Product Details
Moxi 2-Tuner 500GB HD Digital Recorder

Moxi 2-Tuner 500GB HD Digital Recorder
From Digeo

Price: $499.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

2 new or used available from $473.99

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Color: Black
  • Brand: Moxi
  • Model: MR-1500T3
  • Dimensions: 3.00" h x 17.00" w x 10.50" l, 10.00 pounds
  • Hard Disk: 500GB
  • Native resolution: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p 24&30 Hz

Features

  • Digital Video Recorder with CableCARD support
  • No monthly subscription fees
  • 500GB Hard Drive: more than 75 hours of HD or 300 hours of SD recording
  • Emmy Award-Winning Moxi Menu
  • Live TV, DVR, and Photo, Game, Music, and News Browser

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
Want to bring the best content from your cable provider, the Internet, and your home computer to your HDTV? The Moxi HD DVR makes it easy to access it all from one menu with one remote--and all with no monthly DVR service fees.

Moxi’s huge 500 GB hard drive records up to 75 hours of HD and 300 hours of SD programming, and it's expandable up to 1000 hours of HD shows with a 6.0 terabyte external drive.

You can also add a Moxi Mate, which allows you to access live TV as well as all of the content on your Moxi HD DVR from aonther room. It’s an easy, inexpensive way to enjoy your Moxi on other HDTVs in your home .


Key Features

  • New -- Multi-room sharing with the Moxi Mate, now with Live TV
  • Traditional grid programming guide
  • Expandable to 1000 hours of HD recording with 6.0 terabyte drive
  • No monthly DVR service fees
  • Emmy® Award-winning Moxi Menu with HD graphics
  • CableCARD™ support--no need for a cable box
  • Includes backlit remote control






With a Moxi HD DVR connected to a broadband home network, you’ll get:



moxi menu Moxi Menu
Easy-to-learn, incredibly fast, and all HD. The Emmy Award-winning Moxi Menu makes browsing fun again. The always-on TV Picture in Guide lets you keep an eye on what you were watching, TV icons let you spot programming easily, and the two axis design is simple to navigate.

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http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/electronics/cat-500/digeo/detail-pages/moxi features Live TV Control
Rewind, fast-forward, and pause live TV while you're watching. It's TV on your terms.

Two Tuners
Moxi lets you watch one program while recording another or record two programs while playing back a third on your Moxi HD DVR and a fourth on your Moxi Mate. Record your favorite movies and TV shows at the same time and enjoy them later on your main TV or, with the Moxi Mate in another room.




multi-room sharing Multi-Room Sharing
No need to play musical DVRs trying to remember where you recorded what. Access live TV as well as all of your Moxi HD DVR’s content from another room on your Moxi Mate. Start a program in one room and resume where you left off in another.







http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/electronics/cat-500/digeo/detail-pages/moxi hd HD Recording
Record all of your shows in up to 1080p resolution, so you get the same crystal clear picture quality as the broadcast.

External Hard Drive Support
All about the HD? You might need some extra recording space. Attach up to a 6.0 terabyte eSATA external hard drive (sold separately) and expand what you can store.





medialink Media Link
Use DLNA server software on your computer, available with an easy download to stream music, photos, and videos to your TV. If you use PlayOn software on your computer as your DLNA server, you’ll get access to Hulu, Netflix, YouTube, and more all on your TV.

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mosaic View Photos in Moxi Mosaic
Tired of just seeing one photo at a time? Check out Moxi’s whole new way of viewing photos. All photos in an album are laid out in a grid that looks great and allows you to find an image quickly. You can navigate the photo mosaic easily with the arrow buttons on your remote, or let it automatically cycle through full screen views of each photo alternating with the mosaic. For a full multi-media experience, add Rhapsody music!

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medialink Flickr Photo Sharing
Share photos with your friends and family from the comfort of your living room with Moxi's full screen HD photo viewer. See the latest shots from friends and family by connecting to their Flickr accounts. In fact, view any publicly-shared Flickr photos on your TV in a full-screen slideshow. That’s interconnectivity!

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moxi features Grid Guide
If you like to search for TV shows in the traditional grid format, with time slots across the top and channels on the left, Moxi’s got you covered. With the touch of a button, you can switch the Moxi Menu to Grid Guide view.
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medialink Rhapsody
Rhapsody’s award-winning music service makes it easy to find what you like and fun to find something new. Access Rhapsody’s library of millions of songs in the Music Guide. Use Playlist Central to discover new music or pick a station from Rhapsody Channels. Receive a 30-day free trial of Rhapsody Unlimited (value $12.99) with the purchase of a Moxi HD DVR.

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medialink MoxiNet
Get the latest news, sports, financial and entertainment information on Web pages specially designed for display on your HDTV with the ease of your remote. Bookmark your favorite Websites for access from your TV.

