The SageTV-provided EPG server has been shut off. For more information, see these topics: For continued EPG data, it is suggested to sign up for, then use the built-in found in SageTV version 9. To clear this message, click the red X in the upper left corner. Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. Hello, I've just downloaded and trying out Sage TV and it working fine with the exception of my USB transmitter to change the cable box channel.
I use Vista Ultimate and it work perfectly, but I wanted to try Sage because the TV output of my PVR350 doesn't work in MCE, but Sage does. In the settup, when I choose UIRT, it says an error like it doesn't recognize the device. The UIRT I use is a device that came with my Dell Laptop. It doesn't have a specific name or model.
Plds dvd-rw ds8a8sh driver: User’s review: Drivers downloads and hardware from philips & lite-on digital solutions this page contains the list of download links for microsoft cd-rom. Driversthis page contains the list of download links for microsoft cd-rom..to download the proper driver you should find the your device name and click the download link software & updates downloads.
All I can read is OVU4003/00. When I google it came down to Phillips. I was wondering if there could be a work around to make it work. Hello, I've just downloaded and trying out Sage TV and it working fine with the exception of my USB transmitter to change the cable box channel. I use Vista Ultimate and it work perfectly, but I wanted to try Sage because the TV output of my PVR350 doesn't work in MCE, but Sage does. In the settup, when I choose UIRT, it says an error like it doesn't recognize the device. The UIRT I use is a device that came with my Dell Laptop.
It doesn't have a specific name or model. All I can read is OVU4003/00. When I google it came down to Phillips. I was wondering if there could be a work around to make it work. Thanks That's not the same device.
USB-UIRT is a specific device you can purchase from If your device is MCE compatible choosing MCE may work with your device. Nope, USB-UIRT Transceiver is. Choosing the MCE device in Setup is for the receiver portion of the MCE transceiver, not the blaster portion.
IIUC, tHe blaster portion is not natively supported in Sage, since Microsoft has not opened that part of the API. Check out and for solutions that use the MCE blaster. However, there are workarounds to enable the MCE blaster portion, Are these workarounds refers to the link you posted above which is consisting the use of a 3rd party software (HIP)? Or it is a workaround that work within Sage? If you try the Blaster.zip option in Vista let me know if it works for you. I never got it to accept commands from my remote.
The other option using replacement drivers and HIP is you best option. The only drawback is when you install the replacement drivers it no longer works in WMCE and you have to program each remote button in HIP. I don't mind though since I only use Sage. If you dont like that option you can alway reload the default drivers and you are back where you started. I am currently working on a modern day (SageTV 6.x) walkthrough for installing the replacement drivers as well as HIP and all additional software. The other guide was for SageTV 4.x and it has changed a little.
Mine should be ready tomorrow with alot more detail and all the links to needed files (including the new drivers). I will try to post it in the guides and tutorials section of the downloads link when I am done. Edit: I am done with the tutorial but I dont have any pictures loaded in it yet so if you want it now just PM me and I can email it to you. I never got it to work with Sagetray. I used the HIP method.
It is easier and faster than trying to figure out other methods. I just uploaded the walkthrough and posted it in the section. The guide even says how to get EXETuner to work.
Doesn't matter, I still can't make the EXETuner pluggin to work in the first place. From all the example I saw everyone seems to use a service for their blaster running in background of Windows or a different program called in their registry.
I don't have any of those in my computer, yet I can make work my blaster in Vista MCE.
About The second generation Apple® Remote has an elegant and very slim aluminum enclosure. Compared to its, it features an improved, ergonomic design and an additional button. The remote supports low battery detection and sends its ID (in the range of 0-255) along with every button press.
This ID can be used for pairing with most receivers that support the Apple® Remote. Remote Buddy offers additional functionality for multiple Apple® Remotes when used with the. A detailed review of the aluminum Apple® Remote can be found in. Factsheet Technology Button Count 7 Required Receiver Any of:, select (please see table) Bundled With Receiver No Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with and Battery Non-rechargeable, one CR2032 Lithium 3.0V coin battery, user-replaceable Shopping Links At f.ex.,.
