Elgato Eyetv Diversity Dual Tuner Tv Stick Freeview For Mac

The PCTV Dual DVB-T Diversity Stick (2001e) drivers will not work with my Elgato EyeTV Diversity and Windows XP any suggestions? November 21, 2009 at 4:44 PM AT said. This might be useful for somebody, but Elgato EyeTV Diversity now works for Windows 7 without any additional input from the user. Make Offer - elgato EyeTV Diversity Dual-Tuner DVB-T Stick (USB 2.0) silver, Windows & Mac ELGATO EYETV 250 PLUS for MAC -Analog/Digital TV Receiver and Video Converter $169.00.

Newegg.com - A great place to buy computers, computer parts, electronics, software, accessories, and DVDs online. With great prices, fast shipping, and top-rated customer service - Newegg shopping upgraded ™If you are reading this message, Please to reload this page.(Do not use your browser's 'Refresh' button). Please if you're running the latest version of your browser and you still see this message.If you see this message, your web browser doesn't support JavaScript or JavaScript is disabled.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings so Newegg.com can function correctly. Model Brand elgato Model EyeTV One Details Type USB TV Tuner Stick Others An internet connection is required to download EyeTV Program Guide information from the TV Guide data serviceAn antenna is required, not included Specifications ATSC-Tuner- Frequency Range: 48-801 MHz (VHF and UHF)- Digital TV Standards: ATSCInput and Output- USB 2.0 cable (200 mm)- Antenna input: Standard F connectorPower Supply- USB bus powerDimensions- 3.54' x 1.14' x 0.55'(enclosure only)- 0.09 lbs. TV Digital Tuner ATSC Remote Control No Tuner Interface USB 2.0 FM Tuner No System Mac Compatible Yes Processor Macintosh: Intel Core processorPC: 2.0 GHz Intel/AMD CPU or Intel Atom CPUNote: 720p or 1080i HD features require an Intel Core Duo processor. Pros:Although I am a mac user, I only have over the air TV and when I built my Windows 7 HTPC, I chose this tuner.

This tuner works with Windows 7, I believe right out of the gate, no special drivers are needed, although you can download what you need to. Windows Media Center recognized the tuner and got to work scanning the channels. It worked fine with Windows Media Center on Windows 7 64-bit.Cons:Here is where I have to drop an egg. Although the tuner works fine, its packaged software is not compatible with Windows, and also, the tuner doesn't pick up all channels as my off-brand LCD tv. I only have an indoor antenna, and I ran my coax cable into the tuner and it picked up about 7 less channels than when I had the antenna hooked up to the TV, and this was with the antenna in the exact same position. In other words, I only unplugged the coax and had it either connected to the TV or the TV tuner card. With it connected to the Elgato, I constantly had to change antenna positions.

If I were to do this over again, or when I upgrade in the future when I get a few extra dollars, I am just going to buy an add-in card instead of using a USB tuner and see if that helps.Overall Review:I recommend this device, but I'd stick with the system it was designed for - Mac. It works well enough on Windows 7, but don't expect to receive all your channels without getting up from your seat and readjusting the antenna. Keep the antenna hooked to your TV and use this device on your mac instead. Pros:Plug it in to your Mac, connect a good antenna, and watch HDTV. It's pretty simple.After buying one for my mom, I bought another for my uncle. And after a few months with just Netflix and Hulu, I bought one for myself.Here in Los Angeles, I generally have full and complete listings for the approximately one hundred channels I receive. The software works okay, if you dedicate a fast external hard drive to recordings you'll probably enjoy the experience more.EyeTV iPad app is neat.Cons:As a long-time user of MythTV on Linux with MythFrontend on my Mac, I can't stand the software although it basically accomplishes the same task while making exports to iPod/iPhone/iPads way easier.Activation code for software.

Is El Gato a software company or a hardware company?Overall Review:I think you're buying this because you already watch TV online but want to see some over-the-air broadcasts. And it works great, just spend fifty dollars on your antenna. Pros:Intuitive and easy-to-use software. The included software package was the main reason I picked this over some cheaper tuners, and I have not been disappointed.The tuner itself seems very effective at picking up TV channels in my area - better than my actual TV using the same antenna. Picture quality is as good as it gets.I love the built-in software features to help you easily edit and export recordings: you can easily cut out commercials and re-encode the recordings down to a smaller size so they'll actually fit on your hard drive for later viewing.Cons:More expensive than cut-rate tuners. (You probably get what you pay for.)Overall Review:I primarily bought this tuner to use it to record some of my favorite OTA TV shows while not at home.

