Forum › Forums › Freeview HD › FVP 4000T, 5000T › 5 Star Review in what hi-fi mag
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Anonymous.
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February 10, 2016 at 2:09 pm #17720
Anonymous
InactiveSaw this and had to share.
Thoughts?
Rick.
February 10, 2016 at 2:11 pm #68908Anonymous
InactiveSorry – image here
February 10, 2016 at 4:54 pm #68909Anonymous
InactiveWho reviewed it, Stevie Wonder ?
February 11, 2016 at 8:38 am #68910Anonymous
Inactivehahahaha
February 11, 2016 at 9:00 am #68911Barry
ModeratorLink to review:
February 11, 2016 at 9:14 am #68912Anonymous
InactiveI can’t see that there’s anything particularly wrong with the review per se. Provided you buy a good example that has a working wifi module etc then a quick trial would probably yield similar results.
However, did they try manually updating the firmware, did they test whether the Samba server runs properly, did they test whether the remote download decryption works with Vista or Win7 etc?
I suspect not

Richard
PS I wonder why they didn’t do a Google and find this forum first … although the lead times for magazines might mean that they tested it months ago.
Humax technical support confirmed to me that they do not read the Forum so I had to copy and paste my posts to them before they would accept that there are issues which cannot be overcome with the current firmware. There is only one rational reason I can think of why the Humax techies will not look in this direction!
February 11, 2016 at 7:23 pm #68913Anonymous
InactiveJeez that seriously undermines my faith in whathifi reviews.
When I get the time I think it’s worth writing a user review on that site.
February 11, 2016 at 8:41 pm #68914Anonymous
InactiveHi Barry et. al.,
I have mentioned that I didn’t have time to keep up with all the posts and would check occasionally to see if there was an acceptable update, so I hope you don’t mind if I jump in and say that after almost 6 months actual use of the product that I find this review misleading and it looks like a columnist has just re-worded a “press release”.
This does happen and as I haven’t wasted anybody’s time for a month or so, I’ll tell you a story for all the “oldies “out there (if such an organism still exists).
Back in the early 1980’s I was primarily involved in pharmacology research for an international pharmaceutical company. They knew that my main hobby was the early stages of personal computing (IBM PC and pre IBM PC).
Silly me! I offered to help out in my spare time with this new thing “The IBM PC” and finished up working 25 hour days.
I had to cut corners and found a database that at the time would allow speedy coding. It was called Data-Master – (later DataEase). It was a relational database management system and was a rapid application development tool for developing relationally-organized, data-intensive software applications for personal computers. DataEase was created in the early 1980s by software developers Arun Gupta and Joseph Busch. The first version of the software was released in 1981 by Software Solutions Inc. The principals sold the company to Sapphire International Corporation of the United Kingdom in 1991.
The exact dates by now are hazy, but I had won a European competition using Data-Master to produce “the best pharmaceutical database in Europe” with that product.
Sapphire approached me soon after that and said that they were lunching a slightly improved version, renaming it DataEase, and asked me to write an article saying that this was the best product in the whole world but they had to have the finished text in less than 10 hours.
Yeh, right. Not a cat in hell’s chance!
By now the newbies are bored to death and the oldies are saying “get on with it, we’ve all been there!”
OK, you’ve all guessed –
1) I couldn’t possibly test the product and write the article in time.
2) They knew that so the article was already written for me.
3) All I had to do was put my name to it.
The moral of the story is that not all “reviews” are what we really want/need and of course this story is in no way criticising the article about the “Hummy”, the author might have spent weeks evaluating it.
Now back to the question I meant to ask when I logged on – apologies for all that – I just wanted to ask one question…
As “series end” they don’t fall off the schedules. Is there any way of deleting lots of old, no longer relevant schedules apart from going to the end painstakingly and then having to use a number of “clicks” to remove them one at a time?
Thanks for your patience but this Hummy makes me feel the need for such a catharsis every couple of months or so.
Thanks to everybody…. John.
February 11, 2016 at 9:01 pm #68915grahamlthompson
Participantpharmacologist 51 – 14 minutes ago »
Hi Barry et. al.,
I have mentioned that I didn’t have time to keep up with all the posts and would check occasionally to see if there was an acceptable update, so I hope you don’t mind if I jump in and say that after almost 6 months actual use of the product that I find this review misleading and it looks like a columnist has just re-worded a “press release”.
This does happen and as I haven’t wasted anybody’s time for a month or so, I’ll tell you a story for all the “oldies “out there (if such an organism still exists).
Back in the early 1980’s I was primarily involved in pharmacology research for an international pharmaceutical company. They knew that my main hobby was the early stages of personal computing (IBM PC and pre IBM PC).
Silly me! I offered to help out in my spare time with this new thing “The IBM PC” and finished up working 25 hour days.