About The white Apple® Remote is ergonomically designed and a pleasure to use. It supports low battery detection and sends its ID (in the range of 0-255) along with every button press. This ID can be used for pairing with most receivers that support the Apple® Remote. Remote Buddy offers additional functionality for multiple Apple® Remotes when used with the. The white Apple® Remote has been discontinued in late 2009. It was superseded by the new. Factsheet Technology Button Count 6 Required Receiver Any of:, select (please see table) Bundled With Receiver No Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with and Battery Non-rechargeable, one CR2032 Lithium 3.0V coin battery, user-replaceable Shopping Links At f.ex.,.
Using EyeTV remote controls with Remote Buddy Since version 2.5.1 of EyeTV and Version 1.8 of Remote Buddy, both applications cooperate to give users of EyeTV's remote control full access to Remote Buddy's functionality. Software and Hardware-Requirements You need a and remote control. Button presses received by EyeTV receivers are decoded by EyeTV and handled by Remote Buddy. Therefore EyeTV and Remote Buddy need to be running at the same time. Setup No setup is needed. When both EyeTV and Remote Buddy are running at the same time, the first press of a button on a supported remote control (and received via a ) automatically adds it to Remote Buddy.
You'll have to press a button on the remote again when you start EyeTV again the next time. The six most important buttons All core functions of Remote Buddy can be accessed with a set of just 6 buttons. The following table shows you which buttons on your remote control are this core set. Pressing the 'Menu' button takes you to Remote Buddy's menu. Please note that by default, you have to perform a long press of the 'Menu' button to access Remote Buddy's menu when EyeTV is the currently active application. You can change the mapping of buttons for EyeTV on your remote control in Remote Buddy's preferences at Mapping EyeTV.
The remote controls are ordered from left to right, corresponding to the illustration on the left. Remote control Menu Selection Left Right Up Down TerraTec Gray Info (i) OK / / TerraTec Black OSD OK / / eyeTV Remote Enter OK Vol Ch / Ch / Pinnacle Remote 0 5 4 6 2 8 Troubleshooting Please make sure EyeTV and Remote Buddy are running at the same time. If your remote does not turn up in Remote Buddy after pressing a button on your remote, either your version of EyeTV and/or Remote Buddy is not up-to-date, your does not support this feature or your remote control and the EyeTV receiver's IR receiver do not have a direct line of sight. Factsheet Technology Button Count depends on remote control model Required Receiver Select (please see table) Bundled With Receiver Yes, with select (please see table) Wakeup From Sleep No Battery One or two standard AA or AAA 1.5V batteries (depeding on model), user-replaceable. About The Griffin AirClick USB Remote is based on RF technology, quite small and lighweight. To allow access to more than 5 actions, Remote Buddy adds the ability to map additional actions for specific combinations of buttons.
The buttons of the remote are arranged for easy access to play/pause, volume control, backward and forward. Due to their position, however, we can't recommend this remote for navigation in menus. Factsheet Technology Button Count 5 Required Receiver Bundled With Receiver Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with Battery Non-rechargeable, built-in battery, not user-replaceable Shopping Links Please see. About The Harmony® Smart Control, Harmony® Companion, Harmony® Ultimate and Harmony® Elite are universal remote bundles from Logitech®. At the heart of the bundles is the Harmony® Hub, which can control other devices via infrared (IR), Bluetooth® and WiFi. The hub itself then can be controlled by smartphones and the included RF remote.
Remote Buddy can be connected to the Harmony® Hub via Bluetooth® and then provides access to all 100+ applications it supports. Best of (almost) all worlds The Harmony® Hub-based remotes are the best remotes you can get if you want to use Remote Buddy in a home entertainment context. Since they connect to Remote Buddy on your Mac® via Bluetooth®, the connection is rock solid, button presses are received almost instantly and no line of sight or external USB IR receiver is needed. Battery life, especially for the Smart Control and Companion models is. Limitations In our tests, the Harmony® Hub would not work if it wasn't connected to a WiFi network with Internet access - and it could only remember access information for the WiFi network it is currently connected to. This makes it unsuitable for mobile use. For these remotes, Remote Buddy also requires macOS 10.9.3 or later.