SuperTicker
Keep an eye on weather, news, sports, and financial information without leaving your full screen TV program--just by hitting one button on your cool backlit remote.


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moxi features TV Filters
Stop searching through every available channel. Use Moxi’s categories that filter the list down to specific types of programming: HD, Movies, Sports, Kids, News, Music and more. For each of these categories, you can see programming up to two weeks in the future.

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moxi features Channel Favorites
An easy way to get to your favorite programming, Favorites automatically show you the channels you watch the most. And you don’t even have to program them in. Just watch your shows and Moxi will figure it all out.








moxi features Automatic Conflict Detection
If you schedule three programs to record at the same time, Moxi will automatically detect the conflict and let you solve the problem on the spot… even online! Moxi’s online scheduling is synched real-time to your Moxi box. It doesn’t check in later after the mistake has been made.

Recorded Series Priority
Put your series recordings in priority order so that Moxi will automatically record the higher priorities if they conflict.





onlinescheduling Online Scheduling
Away from home and forgot to set a recording? If you’ve got a Moxi HD DVR, just sign into your Moxi account from your computer or PDA browser while out and about and make sure your program is waiting for you when you get home. Moxi’s online scheduling updates your recording schedule in real time so that you can handle conflicts on the spot.









flipbar Flip Bar
Your mini Moxi Menu for full screen TV. You can use the Flip Bar to check out what’s on other channels without leaving your show. Use the flip bar to get program information, see what's on next, and record a program.

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moxi features Find and Record Options
Search for a program by category, title, air date/time, or keyword. That’s right, even by keyword. Just type in an actor’s name if that’s all you know, and Moxi will find your show. If you see a program you like, you can see all of the times it's on.









moxi features Series Recording Options
Choose to record the entire series or one episode only. Or, choose to record new episodes only.

Recording Management Options
Moxi will automatically delete your oldest programs to make room for new ones. But if you want to manage your recordings, you can do it all from one place--watch, delete, protect, or keep for a certain period of time.

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moxi features Recorded TV Access
Find and manage all of your recorded shows in one easy-to-browse list. View all of the programs you have scheduled to record so that you can make sure you don't miss something important.

View all of the programs you have scheduled to record so that you can make sure you don't miss something important.

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moxi features Commercial Skip
Skip over commercials with the press of a single button

Add On/Stop Early
For programs with undefined start/end times, you can add time on to the beginning of your recording or stop recording early.

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econtrols Arcade Games
TV not entertaining enough for you? Pass the time playing games on your Moxi, including Blackjack, Quizmaster, Sudoku, and more.

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parental controls Parental Controls
Protect your kids from what you don't want them to see. Moxi gives you the option of blocking programming by rating or content.

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top10

Top 10

Schedule a recording based on what other Moxi users are enjoying.


Customer Reviews

MOXI HD - a long look4
Despite the fact that I am very nearly the perfect customer for a DVR, I have held off the purchase of one, a decision mostly revolving around the monthly subscription fee versus the relatively few amount of things I avidly watch on television. With the brand new, subscription free, MOXI HD DVR sitting on my entertainment shelf, all that has changed ... I get to watch what I want and when I want to with a much better picture quality than provided by Comcast hardware (see below) without tacking on more costs to the ever rising price of having cable in the first place.

First off, the MOXI HD DVR is very attractive box and came with a complete set of cables, many of which you may not even touch if you are using the HDMI interface. Setting up the MOXI was, overall, a painless experience, if not a little time consuming. At first boot up, the device was contacting the mothership with instructions to find any updates to the MOXI software, which it found, downloaded, and installed. One minor nitpick here is that it did not provide the unit ID that is used to register at the website until after this 30 minute process was over. It would have been nice to be registering while I was waiting for the update.

Next came the M-Card install (multi-streaming cable card, allowing dual feeds for the device), and overall, went off with relative ease, despite a little trepidation on both my part as well as the Comcast@ customer service rep. He was not familiar with the MOXI brand and we both got a little nervous when the MOXI wouldn't recognize the card for a channel scan (but did get the card's ID info) until the customer rep was astute enough to suggest that I remove the card and try it again while the device was powered on.

Following that, there was what I can only assume was growing pain as the MOXI took several minutes to scan the channels and then start displaying me digital gibberish (a fascinating display of colored squares from improper decoding) for a few panic filled moments before finding it's place in the digital stream and displaying a perfectly wonderful HD image of the selected channel.

In fact, the image was so good, I started comparing it back and forth between my Comcast HD receiver unit to only confirm my suspicions, that the MOXI decodes both 4:3 content and HD content with far better quality than the Comcast unit does (which is very poorly if you ask me). Unless I am mistaken, the Comcast DVR is based on the same unit that the HD receiver is built on, so this is one place where initial price tag of the MOXI pays off.

