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Posted
Does anyone have a copy of the game that includes both overtimes that I could get a copy of? If so, could you send me a PM? My DVR did not get the overtimes.

i have both OT's, but don't know how to record it from DVR to a tape or DVD from that DVR...i have the college cup, miami, western michigan, Can't state, and notre dame games on my DVR still...hoping that someone knew how...

Posted

If you have it on a cable (Time Warner) DVR, that's a tough nut to crack as they have it set up with proprietary encryption software to keep consumers from being able to access that video.

If you own your own DVR (Tivo), then it's a lot easier to access. copy and share.

Posted
If you have it on a cable (Time Warner) DVR, that's a tough nut to crack as they have it set up with proprietary encryption software to keep consumers from being able to access that video.

If you own your own DVR (Tivo), then it's a lot easier to access. copy and share.

There's always the option of getting a capture device and re-routing the signal output through it, and then routing the device to your computer. It's expensive, however, and not worth it unless you have other uses for one as well.

Posted
Does anyone have a copy of the game that includes both overtimes that I could get a copy of? If so, could you send me a PM? My DVR did not get the overtimes.

i have both OT's, but don't know how to record it from DVR to a tape or DVD from that DVR...i have the college cup, miami, western michigan, Can't state, and notre dame games on my DVR still...hoping that someone knew how...

If you have an hd tv, you will need to change your tv to channel 3, (hook up the coaxial cable out of the box to the vcr then run a cable to the tv) turn your vcr on channel 3. You should have a picture of what is playing on tv, play the recorded show and hit record on the vcr.

If you don't have HD, it should already be set up. Turn on vcr, put vcr on channel 3. play recorded show, then hit record on vcr and it will record what is playing on your tv.

Posted
If you have it on a cable (Time Warner) DVR, that's a tough nut to crack as they have it set up with proprietary encryption software to keep consumers from being able to access that video.

If you own your own DVR (Tivo), then it's a lot easier to access. copy and share.

teah...its time warner dvr

Posted

Right, you can make a copy of the copy recorded on a cable company DVR by hooking up another recording device (VCR, computer video capture card, etc.) to the output of the DVR. It will just be a re-encoded signal instead of a direct digital copy, so there will be some quality degradation. If cable companies didn't encrypt their DVRs, you could make direct digital copies with no image degradation.

Posted
Right, you can make a copy of the copy recorded on a cable company DVR by hooking up another recording device (VCR, computer video capture card, etc.) to the output of the DVR. It will just be a re-encoded signal instead of a direct digital copy, so there will be some quality degradation. If cable companies didn't encrypt their DVRs, you could make direct digital copies with no image degradation.

alright...thanks for the help everyone. I'm hoping to get this figured out in a few days on a tape/DVD. I'm a UA student, so it's crunch time for me right now. So school is more of a priority right now, but as soon as i get my professors to back off or the end of semester, i'll get it done as soon as possible...

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