Older macOS releases may work as well but - for this remote - are not officially supported. Setup made easy In order to make setting up Harmony® Hub-based remotes as easy as possible for you, we provide a pictured How-To that guides you through the complete setup process: Factsheet Technology Required Receiver Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with Shopping Links Harmony® Companion at,. About The Wii™ Remote maybe is the most stunning remote control you can currently get your hands on. Bluetooth®-based, it offers high responsiveness and reliability.
Its built-in motion and IR sensors enable the IR mouse mode also supported by Remote Buddy. Infrared (IR) Mouse Mode Remote Buddy can use the IR camera built into the front of the Wii™ Remote to implement a virtual mouse that can be moved by pointing the Wii™ Remote itself to a different position. The IR Mouse Mode works by tracking the position of IR light sources - usually supplied by a Wireless Wii™ Sensor Bar located on top or below the display use with the Mac®.
A Wireless Wii™ Sensor Bar is physically required for using the IR Mouse Mode. If, however, you just want to use the buttons of the Wii™ Remote with Remote Buddy, you do not need a Wireless Wii™ Sensor Bar. The Wii™ Sensor Bar (and why it's name can be misleading) The Wii™ Sensor Bar emits the IR light required by the IR camera ('sensor') inside the Wii™ Remote itself. The Sensor Bar - unlike its name suggests - does not contain any receiver or sensors at all. It consists of a simple row of IR light sources (and thus the physically exact opposite of a sensor).
These IR light sources are seen by the IR camera located at the front of the Wii™ Remote. Their location is then sent to Remote Buddy via Bluetooth®. Remote Buddy uses this data to track the location of the IR light sources. From this, it calculates the position of the Wii™ Remote and places the mouse cursor at the respective position on your screen. Battery life It's important to keep in mind that the Wii™ Remote was designed as a game controller. It's filled with high tech and has to maintain a Blueooth® connection when in use.
All of this of course consumes power, so that, depending on which hardware features you use, battery life of the remote can greatly vary and is generally not comparable with that of other remote controls. Remote Buddy's Bluetooth® power saving options can help you increase battery life (slightly or significantly - depending on your use pattern). They can be found at Prefs Hardware Bluetooth® receiver. Important notice regarding the Wii™ Remote Plus Currently, Remote Buddy only supports the regular Wii™ Remote. The Wii™ Remote Plus is currently not supported, because this model doesn't work properly with the macOS Bluetooth Stack. These issues need to be addressed by Apple® first.
Factsheet Technology Button Count 11 Required Receiver Bundled With Receiver No Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with Battery Two standard AA 1.5V batteries, user-replaceable Shopping Links At f.ex. Amazon.com (, ), Amazon.de (affiliate links:, ), Amazon.co.uk (, ), Amazon.fr (, ). About The Sony® PS3 BD Remote Control has a low price point, is widely available, offers over 50 buttons that can be mapped freely with Remote Buddy and uses technology - which is built into almost all more recent Mac® models. How to maximize battery life To maximize the time between recharging/exchanging your batteries, be sure to make use of the power saving options in Remote Buddy exactly as recommended for the Sony® PS3 BD Remote in the.
Factsheet Technology Button Count 51 Required Receiver Bundled With Receiver No Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with Battery Two standard AA 1.5V batteries, user-replaceable Shopping Links At f.ex.,. About The Apple® Built-In IR Receiver is a built-in infrared receiver that is limited - in hardware - to receiving signals of just the Apple® Remote (, ) and programmable remotes that can immitate it precisely. Other remotes can't be used with it. Remote Buddy Exclusive: End-To-End Event Routing Optimization Unlike other products, Remote Buddy builds upon its own, highly optimized driver architecture. This allows it to employ realtime end-to-end event routing optimization, which keeps the time it takes to react to a button press to a minimum. Example: 'Rewind' is the only action mapped to the 'Left'-button. No second action is mapped to the Hold-state of the 'Left'-button.
Remote Buddy's optimization will start triggering the rewind as soon as you press the button. In the same scenario, other software will leave you waiting for at least about 0.25 seconds before it starts reacting to the button press.
Remote Buddy's support for multiple Apple® Remotes Each Apple® Remote has one of 256 different IDs. This ID is sent along with every button press by the Apple® Remote.
