Don't get me wrong. I love my TiVo-like device (it's not actually a TiVo brand digital video recorder but a Dish Network-based machine that we refer to as the TiVo despite the consternation I'm sure this causes among the custodians of the TiVo brand).
I just loathe how dumb it is.
(note--I've changed the earlier headline to underscore that my device is not a TiVo but a machine that functions like a TiVo)
If I set my Dish PVR to record a sporting event, it stops recording right at the minute the broadcaster has said the game will be over, even though very few games ever end on time.
If I set it to record a program that is delayed in some way by a game that runs overtime, a presidential speech or a short news bulletin, it captures whatever is on the air during the scheduled interval, with no mind at all for what's actually being broadcast.
Saturday night, for instance, I set it to record the CBS "48 Hours" update on the Rhoades-murder case in downstate Paris. Instead, for reasons I have yet to determine, it recorded about 40 minutes of a kiddie's Christmas special and only about 20 minutes of the hour-long update.
(Fortunately the transcript is online http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/12/13/48hours/main1123966.shtml .)
Now, sure, VCRs were dumb in this way, too. But they were stand alone objects that couldn't and didn't communicate with some central electronic authority, as DVRs do in order to keep their program guides current.
What I want now is what I'm certain almost everyone will have within 10 years -- a TiVo-like device that knows minute to minute what's on when; that keeps running through double and triple overtimes, that isn't fooled when networks lop over the hour by a minute or two in order to boost ratings; that adjusts for the interposition of special reports, rain delays and other events.
NOTE: click here to read postings: http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2005/12/i_hate_my_stupi.html#more
I just loathe how dumb it is.
(note--I've changed the earlier headline to underscore that my device is not a TiVo but a machine that functions like a TiVo)
If I set my Dish PVR to record a sporting event, it stops recording right at the minute the broadcaster has said the game will be over, even though very few games ever end on time.
If I set it to record a program that is delayed in some way by a game that runs overtime, a presidential speech or a short news bulletin, it captures whatever is on the air during the scheduled interval, with no mind at all for what's actually being broadcast.
Saturday night, for instance, I set it to record the CBS "48 Hours" update on the Rhoades-murder case in downstate Paris. Instead, for reasons I have yet to determine, it recorded about 40 minutes of a kiddie's Christmas special and only about 20 minutes of the hour-long update.
(Fortunately the transcript is online http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/12/13/48hours/main1123966.shtml .)
Now, sure, VCRs were dumb in this way, too. But they were stand alone objects that couldn't and didn't communicate with some central electronic authority, as DVRs do in order to keep their program guides current.
What I want now is what I'm certain almost everyone will have within 10 years -- a TiVo-like device that knows minute to minute what's on when; that keeps running through double and triple overtimes, that isn't fooled when networks lop over the hour by a minute or two in order to boost ratings; that adjusts for the interposition of special reports, rain delays and other events.
NOTE: click here to read postings: http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2005/12/i_hate_my_stupi.html#more
Last edited: