Time Warner Cable’s newest version of its iPad app — TWCable TV — has more issues than the New York Times.
Stop the Cap! previously judged the latest version of the app ‘garbage,’ and after several weeks of periodic testing, we’ve found nothing to change our mind.
Now the cable company itself is acknowledging what hundreds of reviewers have bottom-rated: it simply doesn’t work right.
We’ve identified a number of frankly aggravating issues that have presented themselves only in a live environment. Comment threads on Engadget, DSLReports, this very blog and others support our internal findings, too. If you’re experiencing the following issues, please be reassured that they should be fixed in an upcoming patch releasing by the end of this month at the latest:
- The app crashes after iPad awakes from sleep or lock
- HD filter returns incomplete results
- Intermittently, guide listings will overlay other guide listings (text appears overwritten and jumbled).
- The device selector slides off-screen or disappears altogether
- In-guide recording indicators do not appear
We’ve also discovered an intermittent quality issue with our live streaming that we are working to fix right now. This problem is independent of the release 2.0 code bugs, and will be fixed very, very soon.
The end of the month is a week away, and nothing appears to have been fixed just yet. For Stop the Cap!‘s tests, the most obvious and aggravating problem continues to be streamed video that simply does not work for more than 30 seconds. That such a core function of the product would remain hopelessly broken and unusable for almost a month is a profound embarrassment, tempered only by the fact the app and service is offered for free at the present time.
Time Warner Cable’s Jeff Simmermon tries to offer helpful, but very limited advice to the large contingent of users who find the app bug-laden:
Live TV playback – video buffers (displays “loading” message)
(Note, we are currently working to resolve an intermittent video quality issue that could result in excessive buffering of the live feed.)
Did you experience any video quality issues prior to the 2.0 upgrade? If not, has anything changed on the home network recently?
Download a speed measurement tool or visit an iPad compatible speed measure web site to measure speed on the device at the point in the home where live video is being viewed. TWCable TV’s high definition video streams require a sustained 1.5mbps to avoid buffering. Fringe WiFi areas (e.g., a far corner of the house, backyard, etc) may not achieve these speeds.
Contact customer care with a detailed report of which channels are impacted and the frequency of the buffering (e.g., every few minutes, every 5 sec, etc).
We reported this particular issue and note it is hardly intermittent — it’s a constant for us in the Rochester, N.Y., area. What is particularly odd is the prior version never experienced any of these issues. We’ve only received guidance that our home network — the one Time Warner Cable technicians installed themselves when we upgraded to DOCSIS 3 technology — might be responsible. We think not.
Many Time Warner Cable customers have used the company’s blog postings on the app as an opportunity to vent frustration over the cable company’s foot-dragging on online video. While other cable companies’ TV Everywhere projects are unveiling a second generation of online playback tools, Time Warner is still withholding HBO Go and CNN Networks’ new live streaming of their cable networks’ digital online productions.
One satellite television customer responded bemused with Time Warner’s technical problems: “My DirecTV iPad app just works.”
But DirecTV’s app doesn’t offer streaming (except for the Sunday Ticket sports package)..
Nothing a Slingbox hasn’t fixed, of course.