When you enable Multiple Remote Support in Remote Buddy, it makes use of this information and enables you to pair more than one Apple® Remote with your Mac®, map different actions to the buttons of each Apple® Remote or groups of Apple® Remotes. Availability Only these Mac® models come with a built-in Apple® IR receiver: Model Processor architecture Availability iMac® (until Sept. 2012) Intel® Built-In MacBook® (until Oct.
19th, 2009) Intel® Built-In MacBook Air® (until Oct. 20th, 2010) Intel® Built-In MacBook® Pro (without Retina Display) Intel® Built-In Mac® mini (until Nov. 8th, 2018) Intel® Built-In Add an IR receiver to your Mac® Does your Mac® lack an IR receiver? Using Remote Buddy, you can still add an Apple® Remote to your Mac®.
What you'll need for that is one of the receivers listed under 'Required Receiver' in the Factsheet of the and - of course - the Apple® Remote itself and Remote Buddy. The End-To-End Event Routing Optimization is available for all remotes and receivers supported by Remote Buddy. The extended functionality of the Multiple Remotes Support in Remote Buddy is limited to the Apple® Built-In IR Receiver. Factsheet Technology Connectivity Built-In Bundled With Remote The Apple® Remote is no longer included with the Mac® and needs to be purchased seperately. Compatible With Remote, Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with /, Pairing Support Yes, with /. About A Bluetooth® Adapter can either be a built-in component of your Mac® or added as a USB dongle lateron.
To find out, whether your Mac® has a Bluetooth® Adapter, launch /Applications/Utilities/System Profiler.app, select Hardware USB on the left and check for the existance of a Bluetooth® USB Host Controller. Your System Preferences are an additional indicator: after launching System Preferences.app, you usually shouldn't see a Bluetooth® icon under 'Hardware' unless your system actually has a Bluetooth® Adapter. If your Mac® does not have a Bluetooth® Adapter, you can add one with a rather inexpensive Bluetooth® USB dongle. Factsheet Technology Connectivity Built-In or USB 1.1 or 2.0 Bundled With Remote No Compatible With Remote, Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with, Pairing Support Yes, with. About When Microsoft® created the Windows® XP Media Center Edition (MCE), they also introduced the eHome standard for IR receivers. Receivers following this standard can deliver the raw IR stream received by the sensor.
Remote Buddy supports the eHome receivers listed below and makes use of the raw IR stream to enable the use of Apple® Remotes with the receivers. We found the Philips® OVU4110 (pictured on the left) and OVU4120 (looks almost identical) to maybe be the most beautiful external IR receivers we've come across so far. Compatibility matrix Model Can be used with remote controls Datasheet HP OVU400102/71, - Lenovo OVU430006/01, - Philips® OVU4003 (incl. OVU400301/00), - Philips® OVU4110 (pictured on the left) (incl. OVU411002/00, part of the SRM 5100 bundle), - Philips® OVU4120 (incl.
OVU412000/00), - Rosewill RHRC-11001, - SMK eHome Infrared Transceiver (USB Vendor ID: 0x0609, Product ID: 0x031d), - SMK MCE Tranceivr Emulator Device 2006 (USB Vendor ID: 0x0609, Product ID: 0x0334), - TopSeed TSES-IR01 (USB Vendor ID: 0x1784, Product ID: 0x0001, part of the Hauppauge Media Center Remote Control Kit), Twisted Melon™ Manta™ TR1, - Philips® receivers are also often sold in branded versions. These will usually have a label on the bottom with the same model number printed on it. For example, the Microsoft®-branded receiver we've come across was labeled as OVU4003. Factsheet Technology Connectivity USB Bundled With Remote Some receivers are offered in a bundle with a Windows® MCE Remote (which is currently not supported) Compatible With Remote, Wakeup From Sleep Yes, with Windows® MCE Remote Pairing Support Yes, with / Shopping Links Rosewill RHRC-11001 at f.ex. Lenovo MCE Kit at f.ex., HP MCE Kit at f.ex., Hauppauge Media Center Remote Control Kit at f.ex., (Please note: we provide these links for your convenience. We do, however, not provide any guarantee and can't offer any liability for the correctness of the contents of any linked websites.
