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1Dec/080

When will TV have its version of the RSS feed?

Posted by Eric Long

My media consumption is transitioning more and more to RSS feeds. From the latest online & web marketing industry news, to sports updates, to friends & family blog postings, RSS is an everyday part of my life where I pick and choose what I want to read/consume and when.

TV needs its own version of the RSS feed

It then dawned on me: TV needs to be like this. Essentially, it's what all of our DVRs are striving to be. In our house, we have DIRECTV HD which means we are locked in to the underwhelming DIRECTV HD DVR. DIRECTV is taking a step in the right direction with the ability to schedule your DVR online. The problem is that it differs from Tivo's implementation of online scheduling (we have Tivo in another room in the house).

Proprietary DVR scheduling "protocol" limits potential

If I visit ABC.com (or any television station's website), there's no standard way for me to subscribe to a show. I have to separately go to my provider's website to use their proprietary method of scheduling the DVR to record a show. This is the beauty of RSS feeds -- they are the same no matter which client you read the feeds from.

I really hope the future of DVR scheduling moves towards a standard which allows all networks to use a common syndication interface which can communicate with a network-connected DVR or computer. At the end of the day, there'd be a standard way to subscribe to an episode, series, and set it to record new episodes and/or repeats.

Advertising opportunities

If there were a standard DVR scheduling protocol, just think of how this could be leveraged through online advertising. A few ideas:

  1. A call-to-action could be included within a link or a banner ad to "schedule this show to record" by simply clicking on it and adding the "feed" to your TV scheduler. You could then directly measure campaign effectiveness to new "subscribers."
  2. Similar to FeedBurner, a measurement service could be provided so networks could understand total subscribers.
  3. Standardizing on a protocol would also allow online video sharing sites (Hulu, YouTube, etc.) to provide feeds to a DVR when a new episode/show/clip is available from your favorite show/contributor. I'd love to see YouTube feeds in my DVR list -- when I'm sitting at the couch is when I have free time to check out online videos in longer sessions.
  4. Viral marketing would be much easier -- forward an email to a friend: "Hey, record this one episode, it's hilarious." Recipient clicks and they're done.

Hulu is a step in the right direction

I can subscribe to an RSS feed for new episodes posted for a show or channel on Hulu. The missing link is the ability to play this content through the television. It's still not quite convenient (or comfortable) to huddle around a MacBook Pro 15" or a 20" iMac -- but good enough for catching an episode you missed or while on the road.

Yes, this is vastly over-simplified

I realize there are technical considerations that need to be accounted for, however my ignorance to DVR and TV-scheduling technology allows me to demand features like this. :)

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23Feb/072

Disappointing DIRECTV HD DVR

Posted by Eric Long

I posted last month about the upcoming arrival of our DIRECTV HD DVR. After a month of using this very heavily (between my wife and I, we watch/record about 20 total shows on a weekly basis), we have finally determined that this falls well short of our expectations and we are very disappointed in the product. Let's review:

We're previous Tivo customers
Our main DIRECTV receiver was a DIRECTV/TIVO combo receiver which allowed recording of 2 live programs simultaneously and the ability to watch a 3rd program that was already recorded. We also have a single, standard receiver for a guest bedroom. We've been DIRECTV customers for nearly 5 years now, having moved service with us from MN to NC as well.

DIRECTV HD DVR: The Good

  1. Unlike the old Tivo Series 1 DIRECTV/TIVO DVR, the DIRECTV HD DVR is very fast at setting up recorded shows via the guide. Tivo Series 1 would force you through a couple of menus before you would have successfully set up a show for recording.
  2. Setting up a season pass is just as easy: click record twice. You're done. Tivo was a longer, more drawn out process, and I really like the DIRECTV HD DVR'S way of simplifying and making some assumptions for you (i.e. keep 5 most recent, delete as needed, etc.). You can always override the settings, but from our standpoint, we typically watch the recorded show within a week of it airing, so the defaults are good. Rarely do we record something and have it fall off the list without having viewed it.

