Wired News: TiVo Untethered and Ready to Go
Fifty-seven channels and nothin' on...
Fifty-seven channels and nothin'
-Bruce Springsteen
Now you can carry all 500 of them ...
Wired News: TiVo Untethered and Ready to Go
"TiVo Untethered and Ready to Go"
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- TiVo pioneered digital video recording as a new way of watching television -- when you want it. Now it could be TV where you want it, too.
The long-awaited service feature called TiVoToGo, set to launch Monday, will give users their first taste of TiVo untethered.
No longer confined to TiVo digital video recorders in the living room or bedroom, subscribers will be able to transfer their recorded shows to PCs or laptops and take them on the road -- as long as the shows are not specially tagged with copy restrictions. That's also the case for pay-per-view or on-demand movies, and some premium paid programming.
Users also will be able to copy shows onto a DVD -- soon after but not immediately at the service launch, company officials said.
The mobile feature is a key step in TiVo's long-term vision of giving consumers more freedom with how and where they enjoy their favorite TV. TiVo plans to extend TiVoToGo so it will work on other portable media gadgets, as well.
The company, based in the south San Francisco Bay community of Alviso, eventually hopes to expand its service so video can be accessed anywhere via the Internet.
"It lays the foundation of moving content out of the living room," TiVo spokeswoman Kathryn Kelly said.
Fifty-seven channels and nothin'
-Bruce Springsteen
Now you can carry all 500 of them ...
Wired News: TiVo Untethered and Ready to Go
"TiVo Untethered and Ready to Go"
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- TiVo pioneered digital video recording as a new way of watching television -- when you want it. Now it could be TV where you want it, too.
The long-awaited service feature called TiVoToGo, set to launch Monday, will give users their first taste of TiVo untethered.
No longer confined to TiVo digital video recorders in the living room or bedroom, subscribers will be able to transfer their recorded shows to PCs or laptops and take them on the road -- as long as the shows are not specially tagged with copy restrictions. That's also the case for pay-per-view or on-demand movies, and some premium paid programming.
Users also will be able to copy shows onto a DVD -- soon after but not immediately at the service launch, company officials said.
The mobile feature is a key step in TiVo's long-term vision of giving consumers more freedom with how and where they enjoy their favorite TV. TiVo plans to extend TiVoToGo so it will work on other portable media gadgets, as well.
The company, based in the south San Francisco Bay community of Alviso, eventually hopes to expand its service so video can be accessed anywhere via the Internet.
"It lays the foundation of moving content out of the living room," TiVo spokeswoman Kathryn Kelly said.