Most TV providers provide DVR. I have Charter and I use their DVR service. I know that UVerse, Direct TV, and Comcast also offer DVR. It is great! I never miss my favorite shows now!
A DVR does not make CDs. A DVR records television programming and movies so you can watch them later.
There are several companies that provide direct TV, with HD and DVR. DirectTVPlus HD DVR offers a service where you can record, watch, and delete shows in any room, with just one HD DVR.
One possibility: if the signal is a digital broadcast and you have a digital-capable TV but the DVR has an analog tuner, the DVR would not see a recognizable signal, but the digital signal would pass through to the TV.
Connect its input to the output of a cable box and DVR's output to your television. If you don't have a cable / satellite set-top box, and your DVR has a built-in TV tuner, connect its input to a coax cable from your wall (raw cable feed) or a TV antenna (over the air reception), and DVR's output to your television, then scan for available channels. You should be able to watch TV through the DVR and record TV shows onto it.
Samsung and LG both offer multiple models of TV/DVR combinations. Other makers will soon follow. No but Miglia Alchemy does have a TV DVR
No; a DVR just records TV; it does not have a WiFi router built in.
Direct TV offers DVR service as an option with its service.
DVR can be replicated by adding a TV tuner to your computer to allow you to use your computer to watch TV.
There are a variety of ways where one can have DVR services without a subscription. One way is by utilizing the computer with a digital PC TV tuner instead of the television for DVR. This can be done by simply downloading DVR software to the computer and there is no subscription service involved.
Normally it would come from your DVR and go out to 2 TV's. I have not seen a DVR with HDMI in.
No, you will need the remote that goes with the tivo dvr.