On Sat, Oct 23, 2010 at 22:47, John Andersen wrote:
You would probably be better off on the Myth TV list.
I'll poke around over there.. have to tinker with MythTV a bit on my own first though.
Are you sure you have analog on your cable?
Yes. I've got three possible feeds... DVB-T via the DVB antenna, and analog and digital from my cable provider. DVB-T works fine, and I get the 10 local free to air digital broadcasts using the Hauppauge WinTV 900H and the external DVB-T antenna. My cable TV provider has 52 channels on analog and 196 channels of digital provided at the cable tv outlet on the wall. This is the bit I cannot get to work yet. If I boot to Windows, and start the WinTV software (provided by Hauppauge), I can choose between scanning the input on the DVB-T antenna - finding the 10 local channels - or I can scan for analog channels (the tuner cannot tune the digital cable channels, and I'm not trying to connect to that in either Windows or Linux). When I scan for analog, I see the 52 channels my TV can see (without the digital receiver). So.. testing on Windows shows that this DVB stick can see both the DVB-T and analog (which makes sense because that's what this hybrid tuner is supposed to be able to do). So back to openSUSE. I plug it in, and it's recognized (uses the tm6000 kernel module). I can scan for and find the 8 to 10 DVB-T channels... this works... what I can't figure out how to do is scan for the analog channels. TVTime can't find the tuner stick at all. I haven't really tried MythTV yet. VLC finds the stick and scans but I can't find a way to tell it to scan for analog. So this is where I'm stuck... the hardware works, but I can't find the right software combination to get it working on the analog side. C,. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org