From here, it has been a fun journey of playing with all of the features of the MOXI HD DVR, some of which are great and others are fascinatingly not very good at all. The interface overall is very nice, and more so once you get used to it. It is obvious that MOXI has taken the user interface design as a serious consideration. Recording shows and series is a breeze, playback even more so, and I love the various channel categories (all HD, all Movies, etc.), which admittedly the Comcast DVR has as well, but in a far less attractive menu system. I may have missed how to do it, but it would be great to be able to move through the channel guide display one page at a time rather than navigating one channel at a time (with hundreds of channels, I constantly use the page up and page down buttons on the Comcast remote). On that thought, I really like the MOXI remote as whole.

For the most part, recording has gone well in both standard and HD resolutions, with one exception of several playback errors encountered from a recording of Mission Impossible III (HD). At several points during the movie, it failed on the decoding of the recorded movie so badly, that it kicked me to TV once, rebooted the device once, and several times required that I attempt fast forwarding, pausing, restarting, etc. in order to get a video stream back.

Other than this yet to be repeated recording experience, most things have played back error free and with great quality. The few other errors during recording that I have encountered result in a visual line of noise at the top of the screen that looks like an old VHS tape alignment problem, but the shows themselves have been intact otherwise.

Recording series is brain dead simple and my only complaint here (and there might be a way to do this that I haven't found) is that I find myself changing the default settings for recording a series every single time. In theory, this device is should be able to hold over a couple hundred hours of non-HD and well over a hundred of HD content, yet the series recording options are set to the almost the most spartan, space conserving settings that require you get to your recordings within a couple days. In my case, this is almost never the case and might even be a couple weeks before I have a couple hours to sit and watch some of it.

Another great feature to mention is scheduling recording from the Moxi website. I haven't used it outside of testing, but I like the idea a great deal and bet it will be helpful the handful of times I know in advance I want to watch something, but will not be home in time to see it.

This very feature filled device would be beyond fantastic if they did one, brain numbingly obvious thing ... give me access to a web browser for that love of GOD!!!! Here are a few reasons:

A> I want Pandora, not Finetunes (which I never did actually ever find a way to create a play list on ... which either says I am missing something so obvious that my great intellect glanced over ... heh)

B> I want Picasa slide shows, not Flickr (which also was slow and sometimes only semi-functional).

C> The big wide world of the Internet ... aka ... freedom of choice. DRM issues aside, it is no longer acceptable for networked devices running full PCs under the hood to try and corral me into their business partnerships.

Some might point at platform stability as good reason to avoid an open browser use on a dedicated device as the MOXI HD DVR, but one of the other problems I have encountered a couple of times is the seemingly random rebooting of the device. So, that is to say, I doubt letting me run a browser in kiosk mode and flash apps such as Pandora within would do much to make the platform less stable.

One last note worthy mention is the PCLink to Windows Media Player, which involved some voodoo to get working (even after the security changes ... still uncertain what the final incantation was to make it work ... might have been the chicken blood and candles), I had access to all images and audio in my desktop machine's library (which is not much, since I use Winamp). So far, this has been a much better experience to use than Finetune or Flickr on the MOXI and I think this was a decent feature to include. As, it seems is common in the DVR world, it will not however let you playback video files over the PCLink, which is a somewhat baffling decision and one that I can only presume are related to copyright protection or the potentially problematic playback of a user's video collection of various formats (mov, mpg, avi, mp4, divx, wmv for example) and codecs (an endless sea of possible codecs) being problematic on a black box device. Still, I would love to be able to play at least common formats, or if nothing else, divx would be a welcome standard.

I feel like I have given the MOXI HD DVR a tough time of it in this review, and this is where the rubber meets the road folks. I have no other experience with DVR's on the market, but the MOXI has gotten me pretty hooked on the use of one. Overall, the MOXI HD DVR has been a joy to use and has been no more finicky than the Comcast HD receiver, but does provide far superior picture quality. That fact alone has me happy with the device, but the multi-stream HD DVR, absence of subscription costs, and ease of use of the MOXI makes it a product worth considering.

At a street price of around $800 and iffy, service specific side features, it is a somewhat tougher argument for the tech savvy, as building a PC based DVR system gets nothing but easier. For everyone else, the MOXI should satisfy and not having to add another monthly payment onto your ever tightening paycheck will make this unit popular for many, and in the long run will save you money despite the heavy upfront costs.

I think the MOXI folks need to do a little more finessing and re-tooling the "extra" features, but even with a steep initial investment and some quirks, I give this device a thumbs up for the DVR hungry. Just remind yourself that the lack of a monthly fee will pay off in the long run and you will enjoy your sexy new entertainment center black box!

