nzdreamer55 said:What can I use to edit and write a xml file?
Also I thought that cable providers will send out multiple channels on one frequency so I am not sure how just knowing the frequency will help you get the correct channels. It gets you really close, but not each specific channel. Do you create your xml file from scratch or are you taking your scan results figuring out which ones channels are actually Clear QAM and just editing it down so that you have a back up file for rescaning and trouble shooting?
By the way how did you go about getting tv guide information for your qam channels?
I had to rename and renumber all my channels to the way it is listed on digital cable and then used mc2xml to get an xml to use in 4therecord
So my FOX affiliate is broadcast in analog over the cable on LCN 11 (LCN are the numbers that your TV shows you-usually). The HD equivalent is on LCN 781 (I just looked at my providers numbering scheme for their digital service on Schedule Direct. You can also get pretty lucky if you go to a place like TVguide.com and enter in your local information. The nice think about this is you get the LCN and the affiliate sometimes with the network icon. Three birds (LCN, Affilate, and Network ID) with one stone! BTW when I tune my TV this channel number is displayed at 106-1. We do not have a cable box and use the TV internal tuner. The system that was set up is truly a thing of beauty.Also how do channels that are 1080i like CBS or NBC look on your system?
Do you still use Powerdvd10 decoder? I have had a lot of problems getting smooth 1080i HD on my system so any advice would be cool.
A lot of unknown channels are actually real channels with no identifying data, so this would be an issue if you are saying that any unknown channel is not stored. The way the "check timeshifting" or whatever it is called button worked great for me, exactly what I was looking for and I only wish i had known about it sooner. Channels may be red or green, but it automatically checked the list of channels with an actual signal (ie not scrambled), so I only have non-scrambled channels in my guide. Saves me hours of work. I still need to manually name the ATSC channels, but that is a minor inconvenience.
Is this a beta of MP? Unfortunately I can only test this on my live system and I tend to stick to the 'stable' releases of MP for that setup.