DIRECTV HD DVR: The Bad

  1. The system is too slow for the fast-forwarding speeds. On this system, there are 4 fast-forward speeds: 1, 2, 3, and 4. Unlike Tivo, the DIRECTV HD DVR does not have a skip button for jumping ahead in 15-minute increments.
      • So, they have a speed of "4" for fast-forwarding. This speed is too fast for any human to be able to react quickly to the choppy on-screen playback when fast-forwarding between commercials, so you're guaranteed to overshoot the commercial break and end up several minutes into your program. So, we reserve speed 4 for jump far ahead in a recorded show.
      • Speed 3 is typically where we fast forward. The problem again is that the play back is so choppy that we frequently overshoot the commercial break by several seconds. The timeline bar at the bottom doesn't even update in real-time with the fast forward...it too is very choppy. It's really difficult to easily fast forward on this system.
      • Speed 2 is too slow for fast forward, but not fast enough...it's what we use if we undershoot the commercial break.
      • Speed 1 is very slow, but again, the screen is choppy enough to still overshoot your desired start point in the recorded show.
      1. There is no obvious way to toggle between both live signals. On our previous Tivo Series 1 DIRECTV receiver, we could hit "Live TV" and toggle back and forth between live signals. Not with the DIRECTV HD DVR. This is a bummer for us football fans who have SuperFan on one channel and our favorite NFL Sunday Ticket game on another channel.
      2. After finishing watching a recorded show, the DVR will drop you off right in the middle of any actively recorded show. This was a huge oversight. We watch several shows that are back-to-back. We'll start watching one show about a half hour into it, finish it up, and then as soon as you hit the "stop" button, the user interface of the DVR shows you a live feed of what's being recorded. This is frustrating when you don't want to see any spoilers in the show you're recording. This happens on a daily basis and seems to be a design oversight. Some real-life usability testing should have flushed this oversight out, but apparently not.
      3. Out-of-sync video and audio playback. This has happened occasionally on our system, usually for a minute or two and then it "fixes itself." Tonight, however, my wife swore the world was going to end because Grey's Anatomy was entirely out of sync the entire show. We're not talking a 1/2-second sync error, we're talking the video appeared to be playing at a much faster rate than the audio. The audio track wasn't even close to being in sync with the video. After several stops, starts, fast-forwards, rewinds, we gave up. We'll watch this episode on iTunes, thankyouverymuch.
      4. Lack of integrated features like Internet scheduling. Tivo Series 2 was headed in the right direction with the ability to schedule shows to record online, the ability to access Internet applications, etc.
      5. Once a show is deleted, it's gone. The concept of the trash can or recycle bin from a computer should be available on all systems where media is constantly viewed and removed. Occasionally, we accidentally delete shows on our DVR and want to retrieve them. Tivo Series 2 added this functionality in mid-2006, and we loved it.

      There are several oversights with this product...it's getting so frustrating (we still have our old Tivo Series 1 and it's much nicer in terms of its intuitive menus and fast forwarding) that I'd seriously consider dropping DIRECTV in favor of HD Cable with a Tivo Series 3. I really wish DIRECTV had stuck with Tivo on this HD DVR. The Tivo experience is much more pleasant...the DIRECTV experience feels like a cheap knock-off. Certainly not as bad as Time Warner's DVR, but also not in the same league as a Tivo...which is unfortunate.

      A good lesson in product development and delivering a product consumers want. I feel this one has really missed the mark...it's one thing to have an HD DVR, but I've invested a lot of money in our HD system, the last thing I wanted was a sub-standard DVR because it's something we use every day. We'll switch to HD cable by the end of 2007 if the DIRECTV HD DVR isn't improved based on our complaints listed above.

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      28Dec/060

      Tivo HD + DVR coming in 2 weeks

      Posted by Eric Long

      We recently became new owners of a 50" Panasonic Plasma TV. With this TV comes HD capabilities. We are die-hard DIRECTV subscribers, so naturally we wanted the best of all worlds: HD + Satellite + DVR.

      DIRECTV HD DVR

      Unfortunately, being the holiday season, DIRECTV had these wonderful units on back order. :( So, this meant we would have to settle for standard HD satellite with no DVR capabilities. This is being installed on 12/30. But, good news! Last week (after only about an 8-day waiting period), DIRECTV's automated service called to inform us that the DVR was available. I promptly called, kindly accepted the $299 one-time charge (spread across 3 billing cycles, of course), and scheduled the DVR for installation on 1/15.

      I'm interested to see what the interface is like on this new DVR. It doesn't appear to be a Tivo unit, so we may be giving up the use of Tivo capabilities, which would really be a bummer. But, with only one HD TV in the house, it's not like a networked Tivo does us much good, anyway. Plus, downloading HD content via a wireless connection to a PC for offline viewing isn't exactly, speedy either. Hopefully DIRECTV has ways to schedule programming online with this new DVR. It sure does look nice -- can't wait to get my hands on it.

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