Beyond TV 3.5 - Adding Multi-Tuner Support, a Quick Beta Look
by Andrew Ku on August 24, 2004 12:33 AM EST- Posted in
- Smartphones
- Mobile
Beyond TV 3.5 - Installation and Setup
If you read our Beyond TV 3.4 review, then our explanation of the new version of Beyond TV will come much easier to understand. The installation process and setup is basically the same as Beyond TV 3.4, but with one major change: multi-tuner configuration options.Click to enlarge. |
Click to enlarge. |
The license key for Beyond TV 3.5 will come automatically with two-tuner support, each additional tuner after that will require a "tuner license key". However, you can still have the nth number of tuners installed and be able to choose which two that you want to use, even if you don't have license keys for all of them.
Click to enlarge. |
Click to enlarge. |
Note how SnapStream has implemented multi-tuner configuration. It is a cyclical process unless you select "Finish." If you hit Edit, you get a screen listing each tuner's configuration.
Beyond TV 3.5 – System Requirements and the Test
Beyond TV 3.5 – Major Changes: Where did the Menu Go?
9 Comments
View All Comments
Filibuster - Wednesday, August 25, 2004 - link
In a PVR250 card you cannot turn off the hardware compression...the card basically does all output through the mpeg encoder.With TV Link (network client) you can watch hardware encoded mpeg (live or recorded) via a lan, but not over the internet. It works much better than the web based streamer too.
Unfortunatly that takes out one thing important to some people. :)
AndrewKu - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
#5 - It was suppose to be within a week. But it looks like SnapStream has bumped the date to early Sept.Btw, a slight clarification, when I mentioned that conflict management is not on the client side that was relating to the time/clock issue between the server and the client. When you schedule a recording that creates a conflict, you still need to perform conflict management, even on the client side.
ViRGE - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
There are 2 reasons(I know of) why they can't really stream the MPEG2 stream; it's bandwidth intensive(up to 12Mb/sec), and it requires a decoder license. Even transcoding the stream isn't very feesable, since it would require decoding the MPEG2 stream, then encoding in WMV, which may be difficult to do in real time. A seperate program is also required, and likely a specialized decoder, since by default, I don't believe that WMP knows how to deal with a streaming MPEG2 file anyhow, which may also be a problem with the codec.glennpratt - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
Also, they don't have to use the Hardware Encoding features of the card, you should be able to turn it off.I don't know why they can't stream hardware MPEG2 encoding... I guess that would be a completely different way to streaming as opposed to the software encoder. MCE requires hardware encoding and you can just start playing another program on another MCE or PC while it's recording. Not exactly streaming...
Night201 - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
Any idea of a timeframe of when this is coming out? Sept? Oct?johnsonx - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
In a multi-tuner setup, I'm guessing you have to use the same encoding method for both cards; the hardware cards only do MPEG-2, and MPEG-2 is the one you can't stream.That's just my guess; I'm not at all sure.
Resh - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
I really wish they could find a way to allow streaming over networks if at least one of the tuner cards is a software encoder. For example, one could have a PVR-250 and an ATI TV-Wonder, with the latter being used to stream over the network.No idea why they haven't done this, but if it is a technical possibility, I wish they would do it.
Another nicety would be the ability to add program info to edited files (e.g., after removing commercials, we could add the air date, channel, and synopsis).
Can't wait for the list be folders option.
reboos - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link
MythTV!Rapacious - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link