Now not only can you share your EyeTV library with other users on your local network - though this gave us some problems - but there's support for streaming your recordings to an iPhone or iPod touch. Other improvements are most obvious with sharing. Love the Coen brothers' movies? Just create a Smart Guide that lists 'Coen' in the directors field, and the system will automatically pick up any of their films whenever they appear on your EPG it's a great way to catch stuff you like without scouring the lists. Let's say you love David Attenborough's nature programmes simply tell EyeTV to record all programmes that contain 'David Attenborough'. And while it's still not as slick as a one-click, it does have an extra advantage that the likes of Sky+ doesn't. You can have the system automatically record every programme that matches, and, if it's a series, keep only a certain number of the most recent recordings. So the idea is that you create a smart list with a bunch of variables - show name, episode title, actors, director, format, channel and the like - and it dynamically updates the list of programmes that match. And while it has long been possible to create recurring recordings, these were dumb repeats that didn't make any allowances for changing schedules.Įlgato's novel solution is to leverage the power of smart lists, just as we've seen in iTunes, iPhoto, Mail and Finder. The system has to recognise that specific programmes are linked together into a series, and neither the over-the-air EPG nor the subscription EPG .uk that EyeTV users can access supports this. One of the great things about services like Sky+, V+ and TiVo is that, with one click, you can have the system record an entire series, but the problem with this is that it requires all sorts of work at the back end of the electronic programme guide before you can do it. The biggest advance, however, is with scheduling repeating programmes for recording.