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Review: TiVo Series 4 Premier XL

There's a lot of competition out there for DVRs. TiVo's Series 4 stands out with some brilliant features and an, ahem, enormous hard drive.
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Photos By Jon Snyder for Wired.com

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Rating:

8/10

WIRED
Truly an HD DVR. THX-certified picture and sound. Faster processor means zippy performance, no lag. Web services aplenty: YouTube, Picasa, Rhapsody, Photobucket, and Live365. Smoking new hardware, same old service fee ($13 per month). Oldies but goodies like external storage, multiroom viewing and mobile scheduling return. Cheaper than we were expecting.
TIRED
No support for cable-provided VoD, AT&T Uverse, or satellite. Moving between VoD services is full of clunk. Wireless is dongle-reliant and B/G only. Typing out titles with standard remote is annoyingly slow. Remote scheduling via web is still a confusing hassle. Cable-provider VoD content not available through the Premier. Lack of apps makes us feel like a sad panda.

The stakes for TiVo's new Series 4 are ridiculously high.

A lot has changed since TiVo premiered its Series 3 DVR in 2006. Netflix, Amazon and Blockbuster are now set-top players, and even Apple is strong-arming into entertainment centers.

So TiVo fans will no doubt cheer this entertainment powerhouse's knockout blows: Massive storage, internet video streaming, an improved interface and a kick-ass way to search for and find new content.

The bad news? It's a sloppy victory. TiVo acolytes won't mind, but others might find its rough edges a little grating.

Like the Tivo Series 3 (and HD, and HD XL), the Premier XL is a digital video recorder to its core. It boasts a terabyte of storage (enough to hold roughly 150 hours of HD content), and its dual tuners let you simultaneously record channels piped in through digital cable, antenna, CableCARD, and Verizon's FiOS service. We chose to connect it to our 42-inch Philips LCD via HDMI, but the Premier also supports component, composite, optical and analog audio.

The Premier kicks ass when it comes to searching content. Nestled at the top of the menu screen is a new, customizable Discovery Bar that lists movies, shows and recommended web video. Though it only takes up a quarter of the screen, the feature is hugely useful for exploring new shows floating out in TV land. We got hooked on AMC's Breaking Bad after highlighting the show's banner and clicking through the synopsis.

Integrated tools like the Discovery Bar are rounded out with traditional forms of search. You can browse by category (new releases, most popular) and also use a keyword search. What's most compelling about this is the breadth of results. Searching for The Office doesn't just retrieve showtimes from the cable provider. It reveals IMDB-like data about the show and its stars, links to related YouTube content — and it presents the option of streaming through Netflix, or buying episodes from Amazon VoD or Blockbuster On Demand.

TiVo Series 4

At first we just used the Premier's search for novelty ("Sweet, all 22 episodes of Thunder In Paradise!"). But it has more impact over time. Premier eliminates the guessing game associated with locating content. Want to take in a schlocky Sam Raimi film? All it takes is searching for Darkman, letting the Premier do its thing, and then deciding which channel or online service to watch it with. Though this setup is entirely reliant on the content libraries of TiVo's partners, it's an incredibly smart way to fulfill your entertainment whims easily and immediately.

The jump from search to showtime isn't all sunshine and Technicolor rainbows, though. Whenever you purchase content from the Premier's search results, it dumps you into the storefront of whatever service you bought it from. It's not a deal breaker, but the sudden shift from the Premier's glossy HD menus to the comparatively low-fi catastrophe of Blockbuster's storefront is a salient reminder that there's still room for improvement.

Otherwise, Tivo's classic features are all here, like pausing and time-shifting through live broadcasts, and they run just as smoothly thanks to an upgraded dual-core processor. TiVo's storied (and sometimes needlessly complicated) menu system also benefits from the processor bump, thanks to a redesigned user interface, a sleek HD facelift and Flash Lite.

Also falling under the "shiny and new"category is a slimmer profile, and a new menu area for add-on apps. But that menu is puzzlingly vacant: Our review unit came with little more than a run-of-the-mill weather widget.

TiVo Series 4

According to TiVo, a Pandora app is due out soon, while a partnership with the widget wonks at FrameChannel is already in the works. The promise of a robust app ecosystem (running on Flash Lite, no less) is an appetizing carrot to dangle. But for now, this sad, desolate branch of the menu reeks of missed opportunity.

As a whole, it's lacunae like this (and the ugly transitions to third-party storefronts) that epitomize the Premier XL. Its core features are all right on target — it just has a somewhat half-finished feel to it.

If you're a no-frills TV-archiving fiend, then this device definitely has you covered (and then some). But if you're looking for a truly scalpel-edged, seamless, all-in-one entertainment box, the Premier falls a little short. But only a little.