I have been working with my Hauppauge WinTV900H USB stick DVB-T tuner (phew, that;'s a mouthful). I managed to get it "working" in openSUSE 11.3 by installing the v4l/dvb stuff from the repositories, copying an xc3028L-v36.fw file (I found/downloaded) to /lib/firmware, and doing a modprobe tm6000. I have connected the input for the USB stick to the cable TV outlet. The cable provider has 52 analog channels that this 900H can pickup/tune in Windows. If I tell it (in Windows) to scan for DVB-T, it finds nothing, but if I tell it to scan for cable analog channels, it finds the 52 available channels. This is expected since the signal on the cable feed is analog. So... now that I've got the tuner working in Linux (as in recognized and switched on, ready to be used) how do I convince it to scan for the 52 analog channels instead of the default DVB-T channels? scan <location> -o zap | tee ~/channels.conf just ends in "tuning failed" errors when it can't find a signal at the predefined frequencies in the location file.... which I suppose makes sense since the "T" and analog are not the same thing I tinkered with TVTime, MeTV, and VLC... and all can find the 900H, and all scan the T side for channels but do not scan the analog part... or at least I can't find a way to scan for analog. Has anyone got this far with a 900H? Any tips? Anyone know of a way to switch on/scan the analog side of the 900H in Linux? C. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org