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Best HD PVR? - just ditched SKY :) |
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#26 |
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Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: South Coast, UK
Posts: 4,952
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Indeed, when Freeview comes to my area next year my local transmitter at Newhaven (like many other relay transmitters) will not even include the full Freeview line-up.
A dish offers so much more... Automan. |
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#27 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 4,391
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God another Humax vs the world thread with your host basher Graham T. Humax is my life!
None of those upgrades you speak of are official. They are tricky modifications people have to do themselves not via Humax. There is only fan support when things go wrong. Humax HDR is at the end of it's life in terms of support or upgrades/updates by Humax. Face the reality! At least the features you claim the HDR doesn't do as standard are SUPPORTED by other manufacturers! I did wonder at Graham's post, especially the "(requires a free firmware patch)" tagged on to the end of one feature (which of course applied to several of them). A little unfair of him not to mention that this "firmware patch" is a hack that presumably voids your warranty. While parts of the Humax hack seem stable (e.g. ftp), parts of it don't work as they should (e.g. DLNA with Sony TVs), and parts can create so many problems that "normal" users (who won't ever read Digital Spy, so I don't know why I'm even bothering to type this!) should probably avoid them (e.g. the channel editor). The three main boxes all get you the same free channels and let you record them. Some are more hackable. Some have more features. Some have nicer GUIs. Some are more user friendly. It's not a crime to prefer any of them. Some people upgrading from Sky seem to have more negative comments about the Humax than other boxes (maybe it's the ease of use?) - but the vast majority of owners of the Humax, Echostar, and Samsung STBs seem to be happy with these boxes now. Cheers, David. |
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#28 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 4,391
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My money is going to the first one that can offer unencrypted HD recordings for my collection ... there was rumour of one of the manufacturers breaking Youview ranks and aiming for an Internet delivered EPG to avoid the encryption requirements (somewhat bizarrely it sounds like if you use the broadcast EPG data you must encrypt and if you don't, well you don't need to, very weird if true).
Don't get your hopes up - the BBC applies very strict licensing conditions to implementers of iPlayer outside the PC world. So any STB or TV that has iPlayer is likely to protect HD content in the future. You can always build your own PC-based device. Then it can do whatever you like. But then you won't have access to the HQ encoded-for-TV versions of the iPlayer streams which, for anything filmed in 50i, look far better than those 25p stuttery field-merged conversions that are available on the PC. Cheers, David. |
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#29 |
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Redditch Worcs
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Quote:
to bother).
I did wonder at Graham's post, especially the "(requires a free firmware patch)" tagged on to the end of one feature (which of course applied to several of them). A little unfair of him not to mention that this "firmware patch" is a hack that presumably voids your warranty. . |
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#30 |
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Join Date: Nov 2009
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I have the Hummax 320 and love it. If I was getting a Freesat recorder now I would get the Samsung, no brainer really as it is much more up to date. However I have no plans to change. I may be tempted by a Freesat YouVeiw box if such a thing ever gets made.
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#31 |
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Redditch Worcs
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I have the Hummax 320 and love it. If I was getting a Freesat recorder now I would get the Samsung, no brainer really as it is much more up to date. However I have no plans to change. I may be tempted by a Freesat YouVeiw box if such a thing ever gets made.
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#32 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Buckingham
Posts: 28,537
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I have the Hummax 320 and love it
![]() Edit: Penny drops: Not a 9200T, not a 9300T but a Foxsat HDR with a 320GB HDD. |
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#33 |
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Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 28
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I have the Hummax 320 and love it. If I was getting a Freesat recorder now I would get the Samsung, no brainer really as it is much more up to date. However I have no plans to change. I may be tempted by a Freesat YouVeiw box if such a thing ever gets made.
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#34 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Yorkshire
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The only feature mentioned in the list that requires a firmware update is the media server as mentioned. None of the others require any modification to the standard firmware of any description. (Which one did you think required the box to be modified ?)
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Bit of a moot point as to the warranty, as it's easily reversible anyway.
What, you can delete files from a HDD without leaving a trace? Who do you work for, NASA?! Whether Humax would care is another matter. You'd hope, with any obvious hardware fault, that they'd just cough up - though I suppose they could claim that streaming content to multiple devices simultaneously is not what the box was designed or sold for.Cheers, David. |
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#35 |
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Join Date: Sep 2003
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No auto padding, no manual recording capabilty, as yet no archive to usb.
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#36 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Buckingham
Posts: 28,537
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The Humax implementation of Accurate Recording is also flawed though. Take your pick and lose either way.
