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Finally: Announcing yaVDR 0.4

We are proud to announce yaVDR 0.4 after 12 months of hard work and two pre-releases.
Some basic facts about yaVDR 0.4 have been around for a while and are discussed in detail in some of our previous blog postings. A short summary should be sufficient:
- yaVDR 0.4 is based on Ubuntu 11.04 (Natty Narwhal).
- The ISO image is only available in 64bit flavour. However, our packages are also available as 32bit versions within our Launchpad repositories.
- If you want to upgrade from an earlier yaVDR release to yaVDR 0.4 you will need to do a complete reinstall from scratch. You have to migrate your settings manually. This is often easier than it sounds.
- You can download the yaVDR 0.4 ISO image from our downloads page.
But these were just the boring basics. Let's have a look at all the interesting details...
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Announcing yaVDR 0.4 pre2 ISO Image
All the work that has been done on upcoming yaVDR 0.4 since our first test ISO pre1 back in July is now available bundled into a second test ISO called pre2. Testers are welcome to re-install and submit bugs to our bugtracker.
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VDR Portal downtime: Alternative support forum for yaVDR users
Dear users of VDR and yaVDR!
Due to a downtime of VDR Portal, we invite you to join our own improvised support forum.
Update: VDR Portal is online again.
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Managing your VDR channel list - Easier than ever with yaVDR 0.4

How much fun do you normally have while re-sorting your channel list? Digital TV providers offer their customers hundreds of TV channels and radio stations. At some point almost every person who receives digitial TV has to fiddle with re-sorting some of these channels. This can cause major frustration because the on-screen menus of Set Top Boxes or TVs with built-in receivers often seem to be designed without the urge to win usability awards. Have you ever tried to move a channel from position 2847 to position 7 using the remote control? And after that, to move another channel from position 2846 to position 8? It's as much fun as playing Tetris while the blocks are only dropping by one line per minute.
Even within the open source PVR world it's a challenge to offer a solution with decent usability. But this is going to change soon: Upcoming yaVDR 0.4 will assist you with your channel list in quite a clever way. Let's have a look at the all new channel list editor in the yaVDR web frontend and its built-in access to Channelpedia, the new VDR channel list directory.
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New VDR developer version 1.7.20 is being packaged for yaVDR

A week ago, Klaus Schmidinger has announced the release of VDR developer version 1.7.20. As always, we are excited about the new version and want to thank Klaus for his steady work on VDR core.
VDR 1.7.20 will replace the VDR 1.7.18 packages in yaVDR in the near future.
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For serious testers: Announcing yaVDR 0.4 pre1 ISO image
The promised first "alpha" or "pre" ISO image of yaVDR 0.4 is finally out, bearing the name yavdr64-0.4.0-pre1.iso. The members of the yaVDR team are proud that the public can now join in with testing, improving and extending what we have been working on hard since October 2010.
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It's time to talk about upcoming yaVDR 0.4

yaVDR 0.4 is slowly taking shape: We would like to give you an overview about all important changes and new features that we plan to put into yaVDR 0.4. This will happen in a series of blog postings, starting off today with focus on the cornerstones of yaVDR 0.4.
To make it more exciting to read, I'm pretending that somebody is conducting an interview with the yaVDR developers. (There should be an open source software that automatically comes up with the right interview questions to make it easier to write such stuff.)
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30.000 downloads of yaVDR? We're nearly there!
Counting internet downloads is an error-prone and imprecise craft. But our vanity and our sanity tell us to care for those numbers, and we try to count in a conservative way. It's a source of motivation, and it's also reassuring that what we do is somehow useful, for us and for other people.
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Announcing yaVDR-addon-pip (Picture in Picture)
The yaVDR-Team proudly presents the - as we believe - first OSD independent picture in picture (PiP) solution for the VDR. If you own more than one DVB card, you are now able to watch two arbitrary channels at the same time!
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Watching Live TV on Android devices

It can't get much easier: Android app VPlayer allows VDR users to watch Live TV and recordings on a smartphone like the HTC Desire via WLAN. As the video streaming backend we use our own VDR box at home plus VDR plugin streamdev-server and VDR plugin Live (both are preinstalled on yaVDR).
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