Elyse Betters Picaro is the former Editor-in-Chief of Pocket-lint and the former Operations Manager for Valnet's Consumer Tech brands, including Pocket-lint, Android Police, and XDA. She is based in ...
The TiVo Edge DVR is new and improved, yet the experience is still sliding backwards. The best thing about TiVo has always been its fundamentals. No other DVR gives you as much control over which ...
The rise of cord cutting and streaming video was supposed to render the digital video recorder (DVR) irrelevant. In theory, you shouldn’t need to record anything when services like Netflix and Amazon ...
If you ever wished your streaming TV setup could feel more like using a TiVo DVR in its heyday, Channels DVR might be what you’re looking for. This DVR service for cord cutters can record from both an ...
This over-the-air DVR has a built-in hard drive and plays nicely with Sling TV, but our biggest gripes haven’t changed. The AirTV Anywhere is by no means the best over-the-air DVR for cord cutters, ...
The budget streaming TV service has removed the recording limits from its premium DVR feature. The budget streaming TV service has removed the recording limits from its premium DVR feature. is a ...
You may not be sitting on your couch wondering if there’s any difference between DVRs and NVRs, but if you’re doing any research for a home security system, you may have seen these terms thrown around ...
This DVR software for cord cutters justifies its premium price with features you won’t find elsewhere. Channels DVR is a service that caters to the pickiest of cord cutters. No other cord-cutting DVR ...
A new DVR with a never-before-seen feature doesn't come around every day, and if it's the sort of amenity that works in every room of the house, without compromise, then we just have to review it.
You can use the Game DVR feature of the Xbox app in Windows 10 to record videos of your PC gameplay and upload them to any social site, easily via the app’s Game Bar. We have seen how to use the Game ...
In the late 90s, Anthony Wood and his company ReplayTV ushered in the era of on-demand viewing with introduction of the DVR, a box that allowed consumers to record and watch shows when they wanted.