This article contains content that is written like an advertisement .(July 2022) |
Manufacturer | Sony Computer Entertainment |
---|---|
Type | DVB-T tuner, Digital video recorder |
Generation | Seventh generation era |
Release date |
|
Storage | Hard disk (via PS3) |
Controller input | PlayStation controller, BD Remote, Sony PSP system or Sony VAIO using Remote Play |
Connectivity |
|
PlayTV is an add-on unit for the PlayStation 3 video game console that allows it to act as a digital television receiver, and digital video recorder, using the DVB-T standard.
LiveTV [3]
The Live TV feature of PlayTV provides access to free-to-air (unencrypted) channels through the DVB-T network. Users are able to pause, rewind, and fast forward through any recently viewed material, as well as record and toggle subtitles and audio descriptions. PlayTV allows users to watch one program while recording another. The Live TV feature includes a "now" and "next" bar that enables users to scroll through live TV and see what is on other channels and what will be coming up next. The live programming is cached as it is displayed.
Guide (Electronic Programme Guide) [3]
All recorded content is stored in the PlayTV Library, which offers a list or thumbnail view and is sortable by date, channel, or name. Content in the library can be exported to the PlayStation 3's main menu and stored alongside the user's other video files. During playback of recorded content, users have the ability to pause, fast forward, rewind, skip, and turn subtitles and audio descriptions on or off. The screen size can also be adjusted.
Library [3]
The PlayTV Library is where all of the recorded content is stored. Content can be viewed in a ListView or a thumbnail view. It is sortable by date, channel, and name. Content in the library can also be exported to the PlayStation 3's main menu and stored with the rest of the user's video files.
Schedule [3]
The schedule feature allows users to edit their future recordings. It is searchable.
Find and Record [3]
The Find and Record feature allows users to search the next seven days worth of TV programmes. Find and Record lets users set manual recordings using the channel, date, and time.
Mobile TV with PSP
Wi-Fi connectivity with a PlayStation Portable allows for portable viewing of live or recorded television programming. By using the Remote Play feature of the PlayStation 3, owners can use a PlayStation Portable to access their PlayStation 3 console via the internet. The Remote Play feature also has the ability to 'wake up' the PlayStation 3 from standby mode.
The Sony Ericsson Aino mobile phone can link up to a PlayStation 3 and uses Remote Play which allows users to watch PlayTV on their phone. [4]
Manuals [3]
PlayTV can display an on-screen manual. The manual can be used as a quick reference to the various functions of a controller, Blu-ray remote control, and Remote Play using a PlayStation Portable.
Settings and other features [3]
Sony previously stated that PlayTV would be able to record TV while playing PS3 and PS1 games, the code for the function has already been incorporated in the version 2.41 firmware update. [1] [5] To use the product however a 5GB install is required from the disc provided with the PlayTV device. [6]
Sony has stated that PlayTV is incompatible with the UK Freeview HD, as it uses the DVB-T2 standard. [7]
On 12 September 2008, Sony released an interactive demo of PlayTV on the PlayStation Store in Europe. [8] The device was launched in the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain and France on 19 September 2008 with other regions in Europe following. [9] First week shipments of PlayTV in the UK were reportedly 85,000 units, apparently with "specialist and national press giving thumbs up to the device." [10]
Australia and New Zealand [11] were originally to receive the PlayTV accessory 2 months after Europe but it was delayed until 26 November 2009 in Australia along with an HD software update.[ citation needed ] In New Zealand the device was pushed back further to a release date of 25 November 2010. [2] [12] The update underwent testing in both countries due to the wide availability of HD channels and use of common broadcast codecs (MPEG 2/MPEG 4). [13]
PlayTV is only capable of tuning DVB-T broadcasts, so is not available in regions which do not use DVB-T. A similar accessory known as Torne was made available in March 2010 in Japan, for use with their ISDB-T broadcast system. There were seemingly never plans to release PlayTV or a similar device for use with North American NTSC/ATSC broadcasts, though the PlayStation Vue OTT streaming service was available through PS3 consoles prior to its shutdown in January 2020, and carried local channels in certain areas.
Software updates are available via the About section in Settings using the "Game Update Check" Functionality (when using the original PlayTV software). In recent versions of PlayTV software, a Software Update function is available directly from the main PlayTV menu. A further update was announced on 2 April 2009 that will include new volume and search controls, upscaling of standard definition (SD) content and faster access to TV shows from the XMB menu system.
In February 2009 another update was released, which provided improvements to standard definition upscaling. [14]
On 23 August 2010, details of a new update (version 2.01) were revealed. While part of the update is free, an unlock key must be purchased from the PlayStation Store in order to access some of the features (listed below). [15] The update was released on 17 November 2010. [16]
The following premium services are offered with the 2.01 update:
On 6 December 2010, another update, version 2.02, was released. Many users complained that since the update the PlayTV software became unstable, with the most commonly reported symptom being the software hanging on the PlayTV launch screen and not proceeding any further. [17]
On 3 March 2011, bugfix update 2.03 was released.
On 23 May 2013, version 2.04 was released.
Torne (トルネ) (CECH-ZD1J) is an ISDB-T tuner peripheral for the Japanese market which, like PlayTV, comes with DVR software. It was first announced on 14 January 2010 for release on 18 March of the same year. [18] [19]
Like PlayTV, it is capable of recording and playing back live TV, even while in a game or playing other media (e.g., a DVD or Blu-ray Disc) and can be accessed on PSP via remote play. [18]
Unlike PlayTV, Torne features PS3 trophy support. [18]
In June 2010 Sony released Torne software version 2.00, which enables MPEG-4 AVC compression, allowing recordings to be compressed down to a third of their original size as captured MPEG-2 streams. It will also add the ability to watch, fast-forward and rewind programs while they are still recording and to update the user's PSN status. [20]
The device can be used in Linux since 2.6.30. It also can be used in Windows by patching the USB IDs in the driver of a card with the same dibcom hardware (such as the Pinnacle PCTV Dual DVB-T Diversity Stick). It can be used in both 32- and 64-bit versions of Windows using this method.[ citation needed ] There are believed[ who? ] to be two hardware variants of the device, using the ULI chipset.[ citation needed ]
In Linux or Windows, PlayTV can handle AVC/MPEG4 HD broadcasts which are used in Ireland and continental Europe. The UK has adopted DVB-T2 for terrestrial high-definition TV broadcasts, so the PlayTV will not give PS3 owners access to those TV channels.[ citation needed ]
An unofficial Windows application (in Spanish language only) allows users to edit the file channel_ps3.bin and customize the order of channels in the PlayTV software (a function not normally available). A PlayStation Jailbreak device is required in order to transfer the file from PS3 to PC. [21]
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