Foxtel iQ Personal Digital Recorder

By on 21 February 2005

Great if you love your Foxtel, but it’s not the “ultimate” personal digital recorder solution Australia has been waiting for.

User rating:8.8
  • Good: Easy to learn and even easier to use • Pause and rewind functions work extremely well • High quality recordings
  • Bad: Lack of all free to air channel information for the EPG undercuts convenience factor • Why can’t it automatically skip commercials?
  • RRP: AU$395.00

One year after introducing its digital service in Australia, Foxtel has unveiled a digital set-top-box/recorder that packs a 160 GB hard drive to let you record up to 60 hours of Foxtel programming.

Upside
Dubbed "iQ", it receives encoded digital information via cable or satellite, decodes this information and sends it to your TV, so its strongest point of differentiation is its integration with the Foxtel Digital Electronic Program Guide.

You can access the guide from the remote for 'one-touch' recording.  You can then manage all your recordings through the iQ Personal Planner. It displays all programs recorded, whether or not they have been watched, programs set to record in the future and a reminder that the selected program is about to start. You can also use the Planner to create a playlist to sequentially play back selected programmes.

The Series Link button allows you to record all shows in a series that appear on a particular channel - say, all Simpson episodes on Fox 8 - but it will not record the show if it is programmed on another channel (unless you program a Series Link for that channel as well). Series Link is available on 20 of Foxtel Digital's 100+ channels.

Thanks to the built-in hard drive, iQ continuously records or caches whatever you're watching, which lends itself to two more fun tricks - you can pause and rewind live TV.

With all the controls cleanly integrated into the Foxtel remote, interruptions can be dealt with by hitting the Pause button. When you're ready to resume viewing, you simply hit Play, and the show will continue from the where you left off.

And if you forget to pause, you can Rewind at any of four different speeds to review what you missed. Sports fans will also appreciate a Slow Motion playback option, so you can second-guess the referee by immediately replaying the action as many times as you like.

The box contains two TV tuners, so you can record two programs that are being broadcast at the same time on two different channels, even while watching a previously recorded show.

Foxtel iQ is fully Dolby Digital capable and programs recorded are played back with the same quality as original broadcast - which remember is Standard Definition not High Definition.

There are also Parental Control settings to restrict or block the viewing and/or purchase of certain programs or channels. It does not automatically skip ads when recording, but it does allow you to fast forward through them during playback.

Downside
Limitation number one: it's only available to Foxtel Digital subscribers - it replaces the existing set-top unit, and incorporates all the Foxtel Digital functionality with the new recording capabilities.

Limitation number two: you cannot permanently archive anything you'd like to keep long term. Once your 60 hours are recorded, iQ finds space by progressively deleting the oldest recordings. You can mark programmes you do not want deleted with the Keep button, however you cannot copy them onto a disk or view them on another device. Of course you will not be able to Keep shows purchased through a Premium subscription more than the stipulated time frame, nor will you be able to record at all enhanced Foxtel features such as Sports Active, Sky News Active and Gamesworld.

Limitation number three: as iQ capabilities are only compatible with Foxtel Digital channels and the free-to-air channels Foxtel Digital carries (ABC, SBS and Nine), you will not be able to record shows broadcast by Channels Seven and Ten, who are still in negotiations with Foxtel over digital content.

Limitation number four: the electronic programming guide only lets you select shows up to seven days in advance - not good for those going away for longer periods.  It appears somewhat cumbersome to plan ahead too, as you have to pick the channel your desired show is on, then scroll through hour-by-hour to get to your selection. There is no calendar or search type of functionality.
 
Outlook
iQ is set to directly impact the DVD recorder market, but probably not to the extent that Foxtel envisions. Its live TV capabilities are cool, but there are many DVD recorders with hard drives already on the market such as the Pioneer DVR-520H, the Panasonic DMR-E500H, the Philips HDRW720 and the Toshiba RD-XS32 that have similar buffering,Time Slip or Chase Play capabilities.

