![]() It now appears the system to block allegedly infringing portals can. Now I hope this post will help me to find some more detailed documentation. Last month, IPTV set-top box manufacturer Infomir announced cooperation with rightsholders to block access to 'pirate' streams. I have spent a considerable amount of time searching for documentation on the internet and a call to your Danish office yielded a hint about Scientific Atlanta but that didn't yield anything except the data sheet. It is also interesting when considering the energy footprint of the box. Occasionally we experience power outages. The actual specifications like power requirements and whether or not the box may be installed insíde a cabinet can not be found in ther user's guide or the data sheet for the CIS5000.Īnother thing I would like to know is the extent of time the box can do without power before the stored channel information "evaporates into thin air". The only thing that even comes close is a data sheet for a model called CIS5000. I had hoped to find more information/documentation on a Cisco website, specifically a hardware and a software manual. The ISP has supplied a user's guide, which IMHO lacks a considerable amount of information. ![]() The other day my Danish ISP sent me a new Black Box.Īccording to the label on the box it has been assembled in Czechoslovakia in July 2010.
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