I had to cut corners and found a database that at the time would allow speedy coding. It was called Data-Master – (later DataEase). It was a relational database management system and was a rapid application development tool for developing relationally-organized, data-intensive software applications for personal computers. DataEase was created in the early 1980s by software developers Arun Gupta and Joseph Busch. The first version of the software was released in 1981 by Software Solutions Inc. The principals sold the company to Sapphire International Corporation of the United Kingdom in 1991.
The exact dates by now are hazy, but I had won a European competition using Data-Master to produce “the best pharmaceutical database in Europe” with that product.
Sapphire approached me soon after that and said that they were lunching a slightly improved version, renaming it DataEase, and asked me to write an article saying that this was the best product in the whole world but they had to have the finished text in less than 10 hours.
Yeh, right. Not a cat in hell’s chance!
By now the newbies are bored to death and the oldies are saying “get on with it, we’ve all been there!”
OK, you’ve all guessed –
1) I couldn’t possibly test the product and write the article in time.
2) They knew that so the article was already written for me.
3) All I had to do was put my name to it.
The moral of the story is that not all “reviews” are what we really want/need and of course this story is in no way criticising the article about the “Hummy”, the author might have spent weeks evaluating it.
Now back to the question I meant to ask when I logged on – apologies for all that – I just wanted to ask one question…
As “series end” they don’t fall off the schedules. Is there any way of deleting lots of old, no longer relevant schedules apart from going to the end painstakingly and then having to use a number of “clicks” to remove them one at a time?
Thanks for your patience but this Hummy makes me feel the need for such a catharsis every couple of months or so.
Thanks to everybody…. John.
That’s nothing to do with Humax. It’s a standard for both Freesat and Freeview. They stay in the schedule for 13 weeks after the last programme is recorded (The broadcaster can add a programme to the series in this period – eg Christmas Specials Like Strictly Come Dancing). After 13 weeks the broadcaster can recycle the crid codes for a different series. As a result they will auto delete if you haven’t manually deleted them
February 11, 2016 at 9:13 pm #68916Anonymous
InactiveHi Graham,
Re. “That’s nothing to do with Humax. It’s a standard for both Freesat and Freeview. They stay in the schedule for 13 weeks after the last programme is recorded (The broadcaster can add a programme to the series in this period – eg Christmas Specials Like Strictly Come Dancing). After 13 weeks the broadcaster can recycle the crid codes for a different series. As a result they will auto delete if you haven’t manually deleted them”.
Very many thanks, very useful to have that explained. Do you know why this Hummy is getting reasonable – “even good reviews” when it is so bad compared to the previous offerings?
Kind regards……….. John.
February 12, 2016 at 4:16 pm #68917Anonymous
Inactivepharmacologist 51 – 19 hours ago »
Do you know why this Hummy is getting reasonable – “even good reviews” when it is so bad compared to the previous offerings?
Kind regards……….. John.
Probably because it is really quite a good product.
February 12, 2016 at 8:24 pm #68918Anonymous
InactiveHi Brian,
It would really cheer-up Humax if you told them of your unique opinion; this was my last exchange with them…
QUOTE
from Humax…
Hi John,
Many thanks for providing these details. We do have an update due towards the end of this month but with some issues still being investigated there is a possibility it might be pushed back to ensure issues are fully resolved.
Again thank you for providing these details as it will help us greatly.
Best Regards,
XXXXXX
Humax Customer Support
UNQUOTE.
February 12, 2016 at 10:06 pm #68919grahamlthompson
Participantpharmacologist 51 – 1 day ago »
Hi Graham,
Re. “That’s nothing to do with Humax. It’s a standard for both Freesat and Freeview. They stay in the schedule for 13 weeks after the last programme is recorded (The broadcaster can add a programme to the series in this period – eg Christmas Specials Like Strictly Come Dancing). After 13 weeks the broadcaster can recycle the crid codes for a different series. As a result they will auto delete if you haven’t manually deleted them”.
Very many thanks, very useful to have that explained. Do you know why this Hummy is getting reasonable – “even good reviews” when it is so bad compared to the previous offerings?
Kind regards……….. John.
I don’t have the box so not in any way qualified to comment other than it does seem to require some software improvements. However having used Humax boxes for a long time hopefully Humax and Freeview will eventually sort it out.
I currently have a Foxsat-hdr, a HDR-1000s and two HDR-Fox T2’s in service. They all currently reliably work as they should. The Foxsat dates from 2008, all of them had various significant software issues on launch, now long sorted out.
February 12, 2016 at 10:18 pm #68920Barry
Moderatorpharmacologist 51 – 1 hour ago »
Hi Brian,
It would really cheer-up Humax if you told them of your unique opinion; this was my last exchange with them…
Not unique, I thought the review was ok…..
February 12, 2016 at 10:49 pm #68921Anonymous
InactiveThe 13 week auto recording schedule delete is interesting as on my 1000s I have a couple of items from last June and one from May?????
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