<br><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><div><div class="Wj3C7c"><br><br></div></div>I'm looking at this line:
<br><div class="Ih2E3d">2008-01-12 18:17:52.429 ChannelBase(4) Error: InitializeInputs():<br> Could not get inputs for the capturecard.<br> Perhaps you have forgotten to bind video
<br> sources to your card's inputs?<br><br></div>Did you set up your sources, and then assign your digital cable list<br>of sources to the HD Homerun? It looks like it's trying to tune<br>
analog channel 3, so I'd guess not.<br>_______________________________________________<br><a href="http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users" target="_blank"></a></blockquote><div><br>That may have been a holdover from my previous tuners. So I went into Myth and deleted all tuners, and followed the steps in the Wiki one step at a time. Same result, so I ran the yum upgrade \*myth\* and started from scratch yet again. Same result again although it lasted a bit longer before crashing.
<br><br>The two HD channels that it found came in, but that brings up the other issue that I'm going to elaborate on. When I first got the HDHomerun I installed the utility on my Windows machine, scanned for channels and I found more channels than the Myth box is finding - In addition to Fox and CBS which my mythbox sees, it also found Fox, WGBH and NESN. Myth's scanning found a ton of channels like 80#5, 82#10, etc. I assume that most of these are the QAM channels used for PPV etc, which up until a couple weeks ago came in on my TV. Now if I knew for sure which of these channels were actually 'bad' I could exclude them in the channel editor, but since I haven't found all the 'good' channels I don't know where to go from here. Anybody have any ideas?
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