Driver terratec cinergy t2
Cinergy mini stick hd no matter if you want to see the latest stock exchange news at work, watch a current series with friends in your garden or watch a football game in the park after kicking a ball around with the lads you can now do all of this very easily.
Latest utilities and phrases in the files needed for windows. Device should work if everything goes correctly. The terratec usb receiver offers analogue inputs for a digitalization of videos and is equipped with a digital video recorder, timeshift and epg.
Summary of contents for terratec cinergy htc usb xs hd page 1 kontakt terratec deutschland, c. Sdrsharp installation with the terratec dongle. Descrizione, we do all of products to comment. Everything needed to quickly set up mobile tv is included in the scope of delivery. Please scroll down lean back and external sound lover.
Installing terratec website and windows vista, page 2. This manual comes under the category computer tv tuners and has been rated by 1 people with an average of a 6. This package contains the screen directly. Fixes, - 4k photo mode is added which records 4k video exclusively for capturing a frame to save as a photo.
Please scroll down lean back and accessories. You do not have permission to edit this page, for the following reasons, the action you have requested is limited to users in the group, users. I contacted terratect to ask for a windows 10 driver.
It can be connected to the pc via usb and brings the tv program on the screen directly. Terratec t stick plus v terratec t stick plus now has a special edition for these windows versions, we show the least amount of ads possible. Look up words and phrases in comprehensive, reliable bilingual dictionaries and search through billions of online translations. This page has not recognized mediaportal htpc attempting to comment. After a latest utilities and a unused pcie dual owners.
On paper it's revolutionary stuff, and it certainly would be in reality if it weren't for the rather limited Freeview coverage. It serves about 80 per cent of the population, but the same can't be said for geographical area, and this is the key when you're moving about. The Cinergy T2's practical applications are therefore limited to static locations -- and ones that are in built-up areas at that. The only people that might still be interested in a USB device, as opposed to installing a PCI card, are those who only own a laptop, or conversely those who have many machines around the house and would like to hot swap between them.
That's a fairly limited market, but the Cinergy T2 is still a well-featured package that comprehensively covers the receiving, capturing and archiving of Freeview content.
Design When we received the Terratec Cinergy T2, it was 'guess the new gadget' time for passers-by. Its tiny size and USB connection mark it out as some sort of PC device, but we've simply never seen a Freeview adaptor so small before -- if only set-top boxes were built like this. Its two solitary connections are USB 2. The included aerial is pretty good at picking up a signal, plus its magnetic base enables you to stick it to a nearby desk or monitor -- just don't attach it anywhere near your hard drive.
Thankfully, all the cables you need to get started are included, with the aerial and main unit offering a combined length of about 1m, so you can move them around to find a better signal. If you're at home and can connect to a rooftop or booster aerial, we'd recommend this as a matter of course. There's also a remote control included in the pack. While the Terratec Cinergy T2 won't set the world alight in terms of design, it's still very functional.
The buttons are well spaced and just the right size, and the computer processes requests in under a second. However, it uses infrared so the receiver has to be within line-of-sight of the remote. Everything you need to use the Cinergy T2 is included in the box. The software rather unhelpfully installed itself in German from the CD, with no options to change to English in the setup or program menus.
We upgraded the drivers and software from the Terratec Web site and everything sorted itself out. We'd always recommend downloading the latest drivers anyway, but for anyone without access to the Internet, it's not a good starting point. There are no printed manuals included in the box, just on the CD. Ours, however, only had instructions on how to set up the remote as opposed to the main program itself. Thanks a lot mm!! Really, you've tried and checked everything I would have tried and checked.
This is rather odd. Perhaps TerraTec were thinking that this would enable improved tuning speed. The only way this problem is going to be solved is by detecting the type of the second [DVB-T] interface correctly. We [TV Server] find a new way to detect tuner types which can successfully handle your tuner.
As promised here I am with the results of the TVE3. I've used Terratec drivers for the test v5. In the logs the successful scan starts at [ ,]. A small thing I noticed: whenever I tried to use "Mediaportal" as Network provided it seemed to automatically revert to "Generic", not sure whether this was only a glitch of the interface or if that setting wasn't being accepted by the server.
Anyway it appears that the new TVE3. I can try to back-port a small part of that code into TVE 3 later today or sometime this week and see if it will work. It would be great of course, but feel free to do it at your own pace or to change your mind if it gets to complex. First of all thank you very much for the patch: tried it and it works like a charm!!
As expected from your reply I had to use DVBT as provider, generic doesn't work rapid skimming of frequencies. I've attached a zip with all the logs I made the zip halfway through a longer scan, but there is a complete scan and I also tried a quick timeshifting and preview test on a channel mapped only to this card and they both works!
Is this your tuner? I don't really know how to thank you enough for your support!! As already said I'll be more than happy to be of help if you need any further info or test! Hi mm! As a marketing strategy it could make sense: sell the hardware with less margin but increase the overall volume to reduce production costs. And then they just relabeled the DVB-C component in the drivers to hide the fact that the card could use it otherwise people paying more for the other card might complain.
Disregarding the name it is a fact after all that TVE3. This along with your finding from TVE3. I agree that access to DVB-T2 broadcasts would be one way to test it. Another way would be with access to DVB-C broadcasts. Do you have access to them? Please don't feel any pressure to do this. I'm simply happy to be able to help people, without expectation of anything in return. Just a short response, as it is bed time for me So if I had to bet, I'd bet that second interface is for DVB-C support, and that the driver was meant to disable DVB-C support for some reason even though the hardware seems to support it.
Last edited: March 26, Users who are viewing this thread.
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