On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 11:15 PM, Geoffrey S. Mendelson <[email protected]>wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 10:44:44PM +0200, Erez D wrote: > >> The ideal case for you is to use a dvb-s/dvb-s2 card, a card reader and a >> YES smart card. >> you will not need an STB (memir) for this, and you get the digital signal >> with no quality loss. >> you will also probably be able to watch/record multiple programs with one >> dvb-s card if they share frequencies (both myth and vdr support that). >> >> i am not a YES subscriber, and i have never done that with YES, but i >> think >> i read about people which have done this. >> > > AFAIK It won't work. YES uses NDS encryption, which is not supported by so what ? i heard that this method worked with sky-uk (and the use NDS) > > that type of hardware. There are companies that sell digital satellite > packages to that do include encryption cards that allow you to provide > your own hardware, but they don't sell to Israel. > > I don't know if YES program guides can be downloaded off of the Internet > or not, the English ones can not. they can. > > I don't know if there are legal issues here. but as i see it, you are not >> stealing if you have legit smart cards from YES. >> > > That's correct. But only with companies that let you use your own hardware. > YES does not. > > BTW, if you want channels 1, 10,22,23,33 and 99, they may be available over > the air as digital TV in April. I say may because when the Kenesset wanted > to include channel 9 (Russian language Israeli commerical channel), both > HOT > and YES said they would go out of business if they did, they dropped it. > if you are connected to a YES dish. you can get 1,10,22,23,33,99 unencrypted, just need a regular (NON-YES) memir. > > Expect there to be legal challenges. > > > Geoff. > -- > Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel [email protected] N3OWJ/4X1GM >
