Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac

  1. Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac Pro
  2. Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac And Windows
  3. Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac And Cheese

Hi I have successfully used this card in MCE2005 and wanted to try it in Media Portal though it doesn't detect the card at all during setup. I have tried 0.2.2.0 stable as well as the latest svn to no avail. The unit has working BDA drivers installed.

Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac Pro

Is there something I need to do with config files. Mainly wished to try Media Portal again to see if stability has improved since I last tried it 6 months ago as I would like to migrate away from MCE2005 and see Media Portal or Vista MCE as my two choices at the moment for WAF. MediaPortal Version: 0.2.2 svn-01-07-Rev13644 MediaPortal Skin: Windows Version: MCE2005 CPU Type: Athlon64 HDD: IDE 250GB Memory: 2GB Motherboard: ASUS Motherboard Chipset: NForce430 Motherboard Bios: Video Card: NForce430 Video Card Driver: Sound Card: Sound Card AC3: Sound Card Driver: 1. TV Card: lifeview tv walker dvb-t (Dual USB2) 1.

TV Card Type: DVB-T 1. TV Card Driver: 2. TV Card Type: 2. TV Card Driver: 3.

TV Card Type: 3. TV Card Driver: 4.

TV Card Type: 4. TV Card Driver: MPEG2 Video Codec: MPEG2 Audio Codec: Satelite/CableTV Provider: HTPC Case: Cooling: Power Supply: Remote: TV: TV - HTPC Connection.

I've not come across any Mac-compatible DVB-T2 USB dongles yet. I had to use Bootcamp and Windows to get my USB dongles working on my Mac for years.

Now it's often easier to use a Raspberry Pi (running TV Headend under Linux) and a USB DVB-T2 dongle as combo and then connect the Mac to the Pi+T2 combo over IP. There are some T2 networked tuners available - but they are more expensive than my quick-n-dirty Pi solution. Elgato were the only real game in town for DVB dongles for Macs, but they've now sold that part of their operation to Geniatech, who are marketing a Mac DVB-T2 dongle - but for €100 which is pretty steep.

(Don't know if a current Geniatech non-Mac dongle will work with the latest version of EyeTV - I wouldn't be surprised if they changed the USB IDs between the Mac and non-Mac models to make this tricky) ALSO - could a Moderator move this to Media & Tech forum? According to there is such a stick which will work with the mac. Just scroll down a bit and you will see some info about it on the left. But I am not so sure about this.can anyone confirm if it indeed does the biz for DVB-T2 on mac? That's the same device I mentioned earlier on in this thread. It's badged Elgato, but Geniatech have bought the Elgato TV range, so I suspect it is closely related to the Geniatech T230 (aka August T210 v 2) - though I wouldn't be surprised if it had different USB IDs to limit use of other dongles with EyeTV (Elgato's software).

Quote:With EyeTV Version 3.6.8/3.6.9 in combination with the EyeTV Hybrid you can now receive digital DVB-T/T2 television using an aerial. With the television app for Mac OSX, you are ready to receive European MPEG-4-based DVB-T2 programmes (France, Great Britain, Italy, Poland, etc.) and perfectly prepared for DVB-T2 HEVC TV reception in Germany. DVB-T2 is the second generation of digital terrestrial television. For the Apple Mac, the software requirements are EyeTV Version 3.6.8 / OSX 10.11.x or THC or Tot@l TV / Windows 8. Quote:With EyeTV Version 3.6.8/3.6.9 in combination with the EyeTV Hybrid you can now receive digital DVB-T/T2 television using an aerial. With the television app for Mac OSX, you are ready to receive European MPEG-4-based DVB-T2 programmes (France, Great Britain, Italy, Poland, etc.) and perfectly prepared for DVB-T2 HEVC TV reception in Germany.

Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac And Windows

Lifeview tv kartica dvb-t usb for mac free

Lifeview Tv Kartica Dvb-t Usb For Mac And Cheese

DVB-T2 is the second generation of digital terrestrial television. For the Apple Mac, the software requirements are EyeTV Version 3.6.8 / OSX 10.11.x or THC or Tot@l TV / Windows 8 Doesn't it contradict itself though by then going on to say Freeview HD, encrypted programs, analog television and DVB-T2 in terms of HEVC broadcasts are not supported isn't Freeview HD DVB-T2. Freeview HD is DVB-T2 with H264 compression and AAC audio. Freeview is DVB-T with MPEG2 compression and MP2 audio. However the EPG for Freeview HD channels is compressed using a proprietary Huffman table (not encrypted) and these tables are, I believe, restricted to those manufacturers who enforce the Freeview HD copy protection requirements (encrypting recordings, making them Copy Once or Copy Never etc.) Whist these Huffman tables are widely circulated in Open Source software - they are probably still commercially licensed - so couldn't be incorporated in commercial software like EyeTV. That may be why there is some lack of clarity on the situation.

EyeTV definitely works OK with H264 video - I've used it to watch DVB-T H264 HD and SD content in Denmark, Norway, Sweden etc.

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