Thanks Radar. Rick told me to do the formatting of the app area three times because of the reasons you just mentioned.
These boxes are like our computers, when so much software changes, the cookies from the internet, etc go thru the computer, it tend to get sluggish in performance. I noticed that with the Ultra and after I formatted the app area, and reinstalling the 2050 FW it is doing much better. All the old settings that I did since I bought the box are completely gone. Kinda reminds me of defraging the harddrive on our computers.
I will install the newest FW tonight then program all my satellites. Did I read somewhere that I need to unplug my HDD before doing so?
MrFTAMan,
It was probably from me that you read about disconnecting your HDD before updating the firmware. This is just another safety tip from my personal arsenal.
One time, I found my HDD contents all scattered. Movies were missing, playing one movie would start and then in midstream go to the middle of another movie, some movies would no longer play at all, some movies were listed under a title of a different movie and on and on...... It was just totally hosed up! I had to reformat my HDD and start over from scratch. That may not seem so bad, but on a 1 TB HDD filled to 75% of capacity, do you realize how much time I had spent to get there? If you guessed about 9 months, you would be pretty close. Do you want to put that much data on your HDD and then just flush it down the toilet and then restore it once again with another 9 months of work, just to save 5 minutes of time in order to avoid disconnecting the HDD?
You will have to understand that I was transferring my entire DVD library to my AZBox's HDD. If you are just using your HDD to record a specific program off the sat while you are at work so that you can watch it later and you don't care what happens to that recorded program after you have viewed it, then you don't need to bother disconnecting the HDD. It is only my recommendation to do so if you absolutely want to ensure that you don't lose any of those programs and you have not backed them up to another device already.
I do not know what actually caused my HDD contents to become scrambled and scattered as it did, however, updating the firmware was one of the things that I knew that I had done in the few days preceding the problem. I may have also played with the Hardware Acceleration feature at the time, too (before I knew better). So, in order to play it safe, I just power down and unplug the HDD prior to doing any modifications, including firmware upgrades.
I now have my 1 TB HDD nearly full again and have been working on a few other HDDs as well. I don't intend to lose any of that data again!
I think that you understand why I am recommending this safety measure. You may use your own judgement based on how valuable you percieve the recorded content on your HDD to be. You won't harm the HDD itself as far as I know, but you may scramble the file directory if something goes wrong. You should just scrutinize how important the data you have saved on your HDD is to you, personally, and decide from there. If you have a USB HDD, I wouldn't think twice about disconnecting it in these cases. It's too easy and only takes 15 seconds. That is a no-brainer. With the Premium and the Premium Plus, I actually have to open the box and disconnect the HDD. That takes all of five minutes. If it takes me one year to fill up a 1 TB HDD, I would certainly forfeit the five minutes here and there to save me from having to forfeit an entire year. It is just logical.
RADAR