I’m not sure how big a breadbox is, so let me be more
specific: It’s about the size of your VCR. A foot
deep, a foot and a half wide, and four inches high. Black. No controls on it
– run entirely by a remote control that will also figure out how to control
your TV.
Let me start with the cons:
1. It’ll set you back about $600 --
$399 for the machine unless you get a deal, and $200 for the lifetime hook-up
(the life of your TiVo, not your lifetime).
2. You’ll wind up watching even more
TV.
3. You’ll wish you had one in every
room.
Now here are the pros (not necessarily in the same order as listed on the
box):
1. As luxuries go, at least it’s
easy on the planet. It’s not a Jet Ski,
for crying out loud. And it’s a lot
cheaper than remodeling your kitchen.
2. They include every possible cable
and connector you could need, and although the setup process will take you a
while, you will succeed! They
make it fun! (Needless to say, I do not
guarantee this; but I succeeded, where I usually don’t at stuff like this, and I
had fun.)
3. It stores up to 30 hours of TV on
its hard drive – or 18 or 14 or just 9 if you want to record everything in top
quality, to see the beadlets of sweat fly from the quarterback’s brow.
4. You can fast-forward through
commercials – or fast-fast forward or fast-fast-fast
forward. This allows you to watch your
favorite half-hour sitcoms in just 23 minutes.
The
nightly news – which you will never again miss even if 6:30 slips past you –
will take about 20 minutes, saving you 50 hours a year – a decent work week.
(You’ll start watching any time you want, fast forward through the
commercials, but also skip occasional features that don’t interest you, or
where “the headline” says it all.)
5. You can freeze-frame, slo-mo, or
slo-mo backwards.
6. You can be watching a TV show –
live – and press PAUSE when the phone rings.
Take your call, press PLAY, and you haven’t missed a thing.
7. You can be watching the news –
live – and if you aren’t sure whether the guy said, “Soviet Jewry” or “Soviet
Jewelry,” you can press the instant-replay button as often as you want until
you decide. Again, you don’t miss a
thing. You are in control. All across America, people are having to
watch this over and over again – Soviet Jewry . . . Soviet Jewelry – until you
are ready to proceed. Tom Brokaw just
has to keep doing it over and over again.
Or at least I think that’s how it works. (Others believe that TiVo automatically records whatever you’re
watching, and keeps recording even as you’re diddling around with
instant replays and slo-mos and phone calls, so that when you resume it can
just pick up where you left off.)
8. You can tell it to record “The
West Wing” every Wednesday, “Meet the Press” and “Sixty Minutes” every Sunday, and “The Mole” just this one time on Tuesday
at 8PM on ABC because you’re an Anderson Cooper fan and you want to see if it’s
any good. Plus every episode of the
“The Sopranos” and Larry King Live.
9. You can transfer stuff you’ve
recorded with TiVo onto your VCR. (Once
your 30 hours of recording time is filled up – or 60 hours if you went nuts and
bought the deluxe model – stuff begins to scroll off into oblivion.)
10. If you were about to get a
satellite anyway, you can get the TiVo model that doubles as a satellite
receiver and maybe save a few bucks.
11. You can record shows you never
knew existed, like Jackass on MTV. Who says
you can never recapture your adolescence?
(Of course, you could do this with a regular VCR, or just watch it live
– but you wouldn’t, would you?)
12. You can press the green thumbs up
button or the red thumbs down button as you are watching a live or recorded
show to let TiVo know what you think of it.
Based on what it learns about your preferences, TiVo will suggest and
record stuff it thinks you might like . . . although it will always delete that
stuff to make room, if need be, for something you actively instructed it to
record.
Things you can’t do:
1. You cannot watch one thing live
while it is recording something else.
(You can watch something you’ve previously recorded while
it records something new.) Solution:
watch the live thing downstairs in the den.
2. You cannot record two conflicting
shows simultaneously. If you try to set
it up to record something that runs from 8pm to 9pm on Showtime and something
else that runs from 8:30 to 9pm on CNN, it will politely advise you of the
problem and ask which of the two you want to do.
3. You cannot channel-surf quite as
fast as you used to. You can still do
it. And there are some other pretty
neat things you can do in terms of seeing what’s on (meanwhile, the show you’re
watching remains on in the background).
But with TiVo, there’s a slight delay in going from channel to channel.
4. You cannot do much of anything
unless TiVo makes a phone call once in a while to bring its program schedule up
to date. In normal operation, it calls
once a day, at whatever time you set – I chose 4:47am. It needs to be within 50 feet of a phone jack
(it comes with a 50-foot cord), which it happily shares with your regular phone
line without blocking any calls. Or you
can just keep that 50-foot cord in a drawer and hook it up manually once or
twice a week, using the “call now” option.
(This is the 21st Century Spoiled Rich Guy’s equivalent of
“roughing it.”)
Can you live without a TiVo?
Why, of course you can! The
question is: can you live without seeing “The West Wing” every week. And “Jackass” once in a while? Here, we can be less sure.
To buy
one, use qbsearch, type in tivo, select GoTo as the best engine for
this kind of search, and then just e-shop til you e-drop. Or go to eBay. I own no stock in TiVo or Philips or Sony
(which make TiVo), or in GE (which owns NBC which airs “The West Wing”). I am, from time to time, a jackass.