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Saving from Uverse DVR

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Icehouse, Mar 24, 2010.

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  1. Icehouse

    Icehouse Member

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    Techies, got a question. I have a bunch of stuff on my Uverse DVR that I need to save somewhere. How can I move it from the DVR to a DVD, laptop, something....

    TIA
     
  2. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    Unless you'd like to buy a brand new U-Verse Motorola receiver and be without U-verse service for a while: You can't and by all means shouldn't. TIA. :eek:

    If the content isn't MACROVISION protected, you can record output to your DVD, VHS, or PC.
     
  3. Depressio

    Depressio Member

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    Does the U-Verse DVR have video/audio outputs? I haven't checked mine, so I don't really know.

    If it does, you could perhaps use the outputs and plug 'em into a video capture card on your computer and record them that way. From what I've googled, however, the videos are split up and encrypted on the U-Verse DVR, so you can't just do some straight copy even if you could access the HDD.
     
  4. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    And in my post above, I meant the "moving" part. :eek:
    File this under "DUH." How else can you see it on your TV? The answer is YES, OF COURSE. :p

    Currently, I have HDMI out to TV and Composite going out to my DVD recorder. :eek: I have many a Mexico football games I've recorded from Telemundo.
     
  5. oomp

    oomp Member

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    I've used a video capture card for sd stuff.
     
  6. basso

    basso Member
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    if the DVR has an eSata port, you might be able to copy it to an external HD, the plug that into your PC/Mac and go from there. not sure about copy protection, but i'd be surprised if there wasn't a program out there that would strip it out.
     
  7. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    ^ You're already talking about opening up your receiver. That's what SHE said.

    That's a NO NO. :( Don't do it, man! Don't do it!
     
  8. Depressio

    Depressio Member

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    Yeah, that would be a DUH moment. I guess I was speaking more about composite output rather than HDMI output, but considering it records HD and SD, it probably has both.
     
  9. droxford

    droxford Member

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    (1) As some have already said, you can send composite out from the DVR box to the inputs on a DVD recorder; however, this is analog and not hi def.

    (2) There are ports on the DVR, but I believe they are all disabled. (I'm not at home right now, so I can't indicate which ports are there).

    (3) Theoretically, you could run the HDMI output from the DVR box into a device that can capture and record from an HDMI hi def source (doing a straight digital capture, without going to analog). If you discover such a device, please let me know!

    (4) It is theoretically possible to open it up and access the internal hard drive. I wouldn't know how to do this, and I would think that this would violate some warranty or something.
     
  10. RedRowdy111

    RedRowdy111 Member

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    Run it to your VHS, put a blank tape in that mug, and hit record, worked for years for me :)
     
  11. Depressio

    Depressio Member

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  12. droxford

    droxford Member

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  13. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    That's what SHE said. :eek:
     
  14. Icehouse

    Icehouse Member

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    First off, thanks for the responses. Um, I don't know half of the tech jargon you guys posted. I checked the two boces AT&T gave me. I don't see a eSata anything on them....just things to hook up cable and USB ports. Is there anyway to get the info from those, or by hooking up something to my HDTV....or am I just SOL?
     
  15. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    Even if you connect a DVD-Recorder or HDMI out to your PC with one of them HDMI input cards like Señor TSchmal kindly found for us... drumroll [prrrrrrrrrrrr...] and [prrrrrrr] some shows don't even let you record on your VCR or DVDs. :( That's the case with The Office. I have last season's episodes... and I can't record them onto my DVD recorder... damn you MACROvision... or whatever the heck that is...

    THERE IS, however and if you look well enough through a GOOGLE search, a MacroVision decrypter, but it is only for COMPOSITE, not HDMI or COMPONENT video.

    Maybe since it is a card on a PC, it will let you record, since that won't have MACROVISION or that protecting thingie to not let you.
     
  16. droxford

    droxford Member

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    Your age is showing, my friend.

    You're sending an analog feed (containing macrovision, presumably) to a dvd recorder.

    The video capture card that was mentioned earlier would do a digital hi-def capture, with no macrovision.
     
  17. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    No, no... it's a DIGITAL feed, sir. It's through COMPONENT cables to the DVD recorder. :eek: Last I heard, those are digital...

    Plus, I ended that there post above with "Maybe since it is a card on a PC, it will let you record, since that won't have MACROVISION or that protecting thingie to not let you"... so I think that covers my "age"... :cool:
     
  18. droxford

    droxford Member

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    Incorret - component is analog.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Component_video

    Component video is a video signal that has been split into two or more components. In popular use, it refers to a type of analog video information that is transmitted or stored as three separate signals.
     
  19. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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  20. Icehouse

    Icehouse Member

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    Ok, so basically it will take some complex stuff to make it happen?

    TIA
     

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