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Early HD cable boxes from Motorola and Scientific Atlanta frequently featured active FireWire ports.
Using a FireWire-equipped computer to "rip" or record live high-definition video directly from a cable box's FireWire output, often bypassing standard encryption for personal use (as mandated by older FCC regulations). Notable Examples & Hardware Toshiba Symbio firewire dvr
Enthusiasts still seek out old FireWire DVR hardware and compatible CRT or Plasma TVs for retro gaming setups or to archive old DV/MiniDV tapes, where FireWire remains the "gold standard" for transfer. What are ya waiting for to come to the VCF East swap meet? Early HD cable boxes from Motorola and Scientific
While largely a relic of the mid-2000s, FireWire DVRs (Digital Video Recorders) represent a unique era of high-definition recording where "FireWire" (IEEE 1394) was the primary interface for high-bandwidth data transfer between cable boxes, external drives, and computers. What is a FireWire DVR? A FireWire DVR typically refers to one of two setups: What are ya waiting for to come to the VCF East swap meet
At the peak of its use, FCC rules required cable providers to include an active "IEEE 1394" (FireWire) port on their HD set-top boxes to ensure consumers could connect third-party recording devices.
Most modern cable boxes have disabled their FireWire ports or removed them entirely, as HDMI provides a simpler (and more secure for the provider) single-cable solution for audio and video.
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