![]() It'll stay in if you don't fiddle with it, but it doesn't exactly inspire confidence. The portable telescoping antenna just pops into the port on the EyeTV's back. Just be sure you're getting the EyeTV device that's designed to work in your location - and with your hardware. Compatibility appears limited to a handful of Samsung Galaxy devices and the Nexus 7. The Micro, which costs 60 pounds, is basically just an Android iteration of the European/Japanese EyeTV Mobile described above, with a Micro-USB dongle replacing the Apple 30-pin connector, and a corresponding free Android viewing app. The second international EyeTV version is called the EyeTV Micro. (This one, of course, will not work in the U.S.) It retails for 90 pounds in the U.K. ![]() ![]() The first, also called EyeTV Mobile, "has been confirmed to work in Australia, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Poland, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, as well as any country that broadcasts standard definition MPEG-2 or MPEG-4/H.264 video," according to Elgato. That said, there are two very similar versions that work specifically for the many markets that offer the DVB-T (Freeview) or ISDB-T digital TV standards.
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