More than 60 percent of Foxtel's one million direct subscribers have moved up to the Digital service and surely those folks are the most likely to find iQ attractive - presuming they haven't already invested in a DVR.

Foxtel is charging subscribers a one-off access fee of $395 for the iQ, plus a $100 installation fee for current Foxtel Digital subscribers, $169.95 for those new to the service. Then you will have to cough up a $5.95 per month service fee in addition to your regular monthly Foxtel Digital subscription. This service fee will be waived for subscribers taking Foxtel Digital's top Platinum package or for those who subscribe for two or more set-top-boxes.

Another consideration is that technically, the iQ remains the property of Foxtel. The good news in that is that Foxtel will always be required to service the box if there are any faults and they will continually upgrade the software to incorporate new technologies and features - something the company claims it will continue to introduce.

If you want to see a demonstration of iQ firsthand, Foxtel has a partnership with Myer stores, where they will be setting up special demonstration areas in 46 of Myer's metropolitan stores.

Topics: recorder, personal, foxtel, iq, digital

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Comments (125)

  • Zencat gave 9/10 on 08/10/2009 22:09 Report abuse

    • Good: All works well. As advertised.
    • Bad: For me there ain't no bad!

    A great system to have. Never mind the price, it's worth it. How did I ever live without it. Now no program can escape my attention. It even records while I am asleep. What more does one want?

  • dorianaaBBY:) gave 9/10 on 08/10/2009 21:16 Report abuse

    • Good: almost everythingg:]
    • Bad: the free to air channels are a bit bad quality/

    i love my iq:)

  • hughsy gave a review on 11/09/2009 07:18 Report abuse

    can you ever bring back deleted recordings back

  • Shermellow gave 9/10 on 22/08/2009 15:58 Report abuse

    • Good: Almost Everything!
    • Bad: It sometimes doesn't record the whole show.

    I love it- totally awesome!

  • iq lover gave a review on 20/07/2009 13:03 Report abuse

    can you recover deleted items from some sort of trash or something?

  • jon gave 7/10 on 16/01/2009 00:44 Report abuse

    say you accidently delete a show on the planner, can you somehow get it back?

  • tattoou gave 3/10 on 11/01/2009 19:31 Report abuse

    • Good: only cable avaible
    • Bad: only cable avaible

    (foxtel iq freeze frame) when your watching a program and the screen stops dead,frozen and they bring you another iq which does the same thing plus losing the whole menu,nothing on it,and recording is 70-30 whether it records the whole program or not,could go on, but to finish where is the competition. foxtel iq sux and foxtel and any big company get away with what ever they want crappp

  • sagddesign gave 8/10 on 18/04/2008 12:12 Report abuse

    • Good: Rewinding, Pressing pause for 10 minutes at the start of a show so you can fast forward through annoying adds, able to series link so your favourite show will be recorded without further assistance.
    • Bad: You can only record 2 shows at the same time and you cant watch another channel when there is 2 recordings happening, Unit needs to be constantly on or in standby to record, I turn my off at night time as it heats up, price is too much, on demand channel never has anything worth watching.

    I love my IQ, the option of rewinding and fast forwarding shows & recoding anything I like is perfect, I have connected a DVD recorder so I can burn my favourite shows.

  • analias gave 2/10 on 10/12/2007 01:50 Report abuse

    • Good: pffft
    • Bad: will be going back to foxtel and replaced by another Tivo.

    Disappointing. Rarely used in my household, always runs out of space, randomly shuts down, regularly "fails" to record shows, Epg is almost completly useless. MUCH prefer my Tivo with its single channel.

  • IQDisappointed gave 4/10 on 01/07/2007 00:23 Report abuse

    • Good: You can record two shows at once
    • Bad: It doesnt have the facility to be able to recall your favourite actors/shows/grenres/sports teams etc and automatically find them and record them for you the way TiVO does - which is one of the best features of TiVO - you never miss anything you like

    It's ok, but the reason we got it was because it was touted as Australia's answer to TiVO. It's NOT.

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