And less expensive Premier+.
Right, I forgot that, 4k ROKU owners were given a big price break to upgrade to Ultra.
And less expensive Premier+.
Really, when did I miss that?Right, I forgot that, 4k ROKU owners were given a big price break to upgrade to Ultra.
You can not connect a Joey to a wireless router. Nor, does Dish "support" a direct ethernet connection to the Hopper (though most times it works). Moca via coax is the supported method.Will the Joey be able to use Ethernet directly connected to the router? Or does it require you to run the ethernet from the H3's 2nd ethernet port? Odd that ethernet was connected and verified working yet status said it was not being used. Didn't know if there's some weird proprietary interconnectivity between the H3 and joey's required.
You can not connect a Joey to a wireless router. Nor, does Dish "support" a direct ethernet connection to the Hopper (though most times it works). Moca via coax is the supported method.
Thats for Wireless Joeys.Thanks. Perhaps im a little confused on the setup, I was listening to what my client told me and he assured me there was basically a "master" joey (which sat on top of the H3) that he said communicated with the other joey's. Is this not the case? Does such a item not exist?
I did notice that they are indeed connected via moca coax. But there is one joey that was in his kitchen that was not connected via coax. So surely there must be some wireless capability? Otherwise how was that particular joey working?
Yes, the H3 is connected via ethernet. It works great.
Thanks for your info!
Dish "supports" a Ethernet connection just fine to the Hopper.You can not connect a Joey to a wireless router. Nor, does Dish "support" a direct ethernet connection to the Hopper (though most times it works). Moca via coax is the supported method.
I'm thinking he means an ethernet connection from the Hopper to a JoeyDish "supports" a Ethernet connection just fine to the Hopper.
From his last description the Master Joey on top of the H3 is certainly a WAP for the wireless Joey in the kitchen. The other Joeys are connected via coax and are MOca connected... The H3 is ethernet connected....I'm thinking he means an ethernet connection from the Hopper to a Joey
Will the Joey be able to use Ethernet directly connected to the router? Or does it require you to run the ethernet from the H3's 2nd ethernet port? Odd that ethernet was connected and verified working yet status said it was not being used. Didn't know if there's some weird proprietary interconnectivity between the H3 and joey's required.
You can not connect a Joey to a wireless router. Nor, does Dish "support" a direct ethernet connection to the Hopper (though most times it works). Moca via coax is the supported method.
I was referring to the aboveFrom his last description the Master Joey on top of the H3 is certainly a WAP for the wireless Joey in the kitchen. The other Joeys are connected via coax and are MOca connected... The H3 is ethernet connected....
From his last description the Master Joey on top of the H3 is certainly a WAP for the wireless Joey in the kitchen. The other Joeys are connected via coax and are MOca connected... The H3 is ethernet connected....
That is correct.
So if im understanding this correctly the coax that is connected to the joey's is not just for TV, but for internet, as its doing MoCA over Coax, forming a private VLAN between the H3 and the other Joey's? Because one of the upstairs joey's that is coax connected was having problems buffering HBO on demand. As soon as I connected a RJ45 to the ethernet port from the house's main router, then the buffering issues stopped. But from the conversation in the thread, it sounds like that would not have even done anything? That the ethernet should not have even worked, or done anything? Perhaps it was just coincidental.
So the joey's will get their data from the H3 no matter what? It basically acts as a router to the joey and redistributes IP based traffic to them?
That is correct.
So if im understanding this correctly the coax that is connected to the joey's is not just for TV, but for internet, as its doing MoCA over Coax, forming a private VLAN between the H3 and the other Joey's? Because one of the upstairs joey's that is coax connected was having problems buffering HBO on demand. As soon as I connected a RJ45 to the ethernet port from the house's main router, then the buffering issues stopped. But from the conversation in the thread, it sounds like that would not have even done anything? That the ethernet should not have even worked, or done anything? Perhaps it was just coincidental.
So the joey's will get their data from the H3 no matter what? It basically acts as a router to the joey and redistributes IP based traffic to them?