My folks have had DirecTV for over a decade, but they've gotten sick of paying ~$135 a month, and have investigated Dish. So, my mom was looking at the hopper option, and wanted me to do some investigation, as my folks are getting older and aren't really up on tech stuff.
So after doing some searching online, here I am.
So, first, their situation. They currently have 3 HDTVs with 3 DirecTV DVR boxes. They basically only watch the two tvs, and they have the third tv in the bar area, that is generally only used when company is over, or by myself when I record sports games and watch them at my parent's house (I refuse to pay for tv at all, and have no tv service at all at my place).
I guess my first concern for them would be the limitation of 3 signals. They both record a good deal of crap, particularly my mother, and I'm not sure that 3 signals would always be enough. But I don't know; I'm only slightly up on this stuff myself, and it's my understanding that they currently have 6 signals effectively. With the hopper, would they be able to, say, record 3 programs, whilst simultaneously watching two other recordings?
Second, my dad has an I-pad and he sometimes uses it in lieu of the remote when using his tv. As I understand it, there is at least some functionality over IP with the hopper, but not necessarily full functionality? Can anyone aware me on what the situation is there?
From the other thread, I gather that they would be able to skip running the coax from the hopper to the joeys, and could simply use the ethernet cable? I ask this because I know they have coax running from the satellite to the receivers, but it might be a pain to route coax from the basement receiver to the other receivers, whereas, as I understand it, they currently already have ethernet running from right next to the basement receiver to the other two receivers, so this would be very convenient. If this is the case, is there any sort of setup process I need to be aware of?
Finally, what's the story with the wi-fi adapter? Do these joeys have built in antennae or not?
Edit: oh, and what's up with the apps mentioned on the dish website? It doesn't really explain what those are about.
So after doing some searching online, here I am.
So, first, their situation. They currently have 3 HDTVs with 3 DirecTV DVR boxes. They basically only watch the two tvs, and they have the third tv in the bar area, that is generally only used when company is over, or by myself when I record sports games and watch them at my parent's house (I refuse to pay for tv at all, and have no tv service at all at my place).
I guess my first concern for them would be the limitation of 3 signals. They both record a good deal of crap, particularly my mother, and I'm not sure that 3 signals would always be enough. But I don't know; I'm only slightly up on this stuff myself, and it's my understanding that they currently have 6 signals effectively. With the hopper, would they be able to, say, record 3 programs, whilst simultaneously watching two other recordings?
Second, my dad has an I-pad and he sometimes uses it in lieu of the remote when using his tv. As I understand it, there is at least some functionality over IP with the hopper, but not necessarily full functionality? Can anyone aware me on what the situation is there?
From the other thread, I gather that they would be able to skip running the coax from the hopper to the joeys, and could simply use the ethernet cable? I ask this because I know they have coax running from the satellite to the receivers, but it might be a pain to route coax from the basement receiver to the other receivers, whereas, as I understand it, they currently already have ethernet running from right next to the basement receiver to the other two receivers, so this would be very convenient. If this is the case, is there any sort of setup process I need to be aware of?
Finally, what's the story with the wi-fi adapter? Do these joeys have built in antennae or not?
Edit: oh, and what's up with the apps mentioned on the dish website? It doesn't really explain what those are about.