Tcm2007 wrote:1 may be possible, but will be far from 100% accurate as it reduces everything to that text match. If the name is different in the source data, or if there two or more series of the same name (more common than you might think, esp as any past errors on Tribune's part in creating duplicate ids will be captured alongside the real ones) then it will break.
Is it better to start form scratch and have good SPs that work, or tell people that there SPs will work, but actually some of them won't?
For me it's the former.
For 2, once the TMSID is delivered in a slice you can't change it without breaking and SPs set using the original data sent. Total no-no.
irrelevant wrote:The only issue I can think of that Graham didn't address is the possibility of a clash from the opposite direction - if a new series appears that the tmsid is not known for, then a new number will be allocated, I presume sequentially.
Tcm2007 wrote:Have a look in the perl scripts
daveh wrote:I must admit that I agree with Stuart on this. Why complicate the issue and potentially introduce problems down the line when it is a relatively simple matter to rebuild your Tivo's season pass list over time just as you would have to with a new Tivo. Perhaps a poll of all potential users of the new system is in order to decide which method to adopt?
healeydave wrote:It's not so much Stuarts influence, Graham has plenty of experience now looking at the logistics of this and given the time constraints, I believe its more important people have an alternative source of guide data come June because after-all, Season Passes can be re-created with data available, they're pretty useless without any data to work off!
SolidTechie wrote:I have to say I agree too - Starting afresh with my SP list, would be a good thing - as I have a bunch of them which are old, unused and non-working duplicates.
FWIW.
Pete77 wrote:Suggesting that people delete everything on their machine to my mind amounts to the same kind of nonsense that happens when you return your laptop computer for service requiring some piece of broken hardware on it to be fixed. It may be easier and more reliable for them to always reformat your hard drive but it isn't for you the end user and that is the whole point.
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