Wednesday 11 April 2012

TiVo on the iPad: How to Transfer Recordings


For the new Retina display iPad have a TiVo Premiere DVR, which records HD programming. Naturally, it would be cool to transfer your favorite shows from the TiVo to the iPad. But if done by the TiVo-sanctioned software, this job proved to be expensive, time consuming to use, and ultimately didn’t deliver the quality you had hoped for. The TiVo Web site lists two software suites for converting TiVo recordings into file formats compatible with portable devices like the iPad: Roxio Creator 2012 for PCs (list price $100; price for TiVo users, $70) and Roxio Toast 11 Titanium for Macs (list price $100; price for TiVo users, $80). Since I’m a Mac guy, I bought Toast 11 Titanium.
To start, launched the TiVo Transfer program that comes with Toast 11 Titanium. After launching the software, chose TiVo Premiere DVR as the transfer source (your TiVo and computer must be connected to the same network). Next, selected the recordings you wanted to transfer to your iMac. This could either create an "Auto Transfer," which means all current and future episodes of a TV series will be automatically transferred to your iMac. Or you could click "Start Transfer" to transfer an individual program.  Afterwards, launch Toast 11 Titanium, clicked the "Convert" tab, and selected TiVo on the "Video" tab. The episode transferred to your iMac was visible in a pane, so drag it into the software's transfer queue and click the big red "Convert" button. At this point, you have the ability to edit the video file—to only convert a selection
From there, select the device (options include Apple TV and the third generation iPad) for which you wanted the file formatted. Also selected the video quality and the folder in which the file would be saved. Toast 11 Titanium offers the option to schedule the file conversion, a nice touch. You can also preview the file. Once settings were chosen, click to start the conversion. Unlike TiVo Transfer, Toast 11 Titanium displays a helpful progress bar. The final step was to import the converted video file into the iTunes library and sync it to your iPad. Resolution-wise, it's not good. The end result was merely good, not great, video quality, because TiVo limits maximum quality of video conversions to 640 x 480 resolution. That's a far cry from the new iPad’s native 2048 by 1536 resolution or even the first two iPads, which have 1024 x 768 resolution. Buying an HD program through iTunes and downloading it directly to an iPad is way faster and easier. And it delivers a program with noticeably sharper video quality. If you plan to regularly transfer tons of programs and you don't mind going to the trouble and the inferior video quality, Roxio’s software will ultimately save you money. Otherwise, just buy your entertainment through iTunes and get your geek on some other way.

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