why not plug them to the A/V out of the yes box? that's how i watch TV
on my machine.
since you won't be able to tune anyway (apart from setting an IR
device to control the yes box), why waste money on new cards?
I doubt the quality difference is worth it.

On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 9:26 PM, Shlomo Solomon
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Firstly, thanks to Ohad, Dvir and Geoffrey for answering.
>
> Secondly, I see from all three answers that my question was mis-understood, so
> I'll re-phrase.
>
> If I move from HOT to YES, I want to continue watching TV on the computer
> screen using a Linux friendly TV card. I'm referring to 3 cards for 3
> seperate computers (not 3 signals to be handled by 1 computer). I don't
> intend to do anything illegal (bypassing encryption) - I would have a
> YES "MEMIR" next to each computer and the TV card would be fed from
> the "MEMIR". Since my existing TV cards are analogue only (and include a
> tuner), I now plug them into the HOT antenna plug and they work
> out-of-the-box. But that's obviously not going to be the case with YES
> digital signals.
>
> So to summarize, I'm looking for CHEAP, Linux friendy, YES friendly digital TV
> cards that can connect to the YES "MEMIR" and provide a TV signal on my Linux
> computers.
>
> Tanks again
>
> --
> Shlomo Solomon
> http://the-solomons.net
> Sent by KMail 1.9.9 (KDE 3.5.9) on LINUX Mandriva 2008.1
>
>
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