Hi
I posted elsewhere that On Demand didn't connect, but it seems that it just downloads stuff so slow it seems like it.
I do sometimes get the Can't Connect message but I think that just because it takes so long to do it that it throws the message.
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Both my computer and the Hopper are connected by cable to the same router.
But it's 100 times faster through my computer.
I have a 100mbs connection.
Mike
What do you get on average speedtests using a site like speedtest.net?
"connected by cable" meaning hard wired all the way through, back to your cable modem? (meaning, you're using an ethernet wire back to a router and ethernet from the router to the cable modem, and that no where in the path to/from the hopper's connection is wireless or slinglink/ethernet over power used)
if you have a netflix subscription, I would be interested in what experience you have using the Netflix app on the hopper.
There's two types of "On-Demand", the lines are blured between what content was truly streamed using good compression (like you get with the HD version of Netflix) and content that was standard Mpeg/mpeg2 files which needed more space as they were less compressed, and couldn't stream as well. Usually now the difference is visible up-front with a "watch now" and the Info button during stream may bring up bit rate information.
Since I've been back with dish, and have mostly used Netflix, I don't do as much on-demand. For any shows I do on-demand, I usually start them downloading and go onto other stuff, coming back later to view.
To get a better comparison, I'd need to do the same download for Shrek that you did. Tell me where you went to DL on the hopper and I'll see if its in my subscription. If so I'll set-up some monitoring to watch how much data (it would tell us which type on-demand, streaming, or download) it occupies. But by the description, and if netflix streaming works at hd levels, I would suspect the on-demand was the older larger file version.