Should I get a Series 1 or Series 2 Tivo?

geckojohn

Diamond Member
Nov 28, 2000
4,679
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0
Hey Everyone, i'm thinking about getting in on the Tivo bandwagon. I've been watching a lot of tv and sometimes i miss some of my favorite shows because i get home from work late or i have other plans. Should I get a Tivo then?

Well, I just have normal basic cable tv at home and have a broadband connection. Please let me know what you think. Also are there any good deals around?

Thanks!
 

MrMaster

Golden Member
Nov 16, 2001
1,235
2
76
www.pc-prime.com
Originally posted by: geckojohn
Hey Everyone, i'm thinking about getting in on the Tivo bandwagon. I've been watching a lot of tv and sometimes i miss some of my favorite shows because i get home from work late or i have other plans. Should I get a Tivo then?

Well, I just have normal basic cable tv at home and have a broadband connection. Please let me know what you think. Also are there any good deals around?

Thanks!

As a non Tivo user I always wanted to do the HTPC thing. I had one for a month and then I sold it. It crashed too much. (dell w/ windows media center)

If p2p were to disappear I would pay for a Tivo because it is simple and you don't have to worry about crashing.
 

EyeMWing

Banned
Jun 13, 2003
15,670
1
0
Originally posted by: MrMaster
Originally posted by: geckojohn
Hey Everyone, i'm thinking about getting in on the Tivo bandwagon. I've been watching a lot of tv and sometimes i miss some of my favorite shows because i get home from work late or i have other plans. Should I get a Tivo then?

Well, I just have normal basic cable tv at home and have a broadband connection. Please let me know what you think. Also are there any good deals around?

Thanks!

As a non Tivo user I always wanted to do the HTPC thing. I had one for a month and then I sold it. It crashed too much. (dell w/ windows media center)

If p2p were to disappear I would pay for a Tivo because it is simple and you don't have to worry about crashing.

You suck at teh HTPC. Your problem has been bolded.
 

royaldank

Diamond Member
Apr 19, 2001
5,440
0
0
If you have Comcast, their DVR is much better than TiVo in my opinion. This comes from someone that owns a TiVo, Replay, a Windows Media PC, and a comcast DVR.
 

Ramma2

Platinum Member
Jul 29, 2002
2,710
1
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Check out a ReaplyTV, I went with them for 2 big reasons: built in NIC and they don't force ads on you.
 

RedCOMET

Platinum Member
Jul 8, 2002
2,836
0
0
Originally posted by: Ramma2
Check out a ReaplyTV, I went with them for 2 big reasons: built in NIC and they don't force ads on you.

I have a series 2 TiVo. My only complaint with it is the lack of a NIC. I had a to buy a usb network adaptor thingy. Other than that it Works Great.

I'm not sure what is meant by forcing ads on you? I can fast forward through programs with ease and no ads stopping me in that endeavor.
 

geckojohn

Diamond Member
Nov 28, 2000
4,679
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If I'm using just basic cable tv with no box... can I record one show while watching another show? Thanks
 

LordSnailz

Diamond Member
Nov 2, 1999
4,821
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Originally posted by: geckojohn
If I'm using just basic cable tv with no box... can I record one show while watching another show? Thanks

I believe only directv tivos have a dual tuner for this purpose so no you can't. You can record a show on tivo and switch to your TV to watch another show.
 

SLCentral

Diamond Member
Feb 13, 2003
3,542
0
71
I have a regular series 2 TiVo in one room, and a Comcast (HD) DVR in another. The TiVo is infinitesimally better then the DVR. It's more user-friendly, and has more options. The only annoyance is that you need to use an IR Blaster with Digital Cable. If you don't have digital cable, the TiVo, in my opinion, is pretty much flawless, except for the lack of dual-tuners (unless you use DirecTV). Get a TiVo, it's worth it.

Actually, you can watch one show and record another, but you would have to change the input of the TV in order to do so, and switch back and forth. Kind of annoying, but doable.
 

cKGunslinger

Lifer
Nov 29, 1999
16,408
57
91
Just get Tivo Series 2 and be done with it. We got ours as a gift and is is 100x easier than the capture-card-based HTPC I attempted to put together.

If your time is worth any value, Tivo >> DIY HTPC.
 

sygyzy

Lifer
Oct 21, 2000
14,001
4
76
Originally posted by: geckojohn
If I'm using just basic cable tv with no box... can I record one show while watching another show? Thanks


Your setup is extremely Tivo/Replay friendly. Use a splitter to your TV and Tivo. Then you can record one show and watch another. The only con is you won't have the features of Tivo if you are watching through your TV.
 

torpid

Lifer
Sep 14, 2003
11,631
11
76
Originally posted by: SLCentral
I have a regular series 2 TiVo in one room, and a Comcast (HD) DVR in another. The TiVo is infinitesimally better then the DVR. It's more user-friendly, and has more options. The only annoyance is that you need to use an IR Blaster with Digital Cable. If you don't have digital cable, the TiVo, in my opinion, is pretty much flawless, except for the lack of dual-tuners (unless you use DirecTV). Get a TiVo, it's worth it.