Example: when we purchased the kit from Amazon, its contents looked as pictured at the and not as pictured at Amazon). More information Please see for more information on EyeTV Remote support in Remote Buddy. Compatibility matrix EyeTV Receiver Supported remote controls (from EyeTV Version) EyeTV 200 Not supported. EyeTV 250 No test results yet.
EyeTV 250 plus (3.0.4) EyeTV 300 No test results yet. EyeTV 310 No test results yet. EyeTV 400 Not supported. EyeTV 500 Not supported. EyeTV 610 Not supported. EyeTV Diversity (2007) No test results yet. EyeTV Diversity (2008), (3.0.4) EyeTV DTT (2007) No test results yet.
Philips Ovu4003 Driver For Mac Windows 10
EyeTV DTT (2008), (3.0.4) EyeTV DTT Deluxe (2008) No test results yet. EyeTV DTT Deluxe (2009) No test results yet. EyeTV Hybrid (2007), (2.5.2) EyeTV Hybrid (2008), (3.0.4) EyeTV Sat (3.1.2) Pinnacle TV for Mac® Hybrid Stick (2.5.2) Pinnacle TV for Mac® DVB-T Stick No test results yet. TerraTec Cinergy H7 USB (user tested - ) TerraTec Cinergy T², (2.5.2) TerraTec Cinergy S USB Mac (3.0.4) TerraTec Cinergy S7 USB (3.1.2) TerraTec Cinergy DT USB XS Diversity Mac No test results yet. TerraTec Cinergy Hybrid T USB XS FM Mac No test results yet.
Philips Ovu4003 Driver For Mac Download
All other EyeTV receivers No test results yet. The can be used. With this receiver type, the seperate Select- and Play/Pause-buttons can't be mapped independantly, though. Factsheet Technology Connectivity USB 2.0 Bundled With Remote vary depending on EyeTV bundle Compatible With Remote Please see the Compatibility Matrix above Wakeup From Sleep No Pairing Support No. About The Keyspan IR Bundles (sold as Keyspan (AirPort®) Express Remote and Keyspan Remote for iTunes) consists of a Keyspan IR receiver and a.
Remote Buddy uses its own drivers and does not depend on or use Keyspan's drivers. Compatibility matrix Bundle Bundle P/N Receiver P/N Supported More info Keyspan Digital Media Remote (DMR) URM-15A UIA-10 NOT supported - Keyspan Digital Media Remote (DMR) URM-15A UIA-11, - Keyspan Express Remote URM-17A UIA-11F, Keyspan Remote for iTunes URM-15T UIA-11F, Factsheet Technology Connectivity USB 1.1 Bundled With Remote Keyspan IR Remote Compatible With Remote, Wakeup From Sleep Up to (and including) macOS 10.10. Not supported on macOS 10.11 and later. Pairing Support No Receiver P/N UIA-11, UIA-11F Bundle P/N URM-15A (with UIA-11 receiver), URM-15T, URM-17A Shopping Links At f.ex.
Amazon.com (, ), Amazon.co.uk , Amazon.fr. About Your Mac® can be connected to a through a variety of different ways. It can be through a built-in WLAN Adapter (marketed by Apple® as 'AirPort®') or a WLAN USB Dongle. Network Requirements To use Remote Buddy's companion apps over a Wireless LAN connection, the Wireless LAN must meet these requirements:. All devices (your Mac® and your remote - the latter is usually an iPhone™/iPod® Touch) are connected to and logged into the same Wireless LAN. All devices on this Wireless LAN can communicate directly with one another without limitation (no local network firewall). All devices have to be on the same IP subnet.
Two devices share the same subnet, if their IPs are identical in their first three numbers. For example two clients with the IPs 10.0.5.1 and 10.0.5.2 are in the same subnet, whereas clients with the IP 10.0.5.1 and 192.168.0.1 are not. You can find the IP(s) of your Mac® at Remote Buddy Preferences Mobile Access. You can find the IP of an iPhone™/iPod® Touch at Settings Wi-Fi 'White arrow in blue circle next to your selected network' IP Address. The Wireless LAN has to work reliable.
