I noticed the same thing for Merlin which starts with new episodes on Friday.
I am sure that Merlin was right the other day. But, now it shows an original air date of 9-11-10. Very odd and thanks for the heads up....
Ken
I noticed the same thing for Merlin which starts with new episodes on Friday.
Because of this post I checked Merlin and it is listed as Season Premier, but not "New" and had to be manually restored with an Original Air Date of 09-11-10. And Caprica also had to be manually restored, shows air dates of 11-2 through 11-30-10 and are out of order, after the fact.I am sure that Merlin was right the other day. But, now it shows an original air date of 9-11-10. Very odd and thanks for the heads up....
Ken
I would argue that the fault doesn't completely lie with the guide provider.
The DVR software could do a better job as well.
To me a "new" episode should mean: the episode is new to you, and not: the episode is new to the world.
If it behaved like that, the original air date on the guide wouldn't have mattered.
As a programmer I find that sort of thing a bit annoying since I know how relatively easy that should be to implement.
Given proper indexing on a table that lists the viewed episodes for a show, it should have a negligible performance impact when applying a new/old status column to all the shows in the guide when updating it with new data.
Of course as a developer I also know what it's like to be so overworked and understaffed that there is no time for something this simple (or something even simpler for that matter, like being able to sort the recordings by original air date/episode number).
Does the 922 have any changes in how this functions?
With the current system, yes, but with my proposed system, in this particular scenario it would be resistent to this problem.IF the guide provider, Tribune/Zap2It doesn't provide the proper info the "timer software" will not be able to operate accurately.
On this, I disagree with you, as explained above, the point is if you have seen it before or not.The whole FRACKING point is that it is NEW TO THE WORLD, "the first time shown" or "newly" broadcast.
I'm really trying but I have a hard time trying to follow what you're saying here.Even if rebroadcasted later that same day/evening. That episode is new to the series until the next one comes along. Otherwise the "new" option would be a moot point and we would need to set up timers daily to catch the shows we want that are "newly" broadcast, as far as we know, that they are "new". Which probably would far better than what is happening now with Tribune. The point in having timers with "Name Based Programming" (OF WHICH DISH made a really big deal about) is to grab the episode for us without our intervention or us to have to worry about it? I believe the campaign was "set it and forget it"? Or why bother having timers. This is the whole point of DISH implementing name based recording.
Mate, I'm no rookie when it comes to programming (Close to 30 years of experience), but that doesn't mean I can't be wrong or make mistakes (and I would have no problems if being called out on them).I would really like to see, not to ridicule or demean, what you program. I'm just curious as hell as to where you are coming from.
This has to be the dumbest thing I have ever herd here. And I have been accused of saying some dumb, but true, things. Enjoy the Kool-Aid. OH and have some of the purple. It was Jimmie's fav.
SandFarmer, I think you misunderstood what I was proposing, otherwise you wouldn't have had such a violent opposition to it.
Let me try to explain it again, and hopefully, you'll see that this is a superior system . . .
You're kidding right? This would be an utterly simple addition.ESPNSTI, I fully understand what you are saying. Your solution is based on personal/engineers preference/point of view, which may not entirely be a superior product. Where it would have to make the software more intelligent than it already is, and be mostly perception. It's having a hard enough time now without trying to place Boolean actions in it.
I'm not familiar with the Tivo GUI, but what GUI changes? The only one needed would be to mark past episodes as viewed in case you saw them outside of Dish, and that could be a very minor addition. You could even consider that optional if you're that bothered by it.I could only imagine the TiVoesque (another law suit brewing here) GUI.
Yes obviously it would be better if the guide data was more accurate, I'm not contesting that.You are designing for the flaws of a provider to make your product "functional". When in all reality you should pick a more accurate provider. Even then I doubt that yours would operate properly if the guide data was as all over the place as Tribune is.
The simple solution would be fix the data. The real problem is that the guide info/data is flawed and has been for years and if it were corrected all would be fine and there would be no need for a "new solution".
I have been tracking idiosyncrasies for years and DISH will no longer discuss it even though I was hired, by DISH, at one time to redesign and fix it. They never went ahead with it. The "Name Based Recording" is not that with out the guide data being correct. And if it were there would be no need for your "proposed system", this conversation, or even this thread. The one in place would work just fine, IF the guide data was as correct as it should be by all rights and realities. After all, when you look at it, we're the ones paying, in many ways, for the inaccurate data.
You're a BA, therefore you oppose a programmer's plan? lol, that tells me a lot.<long description of a business analyst>. Thus my "violent" opposition to your plan.
I'm not arguing that the current software doesn't work with correct data.Especially when all it would take is for the one that is in place to work is for the baseline data to be correct to fix the issues at hand. Which in turn would require an accurate provider (not Tribune/Zap2It) and astute subscriber (DISH). The current software is solid and only needs accurate data to function properly. The fact that this is not the case is the point of the problem.
Thank you for playing. I'm done.
. . . sf
I believe Dish receivers look at what has been recorded in the last 30 days. So, if you say new or repeats it still looks at what it has recorded over the last 30 days. If guide info is so bad that the first run date and episode info is missing they tend to just record it just in case.