|
General Discussion General discussion about SageTV and related companies, products, and technologies. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
#521
|
|||
|
|||
Android
Strangely (note the play on words) enough, I had pretty much the same thought. It makes a great deal of sense for google to leverage the technology obtained from the SageTV aquisition on a wider platform...and lets face it, competition for consumers has moved full force into the mobile/portable arena. If you doubt that, look at Apple's last financial report.
|
#522
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Exactly what I was thinking. Also, don't think of the traditional back end frond end like how we think of it now. No sir. Not a PC in an office/closet somewhere serving to extenders... Think of a Google TV appliance that has quad cableCARD tuners that you use as a front end and back end. That same box can serve upteen clients/extenders. You buy the GoogleTV (it's really SageTV technology in there) and then you expand the setup with smaller dumb client extenders. The only downside to this would be the inevitable DRM. But really, I expect this GoogleTV box to be rooted and apps to do some of the things we really want. Like hooking up an additional backend (daisy GoogleTV boxes, or roll your own PC), and transcoding of recordings that we aren't "allowed" to. And for those who think Google would never allow this, remember the Google Music thing that doesn't have RIAA approval or the way Google fought for creative commons in Youtube, or their quest to archive out of copyright books. Google may not always be successful taking on the big corporations against the little guy, but they are never ones to not try. In the end I think the base product will not be as extensive as the SageTV we know now, but I am willing to bet it will be a heck of a lot easier to set up. This will lead to more users, which will lead to more hacks, which will lead to more development, which will lead to the same levels (if not higher) of plugins to do the things we really want. Hopefully this comes quick, and without the headaches of building your own server (no matter how fun it can be).
__________________
Server:W7 Ultimate, SageTV 7.1.9 Capture Devices: HVR-2250, 2x HD PVR 1212 Clients: 1x STX-HD100 3x STP-HD200 @cliftpompee |
#523
|
||||
|
||||
Oh, now see what you did there? You went and rained on everybody's pity party! It's amazing what a little outside the box thinking can do. There's a reason none of us work for Google.
__________________
Server: XP, SuperMicro X9SAE-V, i7 3770T, Thermalright Archon SB-E, 32GB Corsair DDR3, 2 x IBM M1015, Corsair HX1000W PSU, CoolerMaster CM Storm Stryker case Storage: 2 x Addonics 5-in-3 3.5" bays, 1 x Addonics 4-in-1 2.5" bay, 24TB Client: Windows 7 64-bit, Foxconn G9657MA-8EKRS2H, Core2Duo E6600, Zalman CNPS7500, 2GB Corsair, 320GB, HIS ATI 4650, Antec Fusion Tuners: 2 x HD-PVR (HTTP tuning), 2 x HDHR, USB-UIRT Software: SageTV 7 |
#524
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
B) Android@home is a total joke and would take an army years to catch up and it would never work right in the cloud. Although now that I type that out, it makes the above acquisition more likely. Crap, a mod better delete all references to CQC and HA now! |
#525
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Serv:ECS H61H2-T1 ITX I7 3770S CPU@3.1GHZ 8G Ram WIN1064 HDPVR, HD Homerun|network encoder Unraid Server:B75MU3B I5-3550 CPU@3.30GHz 9TB 16G Ram|Network HDPVR encoder:Win10 VM 8G Ram with Processor passthrough. Directv Http tuning to Genie, exemultitunplugin to Genie client. Http scheduled task bat file to defeat screensaver on Genie. Usb uirt scheduled task bat file to defeat screensaver on Genie client. Clients Android TV, Samsung TAB A |
#526
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Though if I were to wish for an ideal scenario, it would be that SageTV would be "turned back on", and development would commence on "SageTV 8" as "Super SageTV GoogleTV Android@Home solution" and we'd be able to migrate our systems over nearly as seamlessly as we've done for prior major SageTV version changes. Though I'm not sure I really think any of these are terribly likely. I "fear" that "Super SageTV GoogleTV Android@Home solution" will be enough different than SageTV in both implementation and ideals, that it will be unappealing. |
#527
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Server: i5-2405S (4 core @ 2.5 GHz), 8GB RAM, NORCO RPC-4220 4U case Tuners: 2 SiliconDust HDHomeRun , 2 Hauppauge HD-PVR Connected to 1 Pace700X and 1 TiVo Series 4 DVD Storage: 24 TB TV Storage: 11 TB (4x1.5TB for recording, 5TB for archive) Clients: 3 SageTV Extenders:5 |
#528
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
Quote:
I've also been talking directly with Schedules Direct and as long as they get the waiver/exception from TMS, which I've been told "shouldn't be an issue" then I've already mocked up a SageTV plugin that can simply replace the Sage EPG server and get listings from SD into Sage. Install the plugin, feed it your Schedules Direct id/pwd and forget about it.** Needless to say, (Canadian/American) users won't be shutout too long if the Sage EPG server vanished suddenly. With that said, I hope it doesn't happen because based on my research, the data provided by Schedules Direct isn't nearly as thorough as the data from the Sage EPG server. I was a bit surprised by this given they both get their data from the same source. I'm guessing Sage pays more for more data than SD does. But in that doom's day scenario, less data is better than no data. ** By mocked up, I really mean pre-pre proof of concept. I've looked at the XML SD provides and I've studied the Sage EPGPlugin interface and it really isn't a big deal to make it happen. It'll be a decent amount of work, but not too difficult. I'll probably chip away at it during the rest of the summer and by fall I'll have a plugin ready. Obviously if the plug is pulled on the Sage EPG server sooner than that then my schedule gets bumped up. If the plug were pulled tomorrow then XMLTV doesn't look too difficult to get working in the meantime.
