Want to watch TV on my thinkpad.. HOw??
Want to watch TV on my thinkpad.. HOw??
OK i would like to be able to watch TV on my T42.
What would be the best way fo doing this?
I saw some USB TV tuners that ranges from $60 to $150.
Has anyone used them? How reliable are they? The quality and so on?
Or is there some better way to watch TV on Thinkpad?
Thanks.
What would be the best way fo doing this?
I saw some USB TV tuners that ranges from $60 to $150.
Has anyone used them? How reliable are they? The quality and so on?
Or is there some better way to watch TV on Thinkpad?
Thanks.
* T60 * X61 * X41 * T500 * ThinkCentre A58 *
-
beeblebrox
- **SENIOR** Member

- Posts: 760
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 3:22 pm
- Location: No location is OK - BillM
I've used Adaptec's VideOH! Media Center product which includes an external USB 2.0 capture device with audio/video/S-Video inputs and coaxial connections. It works with basic cable (up to channel 158), and even though I have Digital Comcast Cable, it still manages to grab the first 80 or so channels, plus a couple Cinemax channels that I DON'T get with my Comcast set top box.
I've also used the ATI USB 2.0 piece and I prefer it because of the TV listings (Gemstar) stuff, and the channel surfing features, among others. I also have used the ATI TV Wonder Pro PCI card in my Dock II which works as well.
Daniel.
I've also used the ATI USB 2.0 piece and I prefer it because of the TV listings (Gemstar) stuff, and the channel surfing features, among others. I also have used the ATI TV Wonder Pro PCI card in my Dock II which works as well.
Daniel.
MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display / 2.6GHz Ci7 / 16GB DDR3/ 512GB SSD / Mac OS X 10.9.3
I am also looking at using DVB-T (Digital Terestrial TV) on my ThinkPad.
What I have found so far.
I have a VisionPlus DVB-T PCI card in my PC and the card works ok (even though it has an old BT878 chipset) but the software like all as I have heard is pretty bad (ie. not stable enough and a bit awarked to use).
The ASUS W1000a which is being advertised as having a TV Tuner built in uses a Lifeview Mini PCI card that appears to do Digital and Analog Tuning.
Lifeview has a PCMICA DVB-T card (Philips SA7xxx based) as well.
Steer clear of any product from AverMedia they are the worst I have ever seen. Avermedia drivers and application give no end of problems.
Leadtek have good sofatware and updates but still only make Analog cards.
I am down to a choice between USB2.0 or PCMCIA based DVB-T TV Tuner.
What I have found so far.
I have a VisionPlus DVB-T PCI card in my PC and the card works ok (even though it has an old BT878 chipset) but the software like all as I have heard is pretty bad (ie. not stable enough and a bit awarked to use).
The ASUS W1000a which is being advertised as having a TV Tuner built in uses a Lifeview Mini PCI card that appears to do Digital and Analog Tuning.
Lifeview has a PCMICA DVB-T card (Philips SA7xxx based) as well.
Steer clear of any product from AverMedia they are the worst I have ever seen. Avermedia drivers and application give no end of problems.
Leadtek have good sofatware and updates but still only make Analog cards.
I am down to a choice between USB2.0 or PCMCIA based DVB-T TV Tuner.
-
shutchinson
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 10:38 am
The USB 2.0 devices are pretty good, though I would love to have a PCMCIA slot tuner. I mostly use the tuner when I'm on the road, and carying the extra bulk around is a pain in the butt.
Note, when trying to connect into hotel cable TV networks you often need a security tool. Essentially it's a hollow hex wrench that will fit into those plastic "guards" that they have in most hotels. You can find them on the net of course for about $8. (or so I've heard, all standard disclaimers apply).
Scott
Note, when trying to connect into hotel cable TV networks you often need a security tool. Essentially it's a hollow hex wrench that will fit into those plastic "guards" that they have in most hotels. You can find them on the net of course for about $8. (or so I've heard, all standard disclaimers apply).
Scott
Plextor ConvertX PVR and SageTV
SageTV with the Plextor ConvertX PVR PX-TV402U works great.
Only product that does Divx timeshifting. Really nice PVR UI and video quality and allows storing almost twice as much video per GB as other solutions.
Only product that does Divx timeshifting. Really nice PVR UI and video quality and allows storing almost twice as much video per GB as other solutions.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
-
x230 compatible fans (want to upgrade and make it quieter)
by blueredcat123 » Sun Jan 01, 2017 5:41 pm » in ThinkPad X200/201/220 and X300/301 Series - 4 Replies
- 1000 Views
-
Last post by mj0
Wed Jan 04, 2017 4:52 pm
-
-
-
Thinkpad X1 Tablet vs Thinkpad Yoga
by Whitieiii » Wed Mar 01, 2017 4:18 am » in GENERAL ThinkPad News/Comments & Questions - 1 Replies
- 384 Views
-
Last post by Whitieiii
Mon Mar 06, 2017 6:53 pm
-
-
-
Thinkpad T450s error: thinkpad ec_read_row: failed requesting row
by Dobob » Fri Apr 14, 2017 3:17 pm » in Linux Questions - 1 Replies
- 271 Views
-
Last post by dave67
Sun Jun 04, 2017 11:31 am
-
-
-
(WITHDRAWN) FT: ThinkPad R500 (2714CTO) for ThinkPad T500 (T510)?
by DartMan68 » Sun Jun 11, 2017 10:28 pm » in Marketplace - Forum Members only - 2 Replies
- 184 Views
-
Last post by DartMan68
Tue Jun 13, 2017 8:34 pm
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests





