Could not believe WalMart dropped the price to $100 on remaining Pio 220s!
I thought I had purchased all remaining stock at local B&M, only to find 2 more available a month later. One, made in Japan; and the other, made in China. YMMV.
WalMart price protected me.
I received a $40 price adjustment (per unit) on several Pio 220s purchased recently.
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Most manufacturers are going to stop production either now or in the near future. There are probably warehouses full of this technology so it's not likely they will simply dry up they will just become harder to find. DVD is being phased out by newer products with greater storage capacity. Good news to the consumer of yesterday tech though as the prices will drop drop drop for this old stuff.
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DVD recorders have not been a successful market segment. Sales have never met VCR levels. With cable and satellite providers offering PVR capability the demand is low.
Many of the folks who are offering DVRs, will not offer HD-DVD or Blu-Ray recorders, when they phase out the current generation of product, they will leave this market segment.
All that will remain are commodity vendors assembling from standard chipsets and drives. Expect more relabeled low cost product if any residual demand exists.
The new technology will not drop in cost as quickly as ROF suggests because of confuson as to the right product, lack of volume, and patent licensing issues and fees. -
Originally Posted by oldandinthe way
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A Pioneer DVR-220 is an excellent machine that was discontinued by Pioneer in June 2005 when the stripped-down 233 came out. Anyone who finds a new one for $100 is getting a great buy.
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Maybe people are getting wiser? There are several strikes against all these new electronics. Who wants to buy a DVD Recorder when it includes copy protection flag? I would be pissed, if I tried to record my favorite show for time-shifting, and the recorder wouldn't allow it.
Also the build quality has gone down the hill for all audio/video components. Who wants to buy a crappy and flimsy looking component? Over the past several years, I've overheard some people in the retail stores, complaining about how everything is poorly manufactured. Every year it seems the build quality gets cheaper. I remember in the 80's and early 90's, things were built much better. You could get a nice audio receiver for $300. Hell, even Radio Shack stuff made back then, beats the cheap crap of today. I still have my Realistic Mach II Speakers that sound better than a lot of so-called high-end speakers of today. -
The majority of people in the U.S. want stuff as cheap as they can get it, regardless of quality. Manufacterers just give the people what they want. If there were more people willing to pay for quality products, there would be better quality stuff.
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Originally Posted by Wile_E
Originally Posted by Wile_E -
Originally Posted by MeekloBraca
The DVR-233 does not have the 32 FR modes. I believe it only has 4 modes with the longest one at 10 hours per disc. Its build quality also is very poor compared with the 220. I mention this because Walmart sold the 233 as well and I wouldn't want you to get one of those thinking it would be the same as a 220. -
i have one and it works great...what i'd like to know is whether the dvd's from costco(TDK-16x-dvd-r) will work with the 220...
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Originally Posted by MeekloBraca
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Originally Posted by ROF
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_shifting
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_v._Universal
The legality of time-shifting programming in the United States was proven by a landmark court case of Universal Studios versus Sony Corporation (Sony v. Universal), when Sony argued successfully that the advent of its Betamax video recorder in 1976 did not violate the copyright of the owners of shows which it recorded.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by oldandinthe way
Also, you cannot compare 2-3 years of DVD recorder sales to 20-30 years of VCR sales.
Originally Posted by ROF
Those "new products" offer only marginal advances in storage, quality and features.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
Originally Posted by lordsmurfLife is better when you focus on the signals instead of the noise. -
Originally Posted by davideck
The inability by many users to get anamorphic widescreen 480i output from cable boxes also makes owning a DVD recorder disappointing. My Pioneer recorder recognizes widescreen sources but my Motorola cable box won't deliver them. Why would I want to keep DVD's of letterboxed shows when my real desire is for true 16:9 recordings? Fix that defect in the Motorola boxes (or replace it with one that does offer this option) and I won't care that it isn't HDTV for some time to come. -
Originally Posted by davideck
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Originally Posted by ROF
I have seriously thought about getting a DVD recorder to replace my broken Panasonic VHS recorder, but right now I'm thinking that I should hold on with VHS a while longer (buy a replacement VHS recorder) to see how the DVD technology develops (i.e. Blu-ray). As things are I just don't think I can get the equivalent of a VHS recorder (in terms of versatility) in a DVD recorder.
I certainly don't expect the DVD recorder technology to die out, though trends are shifting so nobody can really say for certain which way things will go; I feel there will always be a demand for consumer TV recorders in some form though. -
Originally Posted by jonnymorris
Add a hard drive into the mix and I am ready to buy today!Life is better when you focus on the signals instead of the noise. -
Originally Posted by davideck
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I have never had any interest in any DVD recorder that doesn't have a hard drive built in. Why? Mostly because the ones with DVR functions aren't that much more expensive anymore, and they give me the DVD recording ability as well...
As for the broadcast flag, I haven't encountered it, but I am completely against the idea. Time shifting has been around for many, many years. Sure, there were those that sold bootleg VHS tapes on the street. But for most of us, we used our VCRs to catch programs we would otherwise never see. Using broadcast flags to keep me from doing this is totally stupid-- on pay channels like HBO, I would simply cancel my subscription. And on free channels, they've missed their opportunity to show me ads -- I can't watch the commercials if my DVR won't record them...
Back to the topic at hand: I've never cared much for Panasonic DVD Recorders, despite the fact that I very much like Panasonic as a company. I just don't see the need to record to DVD-RAM...and with most of their standalone recorders, that's the only re-writable format you can use. When I do use the DVD Recorder in my DVR, I always use DVD+RWs or DVD-RWs, so I can re-use the disc in the same way I would a VHS tape...Join the fight against Product Activation & DRM!
www.twistedlincoln.com -
DVD-RAM provides timeslip capability on units without a hard drive. But then what to do if you want to save the program?
For daily viewing, a hard drive is a must IMO. 40+ hours of quality recording is infinitely better than 1 or 2.Life is better when you focus on the signals instead of the noise. -
Originally Posted by davideck
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