So I've had my Dish Network ViP722 DVR for several months now, and it never gave me a problem before. I recorded rare one-time showings of shows like the last week of The Tonight Show With Conan O'Brien, the XXI Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver, Funny Or Die Presents, 60 Minutes, Jimmy Kimmel Live, and many more. These tapings will NEVER be shown again on television.
Tonight, I was recording the 62nd Annual Primetime Emmys on NBC, and I started watching from the beginning as it was recording (nothing new). Throughout the taping, I began noticing that it kept freezing. I would try to fast-forward through commercials, and play it, and there would be no sound, or there was some sort of delay. I turned off the unit itself, and the same thing happened. I even tried the other recording from earlier of the same program, but no luck.
Desperate, I called up tech support and a lady picked up. I told her my problem, and she told me to unplug my unit and wait ten seconds. I asked her if this would affect my recordings, and she said it wouldn't. So I did, and plugged it back in after waiting ten seconds. Low and behold, ERROR 311 shows up, saying something about my hard drive. So the lady says, "I'm sorry, sir, but it appears that your unit needs to be replaced," blah blah blah. I asked her where my recordings went, and she rambled on about them and the hard drive being "corrupt" and how there was no way for me to access them. Regardless, I was left with all my recordings taken away from me.
I called back and asked to talk to the supervisor. He basically ran me through another resetting procedure, and the same results came up. The DVR button on my remote is basically useless, as are the record/pause/play/rewind/fast-forward buttons. I can't believe it. I would rather watch the Emmys through thick and thin than through nothing at all. Calling them actually did more harm than good.
What I want to know now is if there is any way to rip my recordings from their current state and put them in some sort of storage unit. I don't care if it requires a third-party software or anything. All I know is that there's a USB port there for a reason.
HELP! I don't know what to do here. I need these recordings for preservation purposes, and I won't just let them go without a fight. Advice, anyone???
Tonight, I was recording the 62nd Annual Primetime Emmys on NBC, and I started watching from the beginning as it was recording (nothing new). Throughout the taping, I began noticing that it kept freezing. I would try to fast-forward through commercials, and play it, and there would be no sound, or there was some sort of delay. I turned off the unit itself, and the same thing happened. I even tried the other recording from earlier of the same program, but no luck.
Desperate, I called up tech support and a lady picked up. I told her my problem, and she told me to unplug my unit and wait ten seconds. I asked her if this would affect my recordings, and she said it wouldn't. So I did, and plugged it back in after waiting ten seconds. Low and behold, ERROR 311 shows up, saying something about my hard drive. So the lady says, "I'm sorry, sir, but it appears that your unit needs to be replaced," blah blah blah. I asked her where my recordings went, and she rambled on about them and the hard drive being "corrupt" and how there was no way for me to access them. Regardless, I was left with all my recordings taken away from me.
I called back and asked to talk to the supervisor. He basically ran me through another resetting procedure, and the same results came up. The DVR button on my remote is basically useless, as are the record/pause/play/rewind/fast-forward buttons. I can't believe it. I would rather watch the Emmys through thick and thin than through nothing at all. Calling them actually did more harm than good.
What I want to know now is if there is any way to rip my recordings from their current state and put them in some sort of storage unit. I don't care if it requires a third-party software or anything. All I know is that there's a USB port there for a reason.
HELP! I don't know what to do here. I need these recordings for preservation purposes, and I won't just let them go without a fight. Advice, anyone???