

Likewise, I have to delete files from iTunes if I no longer want to keep the program.ĮyeTV has been a marginally acceptable way for years, and it’s facing tough competition from up and comers, as I discuss next. As a result, my workflow results in duplicates of everything exported, with the originals chewing up hundreds of gigabytes until I occasionally go through and delete them. You can opt to prune what’s been stored or otherwise manage storage. However, there’s no way to delete the recordings from within eyeTV automatically.
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However, transcoding is extremely slow and can drag down the entire Mac as the app doesn’t throttle itself when burning CPU cycles.Įxporting to iTunes lets you use an Apple TV to browse for computers and then bring up the converted shows. The options include presets for a variety of iOS devices, Apple TV models, and HD formats, and you can customize the settings further. Unlike the other DVRs in testing, you can transcode recordings from eyeTV to iTunes, and set that up as an automatic option after the app captures a program. While some remote-control apps can traverse that, eyeTV cannot.) (I have a “double NAT” due to my ISP’s peculiarity.
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The iOS app can connect for remote access to eyeTV in macOS if you set up a free account and have the right network configuration. The experience is inconsistent and miserable, unfortunately.

There’s no Apple TV app, so the iOS app ($5) is the best way to push programs to your Apple TV through AirPlay. The app can be reached on a local network as a server through Safari using Bonjour to view a stripped-down playback interface. You can also set up Smart Guides for actors, choose only HDTV broadcasts, or only shows with subtitles.ĮyeTV is a scheduler, recorder, and player all in one, and you can tune live television through it as well. Smart Guides can have a number of criteria, so you can grab Saturday Night Live, no matter what network on which it appears, or only when it’s on your local NBC affiliate. You can record an individual TV program, but if it’s part of an ongoing show, series, or the like, the app provides a button to let you record all occurrences as a Smart Guide. The app offers a variety of ways to record via the guide. There’s no graphical way to browse or group by series, genre, or the like.ĮyeTV hasn’t changed much in years, offering a bare-bones DVR approach. The subscription includes actors on shows and a brief description, but no show art and no links from names to find other shows they’re in. requires a yearly €17.95 ($19) subscription to TV Guide.
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Despite consistent updates and bug fixes, the fundamental software looks unchanged from years ago, and remains just as frustrating to use now as then.ĮyeTV orients itself around a programming grid, which in the U.S. The €79.95 ($85) eyeTV 3 macOS app is showing its age. Instead, I’ll provide a feature overview. The other three I cover are in testing, so we aren’t ready to review them until they’re in release form as a server or service. Some offer Internet-based remote access, live TV viewing, and native apps for iOS and Apple TV as well as other platforms.ĮyeTV is in commercial release. What each of the DVRs offers is a program guide the ability to record at will or via schedules, including recurring programs and access to your recorded programs from within a network. standard that lets you use BYOB tuner/DVR with cable service, including encrypted signals, but not those that also have DRM on top. There’s a third model too, called HDHomeRun Prime ($120 on Amazon), which adds an additional tuner connected to a slot for a CableCard, an erratically supported U.S. The Extend has built-in on-the-fly H.264 compression, which produces a dramatically smaller file. The HDHomeRun Connect ($93 on Amazon) and HDHomeRun Extend ($179.99 MSRP available on Amazon) versions both have two tuners, but the Connect streams high-bandwidth uncompressed video (usually in MPEG2 format), which can run 20Mbps for HD content. All the DVR software I examined supports these models SiliconDust’s DVR offering includes support for a fourth, discontinued model. is purchasing a networked tuner from SiliconDust, which has three current models.

The unifying factor in all these systems in the U.S.
