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Forums - Sony Discussion - Unboxed: Sony Play TV

This actually looks promising.

 

Fair play to sony.

After a year long wait since it was first announced, Sony's Play TV finally arrived on our desk today. And while it was tempting just to sit and watch the Olympics all afternoon, we did have a poke around the PS3's telly recording add-on to give you this first look.

If we had a Stuff award for 'most underwhelming piece of hardware design', the Play TV box would be a tough to beat – it's a feather-light, plastic box with an aerial port, USB port and 'on' light, and doesn't even bother with the PS3's glossy laminate finish. Still, at least it has two tuners for watching one show while recording another (though not recording two live channels simultaneously).

After a lengthy firmware update, it searches for channels, then presents you with the intuitive home screen you can see above. On here, you get eight menus: 'Live TV', 'Guide' (a 7-day EPG), 'Schedule' (a list of programes you have queued for recording), 'Library' (a list of all your recorded programmes), 'Find + record' (a search function) , 'Manual' (a help screen) and 'Settings'.

The menus are pleasantly slick – you can call up the full EPG, or just scroll through channels in a smaller menu at the bottom of the screen. The box turns red if it's scheduled to record, and behind the text a bar indicates how far you've got through the programme. There's also the option of an on-screen remote (see below) and chase play (the ability to start watching a programme that's still recording).

But there are a few downers. In order to allow recording while you're doing other things on your PS3 (say, playing Haze) you have to allow 'background recording', and there's a warning that this may cause slow-down and effect gameplay.

Then there are those bomb-shells that we revealed a few days ago, namely no 1080i recording at launch and the inclusion of pesky DRM. Although we haven't yet had the chance to test it with our PSP, this will mean you'll have to record shows via Remote Play to watch them on your handheld console rather than just sticking them on a memory stick and transferring them.

Play TV will be hitting shelves on 10th September for £70, but we'll bring you a full review before then to let you know whether or not to splash your cash.









Published 19 August 2008 16:13 by Mark Wilson
Link here.


 

 

 

 

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Nice. I'm buying it when it hits the U.S.




im gonna get it for sure, cant wait to record stuff to my PS3 hdd



I guess the 160 GB HDD makes sense now.



Looks good, I may pick this up, though if you cant put it onto the PSP that is a low point



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will there be monthly fee's on this. Where do you plug it in to make it work?



Owner Of: PS1 PS2 PS3 PSP NES GB GBA GC WII XBOX

 

Nice.



is this hitting the US if when?

can u get this instead of tv or as a dvr add on?

answer plzx



PLAYSTATION®3 is the future.....NOW.......B_E_L_I_E_V_E

 

Consoles owned: Game Cube, Gameboy Color, Gameboy Advance, Nintendo DS, PSP, PS1, PS2, PS3.

My prediction: NATAL WILL NOT help 360 sales. Maybe a 50-100k boost week 1, then a 30-70 k boost week 2, and back to the norm again after 3-5 weeks.

Would suck if there was a monthly fee. Hopefully it would just pull off of your cable or satellite connection, maybe? I'll probably have this as soon as it hits the U.S. as well, it looks pretty nifty. Now I'll HAVE to go buy that 500 gig I've been thinking about for my PS3..



It's unlikely this will come to the US because the cable and satellites control the access to content. Tivo was pretty much forced to cut a deal with Comcast or go out of business. They were supposed to implement Cable Card, however the support has been terrible destroying any chance for third party products to succeed.

In countries like the UK, they have laws that allow companies open access. In the US it's all in the hands of the cable and satellite companies. You can't decrypt their signal without their permission, which they refuse to grant because they want to sell their own hardware.

The only way Sony can get this to work in the US is to bend over to the cable companies and even MS is unwilling to do that.