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Lately, when I view recorded programs, my R-15 wants to make really sure that it's okay to change channels to record any concurrent to-do list entries. So, it pops up a 5-minute warning box to obtain my authorization. For some reason, even after I approve the change of channel, the box pops up again several times over the next half hour or so. I've learned that the generally better alternative is to reject the change-channel request and hope to record the missed program at some future time.
This is annoying behavior at all times. But, it's absolutely infuriating when I'm burning a DVD. I estimate that I spent $5-10 on flawed DVDs during December alone.
Does anyone know how to turn off the silly notification without permanently damaging the R15? (That alternative has been the subject of due deliberation, but munging the box rather than its maker seems incompletely satisfactory.) Or, does DTV recommend some typically inane workaound such as "delete your to-do entries, watch the recorded program, and then restore your to-do entries?"
Are some folks just such positive thinkers that they take this and similarly egregious defects in stride? Or, is this problem affecting only some especially blessed subsegment of the user population?
I begin to consider the notion that this is just the first salvo in a new digital rights management (DRM) strategy: Flood the market with such bad record/playback devices that DRM is the last issue on the customer's mind. That is, treat 'em badly enough and they'll happily beg for crumbs.
This is annoying behavior at all times. But, it's absolutely infuriating when I'm burning a DVD. I estimate that I spent $5-10 on flawed DVDs during December alone.
Does anyone know how to turn off the silly notification without permanently damaging the R15? (That alternative has been the subject of due deliberation, but munging the box rather than its maker seems incompletely satisfactory.) Or, does DTV recommend some typically inane workaound such as "delete your to-do entries, watch the recorded program, and then restore your to-do entries?"
Are some folks just such positive thinkers that they take this and similarly egregious defects in stride? Or, is this problem affecting only some especially blessed subsegment of the user population?
I begin to consider the notion that this is just the first salvo in a new digital rights management (DRM) strategy: Flood the market with such bad record/playback devices that DRM is the last issue on the customer's mind. That is, treat 'em badly enough and they'll happily beg for crumbs.