Actually, you can watch one show and record another, but you would have to change the input of the TV in order to do so, and switch back and forth. Kind of annoying, but doable.

Uh... do you mean that it is infinitely better or did you really mean infinitesimally which means basically so small it can't be measured?

Anyway to answer the OP, Series 2 is the way to go unless you get some totally outrageous deal on a series 1. There are at least a few features of S2 that you will miss with just S1.
 

cKGunslinger

Lifer
Nov 29, 1999
16,408
57
91
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Is building an HTPC hard?

It's not necessarily hard, but it's not as simple as plugging in a Tivo, either.

Like most things, if you want to DIY, you'll need to do a bit of research and buy specific, supported hardware, and then deal with your own technical support if and when you have problems with it.

Sometimes DIY is preferred over an existed consumer solution, sometimes it's not. You have to make the decision yourself.
 

Ramma2

Platinum Member
Jul 29, 2002
2,710
1
0
Originally posted by: RedCOMET
Originally posted by: Ramma2
Check out a ReaplyTV, I went with them for 2 big reasons: built in NIC and they don't force ads on you.

I have a series 2 TiVo. My only complaint with it is the lack of a NIC. I had a to buy a usb network adaptor thingy. Other than that it Works Great.

I'm not sure what is meant by forcing ads on you? I can fast forward through programs with ease and no ads stopping me in that endeavor.


I thought they now show ads while you are ffing commercials. I could be wrong though.

Another reason for the Replay, complete commercial skip with the single press of a button!
 

cKGunslinger

Lifer
Nov 29, 1999
16,408
57
91
Originally posted by: Ramma2
Originally posted by: RedCOMET
Originally posted by: Ramma2
Check out a ReaplyTV, I went with them for 2 big reasons: built in NIC and they don't force ads on you.

I have a series 2 TiVo. My only complaint with it is the lack of a NIC. I had a to buy a usb network adaptor thingy. Other than that it Works Great.

I'm not sure what is meant by forcing ads on you? I can fast forward through programs with ease and no ads stopping me in that endeavor.


I thought they now show ads while you are ffing commercials. I could be wrong though.

Another reason for the Replay, complete commercial skip with the single press of a button!

I'm not sure where that idea came from, but my Series 2 works fine with no ads and even has a 30-second skip button. ;)
 

Jzero

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
18,834
1
0
Originally posted by: Ramma2
I thought they now show ads while you are ffing commercials. I could be wrong though.
A program in the pilot stages. An ad appears on the screen while you are fast-forwarding through commercials. Since it still takes a few seconds to fast-forward through a set of ads at full speed, I don't see why this is a problem. As long as you can figure out when to hit "play" who cares if it is a blur on the screen or an ad?
Another reason for the Replay, complete commercial skip with the single press of a button!

I think the ad system mentioned above will eventually result in this being removed in a software update, but for the time being, it is no secret that hitting Select-Play-Select-3-0-Select turns the ->| button into a 30-second-skip button, which amounts to a complete commercial skip, and also prevents you from seeing any ads since you aren't really fast-forwarding.
 

SLCentral

Diamond Member
Feb 13, 2003
3,542
0
71
Originally posted by: torpid
Originally posted by: SLCentral
I have a regular series 2 TiVo in one room, and a Comcast (HD) DVR in another. The TiVo is infinitesimally better then the DVR. It's more user-friendly, and has more options. The only annoyance is that you need to use an IR Blaster with Digital Cable. If you don't have digital cable, the TiVo, in my opinion, is pretty much flawless, except for the lack of dual-tuners (unless you use DirecTV). Get a TiVo, it's worth it.

Actually, you can watch one show and record another, but you would have to change the input of the TV in order to do so, and switch back and forth. Kind of annoying, but doable.

Uh... do you mean that it is infinitely better or did you really mean infinitesimally which means basically so small it can't be measured?

Anyway to answer the OP, Series 2 is the way to go unless you get some totally outrageous deal on a series 1. There are at least a few features of S2 that you will miss with just S1.

Yes, I'm a moron :). I meant infinitely.

 

dud

Diamond Member
Feb 18, 2001
7,635
73
91
Gecko,

You've come to the right place. First, I have too many PCs (and did not want to leave the thing running all the time) so I went with a Series 2 (SD-DVR-80) Directv w/tivo (I have DirecTV of course). I bought a floor model because they pretty much stopped selling the Series 2 in March 2005. The newer model (series 2.5) is the R-10. DO NOT buy this unit if you want to be able to extract video - it is not easily hackable.

If you choose to go this route (and perhaps go with DTV) buy yourself a Series 2 (perhaps Ebay). If you are not happy with the amount of recording time then you can replace the HD (I replaced the 80 with a 160 gig HD).

Go here to find all the instructions you need to hack your unit IF you choose to do so:

Hacking a Series II DVR

It took me a while but it worked for me as advertised.

PM me if you need additional info.