December 2010
Live TV on your iPhone - there's a web app for that
Macworld
The new feature – designed specifically for the iPhone, and still in beta – allows you to play back the recording as soon as it begins, meaning you can watch (and pause) near-live TV wherever you have an internet connection. ABC1, Seven, Nine, TEN and One Digital are currently available for ‘Record and Play Now’ watching. Image quality is better over Wi-Fi, but still watchable over 3G (just be careful not to use up all your monthly data).
Molks TV Talk
MyTVR offers an internet-based PVR service, allowing you to log onto their website and schedule as much recording as your account will allow (including possibly recording all channels at once). Leveraging all the talk of internet services (or ‘cloud’ services) allows a subscriber to connect to the service and schedule recordings AND watch TV either at home or on the go.
April 2010
My TVR
Crikey
With television on demand quickly establishing itself as one of the primary modes of watching TV, the idea of watching television live is becoming increasingly antiquated. While direct downloads are an option, it can still be difficult tracking down a lot of content, particularly locally produced programs.
February 2010
MyTVR Adds Blackberry Support
Gizmodo
When we told you about the online DVR service MyTVR back in December, it was strictly a PC/Mac/iPhone/Symbian/iPod Touch affair. Well, since then they’ve added Android support, and this week added the ability to watch recorded TV on your BlackBerry Bold.
Connected Australia
myTVR, the recently launched serviced that enables the recording and playback of content from free-to-air television, has today reported that it can now be delivered via the Blackberry Bold.
January 2010
MyTVR, the PVR that sits in the cloud
PC Authority
Already launched in Melbourne, and with plans to take on the Sydney market, myTVR looks like being one of the most interesting new developments in digital TV recording.
Smarthouse
myTVR has unveiled a new service that allows a user to record and playback content from free-to-air television on an iPhone or PC.
December 2009
'Virtual PVR' service for PCs and smartphones launches
APC Magazine
Don't want to be shackled to your TV set? Australian company MyTVR will record TV programs on their server and push the content down to your PC, iPhone, Nokia or Android device.
Macworld
Every once in a while, something comes along that changes everything. myTVR, an outsourced video recording service, certainly falls into that category. By allowing users to record any show on free-to-air TV and then watch it as streaming video via a Web browser, iPhone or iPod touch, or Nokia smartphone, myTVR is pioneering a significant new model for watching TV.
mUmBRELLA
A company has launched a new service which it has dubbed as a "virtual PVR", allowing users to record and watch free-to-air TV shows on their PC, Macs, iPhones, the iPod touch V2 and media enabled Nokia handsets.
The Tube
myTVR allows users to record and playback TV with their PC, Mac or mobile phone (including iPhone) all within a simple interface.