Basically I wanted a poor man's DVR. I picked the EyeTV because it seemed like it offered the best software experience on my Mac. I have not been disappointed.A noted feature, but something to be aware of: with this device, you can only receive one channel at a time, whether viewing or recording. So if you want to watch the game on one channel and record a show in the background, you will need two tuners. I'm thinking about buying another for this very purpose.Also, initially recorded shows are.huge. (about 4-6 GB for an hour). This is to be expected, but if you get carried away like I did and start recording a lot of shows, you might need more hard drive space!

EyeTV
Product typeTV tuners
OwnerGeniatech
Introduced2002
Previous ownersElgato Systems
Websitewww.geniatech.eu
www.geniatech.us/eyetv/

EyeTV is a European brand of TV tuners that allow users to watch TV on various devices including computers and smartphones. The brand was introduced in 2002 by Elgato Systems and was sold to Geniatech in 2016.

History[edit]

The first EyeTV model, introduced in 2002.

The first EyeTV hardware device was introduced in November 2002.[1] It was a small USB-powered device that contained a cable tuner and hardware encoder in order to convert television video into an MPEG-1 format for watching on a computer.[2] It also had coaxial and RCA plugs to connect it with a VCR or camcorder.[2] A 2002 article in Macworld said it was the 'first step' in bridging computers and television, but at this point still had 'some kinks'.[2]

The next iteration was released in 2004 and called EyeTV 200. EyeTV 200 introduced a digital remote control and converted video programming into the higher-quality MPEG-2 format.[1][3] A Macworld review gave it 4 out of 5 stars for 'very good' and emphasized the video quality and ease-of-use.[1] A story in the Washington Post said it was more expensive than some alternatives, but worked on a Mac and had good-quality recordings.[3] Also in 2004 the first EyeTV product for satellite television was introduced with the EyeTV 310,[4] which was later discontinued and replaced with EyeTV Sat.[5]

Dvb-t

That same year a home media server called EyeHome was introduced. It had recording features similar to other EyeTV products, but was also intended for streaming a computer display to a television.[6] It connected Mac computers and televisions that share the same home network. A review in Macworld gave it three stars or a 'good' rating, saying that it was easy to install and worked well with Apple applications, but some aspects were quirky or frustrating.[7]Sound and Vision Magazine said it was 'pretty darn cool' and an easy, inexpensive way to get media server functionality, though there were some user interface quirks. It gave the product an 89 out of 100 rating.[8]

By 2005, several other EyeTV products had been introduced, such as the EyeTV for DTT, the EyeTV EZ[9] and the EyeTV Wonder.[10] The EyeTV for DTT (digital terrestrial TV) is a small USB-powered device with an antenna for receiving free over-the-air television broadcasts. It received a 4 out of 5 rating in TechRadar.[11] A review in The Register gave it an 85 percent rating.[12] The Eye TV Wonder was only available from July 2005 to January 2006, before being discontinued and replaced with the Eye TV EZ. The EZ was a basic, entry-level product with an analog tuner for watching TV on a Mac computer.[13]

In 2006, version 2.1 of the EyeTV software was introduced with a new user-interface, an integrated TV guide from TitanTV[14] and compatibility with Apple remotes.[15] The interface was similar to that of other Apple products.[16] An article in Macworld praised the update and especially the new editing features, but said it had some quirks, such as a difficult-to-find Edit button.[16] Some of the iHome software, which plays video content from a computer onto a television, was released in 2006 as a universal binary.[17]

Version 2.4 of the EyeTV software was released in 2007 and added an export tool for Apple TV.[18]

Exit from the ATSC tuner market[edit]

As of February 2015, EyeTV no longer sells ATSC tuners. (ATSC is the digital television standard used in the United States, Canada, South Korea, Mexico and the Dominican Republic.) The Elgato web site explicitly declined to give a reason: 'Elgato Technical Support is not able to comment on this business decision.'[19]

In February 2016, Elgato sold EyeTV to Geniatech Europe GmbH[20], a wholly owned subsidiary of Shenzhen Geniatech Inc., Ltd. Geniatech will take over the complete EyeTV product line. This company no longer sells the Turbo.264 HD software and reduced digital TV tuners to one model. No news about Thunderbolt products continuity.

Products[edit]

The EyeTV Micro product for Android devices
The EyeTV Hybrid

Over the air[edit]

The EyeTV Diversity is a USB-powered device with dual tuners for receiving over the air television broadcasts. The tuners can be used simultaneously for an optimized signal, or one tuner can be used to record a channel, while another is used to watch a separate show.[21] Diversity was first introduced in November 2006.[22] A driver in 2009 added compatibility with Windows 7.[21] A review in TechRadar gave EyeTV Diversity five out of five stars.[23]PC Advisor and Pocket-Lint both gave it four out of five stars.[21][24]

EyeTV Hybrid, which can pick up digital or analog television broadcasts, was first released in early 2009.[25] A CNET review said the device was easy and effective to use, but that buffering was often too slow to make watching live TV practical.[26] Macworld said EyeTV's 'core strength' was recording scheduled TV shows.[16] A review in PC Magazine gave the product 3.5 out of 5 stars. The review said it 'works exceptionally well' but doesn't come with Windows software.[27]

Satellite[edit]

In June 2010, the EyeTV HD product for recording high-definition cable and satellite programming was introduced.[28] Because cable and satellite signals are encoded, the device must be connected to a tuner from a television provider. Then it provides remote controls, recording and DVR-functionality from a connected computer. A Macworld review gave the product four out of five stars.[28] A review in Laptop Magazine gave EyeTV HD 3.5 out of 5 stars. It said the interface was intuitive and the video quality was good, but noted it was only compatible with Macs.[29]

The EyeTV Netstream 4Sat has four satellite tuners, allowing four channels to be watched simultaneously from different devices. It was introduced in 2014.[30] A review in Macworld gave it 5 out of 5 stars. The review said Elgato had addressed some of the limitations of prior EyeTV satellite tuners like Netstream Sat/DTT.[30] Pocket-Lint gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars[31] CNET gave it five stars.[32] The EyeTV Sat product, which receives free-to-air television, was introduced in Europe in late 2009.[33]The Register gave it an 80% rating, saying that it 'works well' and that the documentation did not make it clear how to install the Apple and Windows versions of the software.[5]

Software[edit]

The EyeTV software was updated to version 3.0 in 2008. 3.0 made user interface improvements, such as being able to mark favorites or automatically record shows in a series. A review in TechRadar gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars. The review noted that EyeTV was the de facto software for TV and computer video integration and praised its new features, but said it was expensive when purchased separately.[34] A 2007 article in MacLife said their 'top picks' for USB-powered tuners were those using the EyeTV software, such as the EyeTV hybrid or EyeTV 250.[35] In addition to Elgato's EyeTV line of consumer devices, other brands such as Terratec and Miglia use the EyeTV software in their products through licensing agreements with Elgato.[23][35]

Mobile[edit]

The EyeTV W was introduced in November 2013. It is a small 44 gram device that receives free digital over-the-air television broadcasts and makes it available to portable devices through a wireless hot spot.[36] A review in Macworld said it was portable, easy to use and had good battery life, but noted that users can't connect to other WiFi networks and watch TV at the same time. It gave the product 4 out of 5 stars.[36] An EyeTV Mobile device for iPads was announced at the 2011 International Franchise Conference as the first tuner for the new Freeview system in the United Kingdom.[37]

We respect your privacy and take it very seriously.Ask Ubuntu works best with JavaScript enabled. At least just name the possible ways and give proper text to your link.The latest in MIMO tew-643oi technology ensures the fastest communication speeds that wireless n technology provides. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Cookie PolicyPrivacy Policyand our Terms of Service. Privacy Policy and Disclaimer. If so, what drivers did you use and where did you find them? Tew 643pi drivers for mac.

Vcds 805 de download. No specific info about version 805.1. Please visit the main page of VCDS on Software Informer. The default installation folder is C: Ross-Tech VCDS It is essential NOT to install in the Program Files tree in on systems running Windows Vista or newer. To remove other old versions: Versions prior to Release 704, simply delete the shortcuts from your Start menu. Desktop and delete the folder (s) where the program was installed.

Subsequently the EyeTV Mobile and EyeTV Micro products were released for iPhones and Android respectively.[38] The Micro and Mobile allow users to watch or record free over-the-air television programming from their smartphone.[39] Reviews of the mobile products ranged from 2 out of 5 stars by CNET[40] 4 out of 5 stars in Macworld[39] and 3 out of 5 stars in PC Magazine.[41] There is also an EyeTV iPhone app that allows the user to watch their recorded shows on their iPhone, control their EyeTV recordings or watch live TV while connected to Wi-Fi.[42] A compact version for laptops, the EyeTV GO, was introduced in May 2014.[43]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcSeff, Jonathan (July 2004). 'EyeTV 200'. Macworld.
  2. ^ abcJonathan, Seff (November 2002). 'EyeTV'. Macworld.
  3. ^ abGreenberg, Daniel; Savetz, Kevin (June 20, 2004). 'Devices Mimic TiVo -- Somewhat'. The Washington Post. pp. F07. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  4. ^https://www.elgato.com/de/news/eyetv-310-fuer-paytv-mac
  5. ^ abJoseph, Cliff (July 29, 2009). 'Elgato EyeTV Sat'. The Register.
  6. ^Biersdorfer, J. D. (May 27, 2004). 'The Mac Get Its Big Break: A Role in Home Theaters'. The New York Times. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  7. ^Seff, Jonathan (July 2004). 'EyeHome'. Macworld.
  8. ^'Elgato EyeHome Digital Media Player and EyeTV 200 Tuner/DVR Page'. Sound and Vision Magazine. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  9. ^Oaten, Chris (November 19, 2005). 'Digital TV in tiny package'. Advertiser.
  10. ^Biersdorfer, J.D. (August 3, 2005). 'In Small Rooms, Fitting Many Functions: Tech Built for the Dorm'. The New York Times. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  11. ^Phin, Christopher (September 6, 2008). 'Do good things always come in small packages? Elgato thinks so..' TechRadar. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  12. ^Joseph, Cliff (November 26, 2008). 'Elgato EyeTV DTT Mac digital TV tuner'. The Register.
  13. ^Linecker, Anton (January 13, 2006). 'EyeTV EZ'. Macworld. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  14. ^'New Products'. IEEE Multimedia. 13 (2): 93–94. 2006. doi:10.1109/MMUL.2006.38. ISSN1070-986X.
  15. ^Withers, Stephen (November 2006). 'Elgato EyeTV 2.3 and equinux MediaCentral 2.1'. APC. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  16. ^ abcLinecker, Anton (March 28, 2006). 'EyeTV 2.1'. Macworld.
  17. ^Cohen, Peter (June 5, 2006). 'Elgato offers Universal Binary update for EyeHome'. PC World. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  18. ^Machover, Carl; Kasik, David J. (2007). 'Tools and Products'. IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. 27 (4): 96–95. doi:10.1109/MCG.2007.92. ISSN0272-1716.
  19. ^As of February 2015, Elgato no longer offers TV tuner devices in North America https://help.elgato.com/customer/portal/articles/1858903-as-of-february-2015-elgato-no-longer-offers-tv-tuner-devices-in-north-america
  20. ^'Elgato sells EyeTV'. Elgato. February 26, 2016. Archived from the original on November 15, 2016.
  21. ^ abcHarrison, Andrew (December 15, 2009). 'Elgato EyeTV Diversity review'. PC Advisor. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  22. ^Murph, Darren (November 7, 2006). 'Elgato unveils dual-tuner EyeTV Diversity USB stick in the UK'. Engadget. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  23. ^ ab'Elgato EyeTV Diversity review'. TechRadar. January 10, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  24. ^Miles, Stuart (February 11, 2009). 'Elgato EyeTV Diversity dual-tuner DVB-T stick review'. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  25. ^Sorrel, Charlie (March 10, 2009). 'Hands On With Elgato's EyeTV Hybrid'. WIRED. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  26. ^'Elgato EyeTV Hybrid review: Elgato EyeTV Hybrid'. CNET. April 18, 2011. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  27. ^Greenwald, Will. 'Elgato EyeTV Hybrid'. PC Magazine. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  28. ^ abSeff, Jonathan (June 11, 2010). 'Elgato EyeTV HD'. Macworld. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  29. ^Prospero, Michael (June 15, 2010). 'Elgato EyeTV HD Review'. Laptop Magazine. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  30. ^ abDenver, David (January 20, 2014). 'Elgato EyeTV Netstream 4Sat review: DVB-S2 HD TV Tuner'. Macworld. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  31. ^Morris, Ian (March 24, 2014). 'Elgato EyeTV Netstream 4Sat review'. Pocket-Lint. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  32. ^'Elgato EyeTV Netstream DTT review'. CNET. April 27, 2010. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  33. ^Justins, Adrian (October 20, 2009). 'Elgato EyeTV Sat review'. TechRadar. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  34. ^'Elgato EyeTV 3 review: The best TV software just got better, but it's not cheap'. TechRadar. February 26, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  35. ^ abLu, Cathy (March 2007). Mac Life. Future US, Inc. pp. 36–37. 19354010.
  36. ^ abHattersley, Lou (November 13, 2013). 'EyeTV W Review: watch live television on iPhone and iPad'. Macworld.
  37. ^Burns, Chris (September 2, 2011). 'Elgato EyeTV Mobile DTT/Freeview Television Tuner for iPad 2 Hands-on'. Slashgear. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  38. ^Rigg, Jamie (August 31, 2012). 'Elgato outs smaller EyeTV Mobile for iPhones and iPads, EyeTV Micro for Android'. Engadget. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  39. ^ abSpence, Nick (December 22, 2011). 'EyeTV Mobile review'. Macworld. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  40. ^'Live TV on your iPad comes up short on channels'. CNET. December 3, 2012. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  41. ^Kim, Eugene. 'Elgato EyeTV Mobile'. PC Magazine. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  42. ^Bob LeVitus (January 19, 2010). Incredible iPhone Apps For Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. p. 54. ISBN978-0-470-63262-8.
  43. ^Hemphill, Kenny (May 2014). 'Elgato EyeTV Go'. MacUser. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
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