I also play a string instrument and the more I record the more I realize that intonation is just kinda... everything for certain types of music. I like to be able to always see my tuner, there are a lot of micro-adjustments on strings to be made on fly.

So, yes, I have tuners set up on all of my tracks, and they are on, however, for the armed tracks whose ins are set to come from MainTrack, the tuner does not "monitor" the input from MainTrack. I also can't keep "MainTrack" as the only displayed one, ie, when I start a clip in one of my loop tracks, ableton switches to show that track's instrument rack. yes i can switch *back* to MainTrack but it's yet another step to do in my pretty rapid paced live setup.


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It would be really cool if there were a plugin that monitored a specific in and showed a tuner over the top of all windows. It may exist but I haven't found it yet! Another solution could be a separate app, (though, window switching while performing could become an issue.) The solution I came up with as I started to type is to use my phone tuner, but, my focus is really in ableton and... the tuner is very responsive in ableton and... the phone might work, but I still want to see:

I have a Hauppauge 1196 tuner connected to my Windows 10 PC, which would be the server. I'm open to using any free software that would make this possible (I have MediaPortal and I'd been using the MPExtended plugin for Emby, although MPExtended seems to be dead). From what I can glean from Jellyfin's documentation, it doesn't directly support tuners other than the HDHomeRun, and the only live TV plugin I see listed is ServerWMC, which I can't use because I don't have Windows Media Center.

If you leave the "tuner conflict" message for a while, the message will disappear and Windows Media Center switches to the desired channel.


Note A hybrid TV tuner is a TV tuner that can be configured to receive either an analog signal or a digital signal.

Engine also works w/ the Hauppage WinTV-DualHD as well as the branded Tablo tuner (which many think is just a rebranded version of the Hauppage tuner). I have the Hauppage USB tuner and works great w/ Engine but its the only other one that works other than the Tablo one

WinTV-dualHD is a Dual TV Tuner for your Windows PC. Plug into the USB port on your Windows 10, 8 or 7 PC, and with the two built-in TV tuners, watch one channel while recording another. Or have pictu ...

If you do have cable service (and your cable provider uses CableCARD), though, you can still make use of a DVR tuner that supports CableCARD to let you view unencrypted/unprotected/DRM-free content! (Be aware that support for unencrypted channels can vary widely by cable provider and even by location within the same provider.)

The following DVR tuner devices are supported in regions where signals use the DVB-T, DVB-T2, or DVB-C formats, such as Europe, Australia, Africa, and Asia. This refers to compatibility with the system running Plex Media Server.

I have an electronic tuner but I found that AP Tuner worked much better for me because of the sheer amount of options it presents you with, such as the ability to view and listen to a graph of musical notes and a library of sounds that can be customised by the user.

Hauppauge provides an easy to use PPA for Ubuntu, which supports most of our current TV tuners. Plus HD PVR 2, Colossus 2 and Raspberry Pi install instructions are available on our Linux support page.

Watch and record basic and premium cable TV programs on your Windows Media Center PC. WinTV-DCR-2650 is a CableCARD receiver which has two tuners, so you can watch one program while recording another or record two programs at once!

HD TV tuner USB 'box' with a built-in hardware MPEG-2 encoder. You can receive NTSC, ATSC and clear QAM digital cable TV, and FM radio too. Plus it includes an IR blaster to control the TV channels on satellite TV and other set top boxes.

This tuner is apparently the HVR-850 USB OTA Tuner. I could not get this to work with the Raspberry PI at all. I wanted to use it for my Plex Server. If anyone did get it working let me know in the comments! Thanks for reading!

In any case, you can pass SyncConfig(syncer=None) to disable syncing. But again, it would be good to know how it currently looks like so we can see what the problem may be. It might be a windows-specific problem.

After the Windows 10 April 2018 Update, users are finding out that many apps no longer have access to their TV tuners and video recorders. However, this is not a problem or a bug with this new release, it's actually a change that Microsoft is implementing with version 1803 to give users more control over their privacy.

Hauppauge product codes on WinTV internal boards are normally found on the TV tuner. This is a five digit number normally followed by a revision (REV). You need to look at the first two numbers to determine the product type. The other numbers are related to the accessories which are on the product.

What happened was that Analog TV was phased out. In the US (and the US alone) cable card was mandated, thus making it impossible to produce a tuner in any shape to accept domestic cable services. The last tuner device I had, in 2004, could only receive in-the-clear cable/antenna, which meant no ability to receive anything. It also didn't help that Windows XP MCE didn't support it in later versions.

In areas that have DTH (Digital satellite) services, those required expensive tuner boxes, not unlike cable boxes, and the device you've linked to there is actually one of those. (DVB-T/DVB-S) Because in Euro areas, DVB-S was actually the satellite standard, where as in North America, it was again, competing proprietary standards. North America only has clear channels on C-Band, which required a 15' satellite dish. Digital satellite on Ku-band required a much smaller dish, but since they were all specific to one vendor, you couldn't switch. They also required smart cards to operate.

As it stands now, there is no way of connecting any kind of tuner device to computer. Cable services in the US require a card, cable services in Canada and the US run fully encrypted, and satellite services run fully encrypted, and there is no domestic in-the-clear channels unless you live within a mile of the transmitter in a large city. Even then you're lucky if you can pick up one or two ATSC channels.

So they went away because there is no demand, and the existing cable cartel structure always made it impossible to use anyway. Analog SDTV tuners could not pick up scrambled channels on cable, and all channels on analog cable were scrambled or filtered out other than those in the VHF (2-6*) range. Typically without a cable descrambler (yes an old term for it) most old TV's could only tune channel 2-6 anyway. So you needed that extra box (or a VCR that supported it) to get any channel over 6. Yet, the channels you were supposed to pay more for, were typically an additional cost. After the move to digital cable, cable boxes became required, and individual cable channels could be turned on or off by the cable company to you individually. The signal itself was still there, but the box just didn't let you watch it. The same thing happened with DTH satellite services.

Cable and Satellite piracy often involved hacking the smart cards program to tell the decoder that everything was free, or unlimited PPV, or something that basically took advantage of that fact. So these tuner/capture cards were designed to only work with signals that did not need a decryption phase. However some tuner boxes let you send out the decrypted signal (eg the "decryption box" was a separate piece), so you could just straight up plug the decoder box in and it would decrypt everything before it was passed to the card. 2351a5e196

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