__________________
Twitter: @ddb_db Server: Intel i5-4570 Quad Core, 16GB RAM, 1 x 128GB OS SSD (Win7 Pro x64 SP1), 1 x 2TB media drive Capture: 2 x Colossus STB Controller: 1 x USB-UIRT Software:Java 1.7.0_71; SageTV 7.1.9 Clients: 1 x HD300, 2 x HD200, 1 x SageClient, 1 x PlaceShifter Plugins: Too many to list now... |
#529
|
|||
|
|||
I think we are giving Google too much credit. If they could have whipped up a DVR system with all their resources, they would have. I think they couldn't. If Google was good (meaning: competent) as people are making them out to be, then GoogleTV wouldn't have sucked so bad.
|
#530
|
||||
|
||||
Personally, I don't think there is a activation server. There is only the activation key that is supplied by sagetv. That being said, if we are abandon by Sagetv/Google, there are enough licenses.
__________________
Serv:ECS H61H2-T1 ITX I7 3770S CPU@3.1GHZ 8G Ram WIN1064 HDPVR, HD Homerun|network encoder Unraid Server:B75MU3B I5-3550 CPU@3.30GHz 9TB 16G Ram|Network HDPVR encoder:Win10 VM 8G Ram with Processor passthrough. Directv Http tuning to Genie, exemultitunplugin to Genie client. Http scheduled task bat file to defeat screensaver on Genie. Usb uirt scheduled task bat file to defeat screensaver on Genie client. Clients Android TV, Samsung TAB A |
#531
|
|||
|
|||
Who says we don't?
|
#532
|
|||
|
|||
Maybe it's not so bad
It could have been worse....
Much worse if Microsoft bought Sage larry |
#533
|
|||
|
|||
Wow so someone will funally bring full Internet TV to the masses. We'll all be running Google's SageTV and tuning all of our channels over the Internet. SWEET! Ok, I'm completely dreaming now but once in a while it feels good to dream.
Can you imagine HD video streams over the Internet direct into a revamped SageTV. |
#534
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
__________________
Buy Fuzzy a beer! (Fuzzy likes beer) unRAID Server: i7-6700, 32GB RAM, Dual 128GB SSD cache and 13TB pool, with SageTVv9, openDCT, Logitech Media Server and Plex Media Server each in Dockers. Sources: HRHR Prime with Charter CableCard. HDHR-US for OTA. Primary Client: HD-300 through XBoxOne in Living Room, Samsung HLT-6189S Other Clients: Mi Box in Master Bedroom, HD-200 in kids room |
#535
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
My thoughts exactly!!!
__________________
Athlon II Quad Core 3Ghz, 8GB Ram. 12GB Storage. 3 (x4) HDHR for OTA Across 2 Cities, HD200, 2x HD300. |
#536
|
|||
|
|||
I think we need to look at this asking the question "What does SageTV have that Google couldn't easily replicate in house?". I have a few ideas:
1) The DVR functionality. I don't think there are many DVR's that have any where near the flexibility and features that SageTV has. All of the shortcomings of SageTV are directly related to licensing and DRM (Netflix, cablecard, etc). The core functionality is solid. 2) The people who work at SageTV. Often times big companies will buy up smaller companies for no reason other than to get the talent. 3) Patents. I don't know if SageTV owns any, but if they do this could be why Google is interested in them. Reasons that I think can be safely ruled out: 1) Placeshifting. This has been speculated about, but at the end of the day, I don't see anything particularly unique about SageTV placeshifting that Google couldn't implement themselves. Several companies have similar technologies: Slingbox, Air Video, and Orb. The core of SageTV placeshifting is ffmpeg, so there isn't a lot of unique backend to it (at least not to justify buying the whole company) 2) Shutting down a competitor. SageTV is really too small to be a threat to Google. Maybe Google is envisioning the next iteration of GoogleTV not as a box you connect your receiver to, but as the receiver itself. I think most people see GoogleTV today as a huge letdown, Google must know this as well. Slapping SageTV into the existing GoogleTV platform seems like a silly idea. Google develops the software, and then cable, satellite and TV companies can load up the software on a device they sell. Just like Android. If they do go this route, it's not outside the realm of possibility that they open source the software. All speculation of course, but we have nothing else to do... |
#537
|
|||
|
|||
Poor business practices
I just paid for SageTV, and now, before I've had a chance to download the product even, they have pulled the links on their site.
This is close to a criminal action: it's a crime to take payment and not provide the product. I'm going to dispute this credit card payment. I'm upset that SageTV is gone, but I'm even more upset about the way they have gone about this. To pull all links to the product is piss poor business practices. |
#538
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Also, not everyone can afford very high speed like RoadRunner Lightning - advertised as 40down/5up (on a good day) which goes for about $65/month + taxes here. |
#539
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
Personally I like Stanger's idea of merging with Android@home but it better learn to speak z-wave. I have too much of an investment to replace all my HA devices. And it had better be friendly to my Windows Phone 7 phone and my Windows PC's because they're not going anywhere. S Last edited by sleonard; 06-20-2011 at 09:14 PM. |
#540
|
|||
|
|||
Google can build Sage into Chrome OS, just like WMC in Windows, then sell extender-like boxes. Add browser functionality, and Google has your whole house connected.
|
Tags |
acquisition, beer, google, googletv |
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
SageTV 3rd Party Devs & Google Acquisition | Brent | The SageTV Community | 34 | 06-28-2011 10:17 AM |
SageTV Acquired by Google-More info on geektonic.com | Narflex | Announcements | 1 | 06-21-2011 09:40 PM |
Google Music Search - Possible Use in SageTV? | Brent | General Discussion | 4 | 06-13-2010 02:55 PM |
Google Desktop Slowing SageTV? | abexman | SageTV Software | 0 | 02-10-2007 05:36 AM |