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Can't do Tivo: Please Suggest Alternatives

Tags:
  • Tivo
  • DVR
  • Home Theatre
  • Cable
  • Internet
Last response: in Home Theatre
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September 4, 2014 2:37:36 PM

I live in an apartment complex for graduate students, where cable and internet are provided for us through CenturyLink. Because our services are handled by a 3rd party (campusconnect), they don't do Cable Cards, which Tivo requires to function (at least, that's what Tivo Support tells me).

So I was hoping someone might have some advice on what devices/services I can use to be able to record/rewind/pause live TV. Thanks in advance!

More about : tivo suggest alternatives

September 4, 2014 3:04:29 PM

I would connect a TV directly to the wall. Tell the TV to scan for channels. Whatever is visible, should be visible WITHOUT a cable card. Now I believe that all cable providers are REQUIRED to support cable cards. The TiVo FAQ mentions that "major cable providers" are required, so there could be a loophole that allows your third party to NOT support....
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September 4, 2014 4:03:11 PM

It seems that the issue with Tivo is that it requires the cable card to actually pause/rewind/record tv. And according to this customer service response: Apogee is not an official franchise cable provider and we are not required to provide cable cards."
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September 4, 2014 6:55:32 PM

Does your apartment require the use of a set top box in order for you to receive all channels?

-Wolf sends
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September 4, 2014 7:26:34 PM

Nope. The TV plugs into the wall via a coaxial cable, and we've got a blueray player plugged into an ethernet port (though we'll be plugging the tivo into that port if we can get it set up correctly).
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September 4, 2014 8:39:15 PM

The signal coming from the cable outlet is unencrypted QAM, which is why you do not need a set top box. I do not understand why TiVO tech support is telling you that a cablecard is required. For solely unencrypted channels, it should not be. Rather than a TiVO box, however, I'd look at putting a TV Tuner card like the Hauppauge WinTV-HVR-2250 into a PC near the cable outlet.

-Wolf sends
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September 4, 2014 9:42:15 PM

What about for encrypted channels, though? Also, according to our provider's tech support (which has been wrong literally 100% of the time...), my TV isn't QAM compatible.
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September 4, 2014 11:02:21 PM

If your cable subscription included encrypted channels, a set top box would be required. If your TV isn't ClearQAM compatible, then you wouldn't be able to receive any channels unless there is something else happening with the third party provider.

-Wolf sends
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!