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View Full Version : Cablecard Replacement By 2012, Temporary Fix By This Fall


Jon Childs
03-18-2010, 08:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://hd.engadget.com/2010/03/17/a-cablecard-replacement-is-due-by-december-2012-bandaids-by-thi/' target='_blank'>http://hd.engadget.com/2010/03/17/a...andaids-by-thi/</a><br /><br /></div><p><em>"The biggest news is that the FCC has asked the industry to come up with a residential IP gateway that is open and that will provide same abilities as your provider's equipment, and most importantly, it should enable the very same gear to work no matter what type of service you prefer, whether it be satellite, cable or fiber. But while the FCC has given the industry until December of 2012 to define and deploy these IP gateways before implementing an "appropriate enforcement mechanism," in the meantime the FCC wants to see the biggest issues with CableCARDs resolved by this Fall."</em></p><p><img src="http://images.thoughtsmedia.com/resizer/thumbs/size/600/wpt/auto/1268928761.usr486.jpg" style="border: 0;" /></p><p>For all the Tivo and HTPC enthusiasts out there this is great news.&nbsp; The ability to replace your service, but still use the same equipment should be a great selling point for any hardware vendor trying to sell third party set top boxes.&nbsp;It is also good news that the FCC is trying to make current Cablecard offerings more competitive with the service supplied set top boxes.&nbsp; One of the FCC's list of fixes includes allowing software to use Cablecard based tuners without having to go through the full Cablelabs certification.&nbsp; This means you could buy your HTPC with a Cablelabs certified tuner and run whatever software you wanted on it.&nbsp; This is sure to please all those MythTV users out there.</p>

Reid Kistler
03-18-2010, 08:20 PM
Don't use a Cable Card, but anything that promotes competition AND standardized formats seems worth applauding.

We use U-Verse at home - for TV, Internet, VOIP - and one of the frustrations (beyond needing a set top box for Every TV - although our former cable company was also moving in that direction :(), is the relatively small size of the DVR HD - especially when recording HD broadcasts. Having the ability to put a Tivo (or whatever) DVR into the loop, and knowing that it would still work if we changed providers, would be a nice advantage over the current state of affairs.

Jason Dunn
03-19-2010, 06:49 AM
My provider - Shaw Cable - never even adopted cable card, which always ticked me off. There's no way for me to get HD recordings on a PC...I have to use their ultra-mega-awful-crappy PVRs. :mad: