I think zik's right, you don't have to move it back to the receiver in order to watch it. You do however, just need to go to a different option than "My Recordings" to access what you have on the drive. But it does stay there.
Ethernet port is currently enabled for use in place of the "call home" feature (wherein the receiver calls home to check in and update usage data). It will eventually be used for Video on Demand content (SD only for the ViP622, HD & SD for the new ViP722), Dish Home (interactive feature with access to account info etc.), and remote scheduling of recordings, something that I am pretty excited about.
There are rumors floating around that while the "ViP" indicates "Video over IP" as in the Video on Demand feature, it may also mean that networked ViP models may be able to share recorded content via the LAN which would also be cool, but I'm not holding my breath because Dish is very concerned about maintaining integrity of recorded material that is any way copyrighted.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Marc @ Aug 16th 2007 8:45AM
I think zik's right, you don't have to move it back to the receiver in order to watch it. You do however, just need to go to a different option than "My Recordings" to access what you have on the drive. But it does stay there.
SpenceJT @ Aug 16th 2007 9:44AM
Ethernet port is currently enabled for use in place of the "call home" feature (wherein the receiver calls home to check in and update usage data). It will eventually be used for Video on Demand content (SD only for the ViP622, HD & SD for the new ViP722), Dish Home (interactive feature with access to account info etc.), and remote scheduling of recordings, something that I am pretty excited about.
There are rumors floating around that while the "ViP" indicates "Video over IP" as in the Video on Demand feature, it may also mean that networked ViP models may be able to share recorded content via the LAN which would also be cool, but I'm not holding my breath because Dish is very concerned about maintaining integrity of recorded material that is any way copyrighted.
Cheers,
Spence