![]() ![]() I wouldn't recommend buying one of these for a machine less powerful than that. Simply displaying these streams at full size in a window takes about 75% of the available CPU of my wife's 1.6 GHz single-proc G5. A 41-minute episode of The Tonight Show takes 8. An episode of CSI:Miami, after being compressed to 41 minutes, takes 11 GB. 1080i shows can take potentially 20 GB per hour. Once you've marked them, you can compact the show, which permanently removes the marked sections, reclaiming the disk space they were taking.Īnd speaking of disk space, the CPU and hard disk requirements for digital TV content are enormous. Once you've recorded a show, an iMovie-like editor lets you locate the commercials and cut them out, although the job of finding and marking them is a manual procedure. But the software does poll Titan for schedule changes (if you allow it). Recording shows is more or less on a timed schedule basis - it's not quite up to the standard of a TiVo season pass. ![]() You can click on shows on the TitanTV web site and watch the EyeTV tune to the correct channel or set up to record the show. The software integrates well with, which provides program-guide information. If you get cable TV, then this isn't for you. The other thing to keep in mind is that this receiver is designed strictly for over-the-air reception, and for good reception, you'll very likely need a good outdoor antenna. Elgato should add some way of manually adding or deleting channels (I don't really care about non-English language and home shopping channels). Finally, the third try yielded 28 streams (I have a good outdoor antenna in Santa Clara, CA, aimed at the Mt. When I repeated the procedure, it found that one, but missed a different one. It takes a couple of minutes to complete, but the first time I did it, the EyeTV missed a station that I knew it should have found. This is the first place that EyeTV stumbles ever so slightly: The purpose of the auto-tune procedure is to fill in the channel list used for the channel up and down buttons and for the channel list drop-down menu. The first time you start the EyeTV application, you'll get a setup wizard that will ask about your EyeTV hardware, discover it, and begin the auto-tune procedure. The installation procedure is simplicity itself: You connect an antenna to the antenna jack, you connect the FireWire cable between your computer and the box, you insert the CD into your computer and drag the EyeTV application from the CD to your Applications folder (or anywhere else you want it). The box is light for its size and liberally perforated with ventilation holes, but in extended use I couldn't detect any heat. The front panel has a window with the IR remote control receiver and a status LED. They do not recommend you plug bus-powered devices into it if the EyeTV device itself is bus-powered). As delivered, it has a plastic cover on it), two FireWire jacks and a DC power input jack (there is no power supply, um, supplied, and DC power input is optional. The back of the box has antenna-in and -out jacks (the purpose for the antenna-out jack is unknown. The 500 comes with the box itself, which is slightly larger in all dimensions than a paperback book an IR remote control and batteries a CD a quick-start card and a standard 6-wire FireWire cable. The 500 will play back both standard and high-definition digital signals, but only broadcast, not cable. With the 500, HDTV reception and recording functionality has arrived for the Macintosh." Pudge reviewed the original (USB, NTSC) EyeTV nearly two years ago read on for the rest of nsayer's review of the FireWire-based 500 model (first mentioned earlier this month). Elgato makes PVR hard- and software for Macs. Nsayer writes "My wife and I just took delivery of an EyeTV 500 - Elgato's brand-new box for U.S. ![]()
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