The Good The Bad And The Beautiful4
First let's make one thing very clear: there is nothing else on the market right now that gives you high definition, hard drive recording from cable, has 2 QAM tuners, accepts a dual tuner cable card, provides a decent schedule/programming interface, has no reoccurring fees, and has first class customer support.

If you do not own a computer, do not purchase this unit. If you are not subscribed to a cable company, do not purchase this unit.

The unit arrived packaged well. Setup took less than an hour. You make 3 connections not including the power cord: 1) the cable company's incoming cable 2) the HDMI cable from from tv. A six foot HDMI cable is included 3) the network cable from your router.

Once you are connected, you follow the on screen instructions to activate your account. Contrary to what others have said, navigating through the menu is not super intuitive and some of the more important features are buried in sub menus. Irregardless, you will eventually get the hang of it and in a few days be zipping through, at least, the recording and playback functions.

If you do not intend on using a cable card, which you get from your cable company for a nominal fee, you will be stuck receiving only the QAM channels which is about 25% of what the cable company offers. This is because the unit is not equipped with a QAM Free tuner which most modern tv's have built in. So the result is, you WILL be able to see channels on your tv that your MOXI will NOT be able to record.

The MOXI has first class, made in America, live person support. I ended up going on their web site and typing in my problem (wrong time displayed) in their "live" messaging box. After some text messaging back and forth, he contacted me by phone and we worked it out. He followed up a day later to make sure everything was going smoothly (it was). They can access your MOXI from their office and run diagnostics on it etc.

I deducted a star because there are a few clunky areas of their schedule/programming interface that need work. I was assured by MOXI support that they will address these in future operating system updates.

In summary, this is a good unit that is 95% there. If you want to record high definition tv without the monthly fees and a better programming interface with no commercials, it's the only game in town.

UPDATE - I sadly returned this after trying two of them. Both had tuner issues, ie picture and sound breakup under certain conditions. The MOXI 30 day guarantee worked as stated on their web site. Also their tech support continued to be the best I have ever experienced with any product - live people from the state of Washington.

had moxi, tivohd and fios dvr ... moxi was best for me.5
Brief:
Pros,
- DLNA support watching my divx movies, hulu, mp3s, jpgs, from my tversity box was super easy. The DLNA menu is much faster than the Xbox360 or Dlink dsm-520.

- Menu is much easier to read than the motorola or tivohd, all three used different methods for moving around. all were just as intuitive.

- 2 hour live buffer is really nice... tivo is 30min...

- compatable with 4TB eSata drive from lacie. Tivo maxes out at 2TB total storage regardles of how it is installed.

- Ticker is kind of like a widget, nice. also there is a webpage display but it is currently really slow... could easily be a bug though. (you can view web pages from the moxi)

- worked right away after upgrading channel lineup. (the tivo required me to manually add the new premium channels)

- Just a response to other reviews as of july 10th when i recieved this box I have had no crashing, and my recorded content is flawless. Also the remote is indeed backlit.

Cons:
- Tivo has a much better search, smarter more intuitive.
- box to box streaming and box to pc streaming need to be fixed.
- moxi mate needs to be released.
- no discount for second/third box.
- streaming HD from netflix/unbox/blockbuster

All of the cons listed are being addressed by moxi and they expect all of them to be released this year... (with the exception of dlna 2.0 streaming to a pc client.)


I purchased the moxi and tivo HDXL the same day within 4 days I had both units at home waiting for cable cards. Fios tech came out only had one card and installed it in the tivo so I used the tivo for 4 days before another tech could come out and set up the moxi. he had not seen a moxi and after showing him the cablecard pairing screen he was able to get the box running in 20 minutes. both tivo and moxi were effertless in there set up on fios.

After using them side by side for 3 weeks I decided to send back the tivo for most of the reasons listed above but also my tivo crashed on me twice and stayed locked up not recording anything. I would really like to see the search and schedule features brought up to tivo level, and of course the box2box and live tv streaming would be nice. one note on box to box... some tivo content can not be transfered if there are 5c flags due to the transfer method of tivo not being encrypted. Moxi uses a dlna 2.0 copy method so that no transfers will be blocked.

I would highly recomend this product to anyone looking for a DVR and want more open standards. Especially if you are already used to streaming from dlna product like tversity, playon or twonky. Also being able to have 4.5TB of recordings

UPDATE: Moxi summer software update added support for native mkv and avi files. This is great for streaming from a pc no more need to transcode.
Also moxi to moxi and moxi to mate streaming is working great. and lastly digeo has test esata drives up to 8 TB from lacie and verified they work with the moxi (those drives are currently close to $2000 though...