It just unfortunate, the 922's SW team (I would estimate 10-15 guys working on it) totally switched to models 813/110 [h2k/J]
Really ? All ? Rumors ? Unfounded ?all we have are unfounded rumors
All I will say is that you are making a statement that cannot currently be substantiated... i.e., to state that there are no developers working on 922 firmware right now is an unfounded statement unless you can factually prove that right now there are no developers working on firmware updates for the 922... and I'm pretty sure nobody can substantiate that.P Smith said:Really ? All ? Rumors ? Unfounded ?
It was direct words from last CES - they are working on 813's FW instead of 922. Words that 922 FW bug fixing and features adding postponed because of 813 spin off.
I wouldn't qualify it's as x y z rumors. Perhaps the cup is half way full ...
This first question is of a different type than the others. This one is about opinion. In my opinion the 922 is as good as all the other Dish DVRs. It is NOT everything it was advertised to be... so it is a disappointment, don't get me wrong... but all other things being equal, of all the ViP receivers I still would prefer a 922.MCHuf said:Stewart, I don't understand why you keep acting like the 922 is as good as Dish's other dvrs?
How do we know this is a fact? But wait, before we argue about it... I'll accept this as a reasonable assumption because of the similarities of the interface AND the fact that Dish wanted to move these Hopper/Joey configs clearly... so logically, it makes sense for them to re-purpose resources to help that happen quicker. Companies do this all the time, so assuming it to be fact, I don't see this as a negative at all.MCHuf said:FACT: The 922 team was temporarily pulled to to work on the H/J and get it out the door. That tells me how important the 922 is to Dish.
This is unfortunate... but again, it makes sense. With Dish pushing [email protected] it makes sense to not sign new customers up for a 922 and then have to explain why they can't get those movies.MCHuf said:FACT: The 922 is not available except to replace other 922's (unless you want to buy it from other vendors).
It sure does look like Dish wants to push Hopper/Joey as the way of the future... then again, I remember when the 921 was the next big thing (don't ask people who bought one of those about that!)MCHuf said:FACT: [email protected] doesn't work with the 922, yet it works with every other HD DVR that Dish Network supplies it's customers with. The H/J is designed from the 922 and it has [email protected]
While the other dvr's will eventually be pulled in favor of the H/J and it's successors, the 922 is already a "lame duck" and will probably have a far shorter than typical Dish receiver life cycle.
First of all, thanks for your edit. The claim you replaced this text with was incorrect.P Smith said:Edit: well, after thorough research, it's seems they did put a couple gamma post-S1.16 versions on 'backyard' tpns/sat 129W ... for merely 80 and 300 boxes. When ? I don't know.
MCHuf said:FACT: The 922 team was temporarily pulled to to work on the H/J and get it out the door. That tells me how important the 922 is to Dish.
Because it was acknowledged at CES. I got it directly from someone involved in software development.Stewart Vernon said:How do we know this is a fact?
I trust you enough to agree with "temporarily". The problem is that some have read that as being a permanent end to development on the 922. A "all hands on deck" scramble to hit a deadline makes sense, especially with similar firmware. Abandoning the 922 forever does not.BobaBird said:Because it was acknowledged at CES. I got it directly from someone involved in software development.
While I don't disagree with your assessment (re: why the 922 was released with some big bugs but now they aren't delivering new 922 receivers to customers because of lack of an important feature)...BobaBird said:Agreed, but the proof will be in the updates or lack thereof. S116 didn't include [email protected] because of the focus on Hopper. If lack of a promised future feature is being put forth as the reason Dish has suspended installations, I have to wonder how any of us got a 922 at all (one example: limited EHD capabilities at introduction). I hope the beta addresses bugs that didn't make the cut for the last update.
Don't lump the 622/722/722K family with the 922. They're still being given out to new accounts, while the 922 isn't. They have a far longer lifespan than the 922. I'm willing to bet that they'll still be given out when the "next big thing" is released.Stewart Vernon said:Then the 622 was the next big thing... but the 722 came... then the 722K... then the 922. So... it does seem like shorter lifecycles are becoming the norm at Dish... so it wouldn't surprise me terribly if in a couple of years we start hearing about the "Leaper" that has 6 tuners instead of 3 or something like that...
My "Dream Hopper" would have 4 satellite tuners.It would also have the slot inside to accept the MT2 Module for a total of 6 tuners(4SAT+2OTA).MCHuf said:Don't lump the 622/722/722K family with the 922. They're still being given out to new accounts, while the 922 isn't. They have a far longer lifespan than the 922. I'm willing to bet that they'll still be given out when the "next big thing" is released.
And if the "Leaper" does have 6 tuners, it will still be playing catch-up, since there are already WHDVR's with 5 or 6 tuners.
I agree with you.+100%.Stewart Vernon said:This first question is of a different type than the others. This one is about opinion. In my opinion the 922 is as good as all the other Dish DVRs. It is NOT everything it was advertised to be... so it is a disappointment, don't get me wrong... but all other things being equal, of all the ViP receivers I still would prefer a 922.
How do we know this is a fact? But wait, before we argue about it... I'll accept this as a reasonable assumption because of the similarities of the interface AND the fact that Dish wanted to move these Hopper/Joey configs clearly... so logically, it makes sense for them to re-purpose resources to help that happen quicker. Companies do this all the time, so assuming it to be fact, I don't see this as a negative at all.
This is unfortunate... but again, it makes sense. With Dish pushing [email protected] it makes sense to not sign new customers up for a 922 and then have to explain why they can't get those movies.
BUT... given that the Hopper/Joey is based on 922 code... my guess/thought is that with Hopper/Joey out the door it is probably a trivial thing to start back-developing Blockbuster support into the 922 and get those out the door again.
It sure does look like Dish wants to push Hopper/Joey as the way of the future... then again, I remember when the 921 was the next big thing (don't ask people who bought one of those about that!)
Then the 622 was the next big thing... but the 722 came... then the 722K... then the 922. So... it does seem like shorter lifecycles are becoming the norm at Dish... so it wouldn't surprise me terribly if in a couple of years we start hearing about the "Leaper" that has 6 tuners instead of 3 or something like that...