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TiVo’s AirPlay blockade ends as iOS app adds streaming to Apple TVs

One of the long-running complaints among TiVo users has been the company’s decision to block Apple’s AirPlay mirroring feature, preventing users from streaming content from the TiVo iOS app to an Apple TV. That’s all changing today as the company plans an update to the app that enables the functionality for the first time, allowing TiVo hardware owners to stream any content accessible via the iOS app to an Apple TV connected to the same network.

I’ve been playing with a pre-release build of the app, and it works much like you’d expect. The iOS app gives users access to content recorded on TiVo Roamio or TiVo Premiere DVR hardware, and users can now simply toggle on AirPlay mirroring from the iOS control center for their Apple TV. The feature will work for TiVo Roamio Pro, TiVo Roamio Plus, TiVo Roamio with TiVo Stream and TiVo Premiere with TiVo Stream.

It was a long time coming, especially as the company embraced iOS users in most other ways with recent software and hardware releases. It introduced the ability to stream directly to iOS devices with its new Roamio DVRs a couple years back, but AirPlay support is the final piece of the puzzle for Apple users.

While it might not make a whole lot of sense for all users that might already be streaming directly from their TiVo to a connected TV, it is extremely convenient for avid Apple TV users that often AirPlay stream content from an iOS device and would like recorded TiVo content to be a possibility in the equation. It’s also handy for users that might want to stream content to multiple screens in their home that might not be connected to their TiVo hardware. Streaming recorded TiVo content to a friend’s Apple TV when away from home isn’t possible unfortunately, as TiVo hardware that offers out-of-home streaming doesn’t appear to support the AirPlay streaming feature when off the local network. 

The updated TiVo app should be arriving on the App Store any minute now.

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Comments

  1. dday408 - 9 years ago

    Yes that’s a good step forward even though it’s a bit late… How about the 4G network remote streaming? Currently the remote streaming still stuck with the WiFi only.

Author

Avatar for Jordan Kahn Jordan Kahn

Jordan writes about all things Apple as Senior Editor of 9to5Mac, & contributes to 9to5Google, 9to5Toys, & Electrek.co. He also co-authors 9to5Mac’s Logic Pros series.