mikerr wrote:To do it *just* by changing the phone number would require reverse-engineering much more than has been done by other groups.
It's easier and more feasible short term to do it via scripts - which can of course be put on preconfigured drives and operate by dialup.
The end user would be none the wiser.
That would work for those of us with a techy knowledge, of course.
There are three sorts of people we would want to cater for - those of us who know one end of a screwdriver from another, whom I don't see having any problems installing scripts, those people who have already had larger hard discs installed, maybe a cachecard or tivonet card, and are happy to do it again in order to keep running the TiVo, and and those who just want to watch TV and don't care how they do it.
It's that last lot who are going to just chuck the TiVo away and perhaps it's those whom are the ones we need to court -
The average Joe who has had the TiVo under the telly since they bought it, isn't going to want to spend >£50 on sending it away for a tivonet and software upgrade when they can get a brand new freeview PVR or HDD-DVDR for not much more. Heck, the TV in our bedroom can itself record DVB-T if I plug a memory card in the side. Nor are they going to want to mess about running cables to a PC or router... it'll be a "too much trouble, get a new smaller shiny thing instead. "
I think the easier we can make things for the non-technical out there, the more likely we are going to be at keeping them. Setting up a new dial-up server might be more work, but will keep a lot more people on-board.
Two questions therefore -
- how many people are there out there actually still running non-networked TiVos? i.e. what's the target audience for this?
- what is the aim of this exercise? To keep *our* TiVos running, or to keep *everybodies* TiVos running?