In my column in The Times on Thursday, I reviewed the TiVo Mini. Itâs a small plastic box that lets you gain access to your TiVo from another television in the house without having to buy a second entire TiVo.
But I also wrote:
Incredibly, though, you still have to pay another fee for the Mini: $6 a month, or a one-time $150. Why The fee youâre already paying for your TiVo is already hard to justify; why should you pay more just to pump your legitimately recorded shows to a different room
Unfortunately, âbecause we need the moneyâ is the only plausible reason. (I suppose âbecause our arch-rival, the Dish Hopper, also charges for its secondary-TV boxesâ is also plausible.)
After the column was published, Jim Denney, TiVoâs product marketing manager, explained to me why there was a fee for the Mini.
First, h reiterated my point that all of TiVoâs rivals, like the Dish Hopper, DirecTV Genie and cable-company boxes, also charge a fee for each second-TV box.
Second, he pointed out that the Miniâs $6 monthly fee is a lot lower than what youâd pay for a second TiVo box ($15 monthly).
âYes,â I said, âbut what are you actually buying I mean, youâre already paying a fee for your main TiVo box. The Mini just shows whatâs on your main TiVo â" it doesnât supply any new features of its own. TiVo isnât providing any services that would justify a separate fee. All the action is within my own network.â
He explained to me that thatâs not quite accurate. The Mini does connect to TiVoâs service â" bypassing your main TiVo â" for many of its functions. For example, when you access Hulu Plus, YouTube, the search and browse functions, and the music and photo functions, the Mini goes directly to the TiVo mothership online.
He also pointed out that the Mini will gain more f! eatures and polish as time goes by, and thatâs worth paying something for, too.
Iâm still skeptical. I donât even see why standalone DVRâs need a monthly fee. Unfortunately, for better or worse, thatâs the business model weâre all stuck with, no matter whoâs providing the boxes: you pay a monthly fee for your DVR, and another one for each secondary-TV box.
At least TiVo offers you the chance to pay a one-time lump-sum fee for each device â" and if you opt for the monthly fee, at least itâs lower than most of its rivals.