How about getting endless TV over the Internet without the trouble of ever tagging which TV programs you want to record?

Image: Tvinno logo from the Tvinno website.
Now it's possible through a cool new service called Tvinno at www.tvinno.com
Tvinno currently offers these channels:
Germany: RTL, RTL2, SuperRTL, VOX, n-tv, Sat1, ProSieben, Kabel1, N24, 9Live, ZDF, 3Sat, and Kika
Italy: Rai1, Rai2, Rai3
Sweden: SVT1, SVT2, TV3, TV4, Barnkanalen/Kunskapskanalen
Finland: YLE1, YLE2 YLE-fst, YLE Teema, MTV3, Nelonen, JIM, SubTV, Urheilukanava, The Voice
In Finland the service is better known as www.tvkaista.fi - Finnish channels are in that separate service, and the rest (German, Italian and Swedish) can be found from www.tvinno.com
If you click this link here, and register before the 14th of February 2009 you will get a free trial account to try it out.
The service is provided by the same people who have been building up TVKaista for the finnish market. Now they are expanding to the TV of other countries.
Tvinno works by recording every program from every channel. Then it saves everything for a couple of weeks in various formats (the highest resolution being a 8Mbps stream). You can search for programs and save them for later viewing. You can even download specific program files and save them indefinitely on your own hard disk.
I have been using the Finnish version of Tvinno for quite some time now and it has changed the way I watch TV. I no longer worry about recording anything; the service does that for me. And primarily watch all of my TV only from this service.
It comes in very handy in situations where somebody says "did you see that cool interview on channel X a few days ago?" and often enough I didn't, but no worries, I can just login to the service, search and find the clip in an instant and watch it, save it, download it or what ever.
I have also been using the service to save my own TV interviews for later use and for stuff like placing them on Facebook etc.
This is also an excellent service for any expat who wants to get the TV of his/her home country over the Internet. I am under the impression that for example Jyri Engeström of www.Jaiku.com is an enthusiastic user and is using this service to get his Finnish TV in San Francisco.
As far as I know this service is entirely legal in all the above mentioned countries - in essence it is about hiring somebody (in this case a company) to do your TV recording for you. For all practical purposes its the same thing as hiring a person to sit on your couch and manually operate the remote to record every channel. This just does it automatically. Its a public broadcast, its your TV, and you can record it if you want to.
The Tvinno service is still quite raw and almost unskinned as far as fancy graphical UIs go. Despite of that it does work. Some information pages in there might still contain bits of finnish, but for other than that Tvinno seems entirely usable.
What do you think; does something like this have a chance of changing the way people watch broadcast TV?
Hi. My name is Taneli Tikka. This is where I preach what I practice. I'm a
serial entrepreneur and a startup activist of sorts. People usually know me
from my past and present consumer Internet service projects: IRC-Galleria,
Dopplr, Muxlim, StarDoll, RunToShop, Vakuutuskone.com, and a bunch of other stuff. My
"proper" bio is behind this link. Glad to see you here, thanks for browsing
around.
Comments
Over and out
Wed, 2009-01-21 20:37 — Hannu Ripatti (not verified)I still think that Mr. Jungner was right when he said a couple of years ago that YLE will not broadcast anything in ten years. Tvinno on a set top box should do he trick.
Redundancy is sometimesd good
Wed, 2009-01-21 22:54 — Jani Karlsson (not verified)I've been using TVkaista for about 3 months now, and my TiVo is gathering dust at home, didn't even bother to install the client to this laptop. Don't recall when was the last time I recorded something to digibox.
Just watched Obama's inauguration from TV1 here in London. On the iPhone (it was a boring panel...) On the other hand I've used Joost since beta, SurfTheChannel & VEOH for ages, so I may not be what you might call a virgin user of IPTV.
Harvinainen yhdistelmä käy TVkaistan kimppuun
Wed, 2009-01-21 23:02 — Jani Karlsson (not verified)http://www.digitoday.fi/viihde/2009/01/21/harvinainen-yhdistelma-kay-tvk...
Read the comment
Thu, 2009-01-22 21:51 — Anonymous (not verified)Read the comment (fin):
http://www.digitoday.fi/viihde/2009/01/21/harvinainen-yhdistelma-kay-tvk...
Nice service!
Just not legal.
Legality of TVinno
Fri, 2009-1-23 11:23 – taneliI think that "the jury is still out" on the case of their legality. So far it seems that the big commercial TV channels like MTV3 don't necessarily have any kind of strong case against them. It will be interesting to see how the thing unfolds.
Legality on TV-kaista
Thu, 2009-02-05 16:00 — Timo Poijärvi (not verified)Just recently joined TV-kaista and have to say it completely changed the way I watch telly. Beautiful service indeed. When it comes to legal or not legal I'd say the crucial point occurs when the service provider charges money from the users for this kind of operation. Additionally, some kind of mechanical fee could be debatable as they are indeed re-recording the program feed onto their hard drives... just like music biz has had it for years now... however, the case is not quite strong I'd say. Having said that all I personally keep using the service - just love it!
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