This is irrelevant nonsense. Both of these functions have to be performed by all satellite receivers, or in fact any digital tuner of any sort, whether or not it's also a DVR.
The "analyzing" data is relevant to one of the constructions of the TiVo's patent claim, but TiVo's patent claim has 5 or 6 claim constructions, they must all be met for E* to infringe.
The reason E*'s old software infringed was because they used the exact "indexing" method, which for it to work, had to use all of the constructions in the TiVo's claim.
Now "the method" that got them in trouble is no longer in use.
But TiVo insists that because those receivers still use PID analyzers, therefore they still "analyze" the incoming data, therefore it still infringe, it of course is nonsense not only because of the reason I stated in the beginning, but also because:
ALL satellite receivers use PID, PID is used in all satellite receivers ever since satellite receivers existed and long before TiVo even existed, may it be BUD, DBS, FTA, you name it. If TiVo can prove mere use of PID is infringing on its patent, then logic will lead to ALL satellite receivers all infringe on its patent, even non-DVRs.
It is of course a no brainer to see it is a nonsense.
Another thing is, TiVo does not hold a patent on recording and playback another program at the same time, TiVo's patent said nothing about recording one program and playback another at the same time. In fact E* actually holds a patent on DVR recording and playback another program patent, before Tivo's patent, only with a less efficient method. E* decided not to use its own because the DVRs manufactured at the time could not handle the power requirement, and instead they borrowed the TiVo's indexing method and that was why they were in trouble.
The new DVR technology E* claims to use now is a totally different method. This new method does not use that "indexing", as a result it taxes the DVR CPU power more, the good news is the newer DVRs all have more powerful CPUs than, say the old Dishplayers back in the early days, so the newer DVRs can handle the higher CPU power requirement.