It may not drop packets. While, to some degree the error correction in the TCP/IP protocol stack should be able to deal with these, packet drops at the very least cause high latencies and reactions to your touches will feel laggy.
Excessive packet drops will cause connections to break down or requests to get lost. Factsheet Technology Connectivity Built-In or USB 2.0 Bundled With Remote No Compatible With Remote and Wakeup From Sleep No Pairing Support Yes, via WLAN access control (f.ex. Password protection). What is Bluetooth®? Bluetooth® is a complex, bi-directional, wireless communication standard using radio waves as carrier medium. Usage Bluetooth® remotes need to be paired using Remote Buddy's built-in Setup Wizard before they can be used. Bluetooth® knows Class 1, 2 and 3 devices that mainly differ in the range in which they can be used.
Under optimal conditions, the maximum range is 100 meters for Class 1, 50 meters for Class 2 and 10 meters for Class 3. Devices belonging to different classes are interoperable, but the maximum range is then limited by the device offering the smallest range. Notes Bluetooth® uses the same 2.4 GHz band as using the 802.11b (11 MBit/s), 802.11g (54 MBit/s) and (in part) 802.11n (300 MBit/s) standard and can therefore have a negative impact on the quality and stability of such networks when used simultaneously. No interference can occur with Wireless LANs operating in the 5 GHz range (802.11a and 802.11n when configured accordingly). Technical data Standard RF band Maximum Speed Bluetooth® 1.2 2.4 GHz 1 MBit/s Bluetooth® 2.0 + EDR 2.4 GHz 3 MBit/s. What is Infrared? Infrared (IR) signifies a range of the light spectrum that's invisible to the human eye.
Products using IR technology use light in the IR range as carrier medium. Usage As the IR technology essentially just uses light, it can't be used through walls. A direct line of sight needs to exist between IR remotes and their targeted IR receivers.
The maximum possible distance between receiver and remote depends on the strength of the signal and the quality of the receiver and is usually a few meters. Notes Exposure of IR receivers to sunlight (which also includes light in the IR range) and heat (which essentially is just another, more popular word for IR light) can have a negative impact on the reception of the IR signal and should be avoided. What is Wireless LAN? Wireless LAN (WLAN - also known by the marketing names AirPort® or Wi-Fi®) is a complex, bi-directional, wireless communication standard using radio waves as carrier medium. Usage Wireless LANs work with a base station (usually a router) and clients that are wirelessly connected to it.
The most commonly used protocol stack used over Wireless LANs is TCP/IP - the protocol powering the Internet. Wireless LANs can have their own name and be protected with a password. In the most simple (and most common) scenario, the access point is configured correctly (see for what is meant in this context) and all devices (for example a Mac® and an ) are connected wirelessly to it. Notes Often, WLAN routers keep computers connected to their Ethernet port in a network separate of their wireless network. Some of these routers even block any communication between the two networks. If you have problems establishing a connection between your Mac® (connected to the router via Ethernet in this example) and a WLAN device (f.ex. An connected to the router via WLAN), this may be the root of the problem.
The network connection stability and reliability of WLAN is significantly dependant on these factors: interoperability between WLAN adapters (mainly determined by the quality of the operating system drivers for WLAN hardware) and base station, WLANs in the neighbourhood using the same WLAN channel, devices that emit radiation in the same RF band (f.ex. Microwaves, ). Technical data Standard RF band Maximum Speed IEEE 802.11a 5 GHz 54 MBit/s IEEE 802.11b 2.4 GHz 11 MBit/s IEEE 802.11g 2.4 GHz 54 MBit/s IEEE 802.11n 2.4 GHz and/or 5GHz 300 MBit/s. Disclaimer Although the information on this page has been written and composed with greatest care, we can neither exclude the possibility of errors nor that of technical changes to the products and technologies portrait here. Therefore, use all of the information on this page at your own risk and all information is subject to change without notice. The provided lists of shopping links make no claim to be complete.
All shopping links point to external websites for whose content we assume no liability. IOSPIRIT GmbH and Remote Buddy are neither affiliated with nor endorsed or sponsored by Apple®, Nintendo®, Keyspan™, Philips®, Sony®, Microsoft®, Twisted Melon™, Logitech®, Griffin or any other, previously named company.