Thanks for all the tips everyone. Now you mention it I remember trying mfs_ftp years ago but had forgotten it existed. Sounds like it may be worth taking another look, although I note that performance is still as slow as TyTool - I have seen 2MB/s quoted as the best speeds people achieve, so unfortunately I am not sure it will be a particularly practical way of backing up and restoring 1TB of TiVo recordings.
Anyway, your replies got me doing some serious research into TiVo alternatives - although I am very much a TiVo devotee, I think other options do warrant a look these days, if only for HD support and multiple tuner support - until, that is, we get a UK Series 4
. BTW, I assume that MythTV and Window 7 Media Centre will record concurrently from as many different tuner sources as are available?
Here are a few things that my research uncovered that may be of interest to others:
XBMC (which will run on just about any PC and platform) definitely seems worth a look as a media centre (without PVR), especially as it will stream TiVo format files without conversion (Google "ccxstream"). It seems that a lot of development effort has been put in to the XBMC UI, and it sounds like many find it is preferrable to the MythTV UI, so much so that an XBMC front end to MythTV has been developed.
If I were to go with a PVR alternative to TiVo I think it would probably be Windows 7 Media Centre (which I think is now included "free" within all versions of Windows 7) or MythTV. I don't particularly want Microsoft in my living room, but if it turns out to be the best available solution for me then so be it. Tcm2007 - if you happen to read this post I would be particularly interested to know how you find WMC as it's clear you were/are a serious TiVo fanatic
who nevertheless decided WMC was the way to go (at least for your needs) a few years ago.
Whilst MythTV is usually run on a Linux platform (with Ubuntu packages being the most off-the-shelf solution), there is also a port to Windows (albeit with limited tuner card support). MythTV currently doesn't support any DVB-T2 cards (i.e. UK terrestrial HD) although this may change within the next year.
A company called Blackgold sell a PCI-e dual DVB-T2 tuner (i.e. 2 tuners on one card, both capable of receiving UK terrestrial HD and SD channels) for around £100 which has Windows drivers so I guess will work fine with Windows 7 Media Centre.
A few links to some interesting stuff on these topics:
http://dealdatabase.com/forum/showthrea ... 20&page=11http://ww2.fatattitude.com/software/sof ... tivox.aspxhttp://adamhaeder.com/wordpress/2010/01 ... -frontend/http://www.hackourlife.com/perfect-myth ... sing-xbmc/http://www.avforums.com/forums/home-ent ... iated.htmlhttp://www.silicondust.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=8010http://wiki.xbmc.org/index.php?title=TiVohttp://forums.oztivo.net/showthread.php ... o-and-Xboxhttp://community.mediabrowser.tv/permal ... -tivo-bornAnyway, I intend to keep using my TiVo for its unbeatable userfriendliness, and so, like all of us on this board I am extremely grateful to the AltEPG team for saving our TiVos and look forward to seeing AltEPG continue to get better and better over the coming years. Nevertheless...I will probably install XBMC on a Windows 7 box by the TV which in turn is likely to encourage me to dabble with Windows 7 Media Centre.
BTW, is talk of the possibility of adapting the Oz Series 3 for AltEPG forbidden here?... On that subject, I assume the Oz Series 3 only has dual DVB-T not DVB-T2 tuners and so (without a serious hardware hack) it looks like an Oz Series 3 still wouldn't be able to receive UK HD, only SD.