. ffwing to 10 mins before, and skipping 10 min at a time, past the error). The remaining 5-10% of the time, I'll hit an error that the frontend simply can't get past, or the backend will mysteriously crash during the recording, with no output at all. So, QAM256 users with pcHDTV cards... please do give it a try, but be ready to stick through a potentially non-perfect experience.

A note on comparing what's available in one area, vs another. At my house, technically in San Jose, and part of the San Jose Comcast department, I get the experience described above. Joel lives ~8 miles away, has the same service from the same company (Comcast, although in Sunnyvale not San Jose), and gets essentially no channels over QAM256. He gets the "must carry" channels, ie. the networks in HD and analog, but he actually gets more channels with a simple indoor hdtv antenna. Be careful of assuming you'll get the same results as your relatively near-by neighbor.

I'd be very curious to hear about other's experience with pcHDTV cards and QAM256,
Aaron S. Joyner

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