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#37 |
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Join Date: Nov 2009
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No auto padding, no manual recording capabilty, as yet no archive to usb.
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#38 |
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Join Date: Nov 2009
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A what?
![]() Edit: Penny drops: Not a 9200T, not a 9300T but a Foxsat HDR with a 320GB HDD. |
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#39 |
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Worthing, West Sussex
Posts: 82
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No auto padding, no manual recording capabilty, as yet no archive to usb.
Our Sxxxm does both fine, as well as easily setup favourite lists (that includes non-freesat channels), just thought a pause in the Humax vs everyone else scenario....
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#40 |
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 900
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The added things you get with the Humax, if you patch the firmware :
- ability to stream to just about any device without paying a bundle for the privilege I would like to be able to stream to my Samsung TV, but it appears that the TV does not like the format. |
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#41 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Buckingham
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We are in the Freesat recorder section, discussing the merits of a Samsung and Humax freesat recoders and you are confused by the phrase Humax 320
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#42 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 821
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So what have you actually managed to stream to using upnp (apart from a PC running XMBC)?
I would like to be able to stream to my Samsung TV, but it appears that the TV does not like the format. - AC Ryan HD mini (media streamer) * - HiSense 1080 media streamer * - Windows 7 PCs (using media centre and VLC) * - Windows XP (using VLC) * - iphone (Buzz application) - Ipad (AirVideo app) - ASUS O!Play HD1 (media streamer) - Apple TV (jailbroken) - WD TV (media streamer) - PS 3 - Xtreamer - Android devices (Skifta and vplayer apps) Thats not a bad list. Most TVs and BluRay players have really patchy format support, they don't play the Humax recordings on a USB stick either, at least my new Sony only plays some of them - its not in their interest to support a full range of formats. I know the idea of a firmware patch (even though its just a matter of putting it on a USB stick and booting the HDR) is slightly scary but its the only way you're going to see these features on a Freesat recorder - they have very strict rules that the manufacturers must lock down their machines and not allow such things. The HDR may be getting on a bit now, but after more than 3 years it still has the best set of features (if you apply the patch). |
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#43 |
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Join Date: Nov 2009
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Given you mis-spelt Humax as well as omitting GB from the model description and that it is common for people to post in the wrong section and sometime not even know what box they actually have then clarification was in order.
I |
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#44 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Buckingham
Posts: 28,537
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I admit to my original confusion and you accuse me of me of being a smart-arse? What a weird world you inhabit that considers people who are sometime slow on the uptake as being at the brighter end of the scale.
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#45 |
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 4,391
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Thats not a bad list. Most TVs and BluRay players have really patchy format support, they don't play the Humax recordings on a USB stick either, at least my new Sony only plays some of them - its not in their interest to support a full range of formats.
The choice of codec (audio and video), the choice of muxing, and the delivery method (DLNA/UPnP vs USB vs fileshare) is a real minefield. Worse, the exact coding parameters are outside the control of the STB. The BBC could change their HD coding tomorrow in such a way as to remain compliant with the MPEG and Freesat specs, while straying beyond what certain hardware (or decoding software) is capable of. I'm not making this up - they've done it at least once before. That's why the best DLNA server implementations should have a transcoding or at least re-muxing module built-in to match the format to the destination. Sadly this is very rare for now, but DLNA and some silicon vendors have been pushing this approach recently. Cheers, David. |
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#46 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 821
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That's a strange thing to say. Why would Sony sell more TVs if they supported fewer formats?!
.... My HiSense media player (dirt cheap, quite old now, quite nasty build feel, no active support or recent upgrades), doesn't have any problems at all with playing these files so why should a fairly high end, brand new TV/BluRay ? Even on formats it does play my new Sony BluRay (BDP-S480) appears to hang for nearly two minutes before playing MP4s from my DLNA NAS device, thats just rubbish. This is why I have my suspicions that they aren't trying very hard. |
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#47 |
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Join Date: Oct 2011
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This is why I have my suspicions that they aren't trying very hard.
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#48 |
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Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 85
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Sony have a history of hating formats they don't own, but they have been getting better in recent years (they have no choice really)
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#49 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 821
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Meh, internet myth passed around by idiots with selective memories.... They will remember formats like Beta, Minidisc and ATRAC and they totally ignore formats like cassette, CD, DVD and Blu-Ray all of which Sony had a major part in realizing...
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#50 |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 2,087
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... and they totally ignore formats like cassette, CD, DVD and Blu-Ray all of which Sony had a major part in realizing...
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