It's luck of the draw. Electronics sometimes go bad, they make millions of them and some are going have flaws.
What are people doing to them to cause them to fry? I've still got the very first Roku device. In fact, the thing is in a clear housing, as in the beginning, roku didn't have a black casing, it was see-thru clear plastic. I have a streaming stick, 3 ultras, and 2 or 3 Roku 3's.
Same question for the slowing down. I've never seen any of mine do that. An occasional reboot is probably healthy (via the settings menu). I also put 64gb or 128gb memory cards in all of mine...solves the problem of not enough room... Basically it's running a linux backend so there shouldn't be any resource hogs that aren't fixed with a reboot.
Makes sense... I never watch the free stuff (the ad-laced offerings) so I guess I don't get as much "targeted" advertising. Normally don't do searches either, unless I specifically know a program and just can't find it. Otherwise, like my daughter watching right now..she goes right where she wants to and watches. It's usually either sling, netflix, youtube, or hulu that we have included in cellular. Sometimes I use TRC and will just start a movie playing..but not always sit thru it all... Other than that... I try to stress the 4K content while playing PS4, son playing PS4, both of us streaming to Twitch via PS4...just so I can push the network and see where it's got weakness.I think it is a combination of both hardware being manufactured to a pretty low price point, and new software features which push the hardware to do more with the same resources. If you never upgrade the software, then perfectly-made hardware would most likely never have any issues. I think things seemed to get a lot worse when Roku added advertising and activity tracking to their software. Advertisers always want more and more targeting/tracking features, and most of that gets pushed down to the devices. This is the same kind of thing that makes web pages load so slowly these days. There is so much code on the pages, that the browser has to do a ton of work that is completely unrelated to the content you actually care about.
While you can occasionally get them at that price, I think it’s a stretch to say they are normally $24.99 on sale.They only let you buy one at that price.
Yep, I paid $34.99 for my 4K version in December of 2018...While you can occasionally get them at that price, I think it’s a stretch to say they are normally $24.99 on sale.
The regular sticks are often that price.
The 4K version is for some. Occasionally. $34 is the standard sale price.
The first roku stick that was purple was slower than whale goop too.
While you can occasionally get them at that price, I think it’s a stretch to say they are normally $24.99 on sale.
The regular sticks are often that price.
The 4K version is for some. Occasionally. $34 is the standard sale price.
FYI: There is some debate as to whether Roku is really a neutral platform any more:
Why Does Roku Still Insist It’s ‘Neutral’?
Company’s CFO proclaims top OTT platform still plays its ‘traditional’ Switzerland role in the streaming wars. But analysts say it now has too many advertising and subscription agendaswww.nexttv.com
Given the disputes, I tend to lean towards not neutral these days.
totally lost on neutral...neutral to what? elaborate please?
I mean..dont they all have ads? is there ANY platform where you're not going to be subjected to either ads or commercials? Unless you have your own media and media server, there's just no getting around it in this age. I finally deleted some DVD rips that I had because I never watch them anymore and the quality sucked anyway...but it's just part of life now.
"Reached for comment, a spokesperson for HBO Max parent company WarnerMedia told Gizmodo the company had no comment. A spokesperson for NBCUniversal, Peacock’s parent, said that “talks are ongoing.”
Roku didn’t immediately return a request for comment."
Code:"Reached for comment, a spokesperson for HBO Max parent company WarnerMedia told Gizmodo the company had no comment. A spokesperson for NBCUniversal, Peacock’s parent, said that “talks are ongoing.” Roku didn’t immediately return a request for comment."
So the whole article is unsubstantiated speculation.
I broke down and ordered an AppleTV to try in the Living Room this weekend. We continue to have issues with the Firesticks losing network connectivity. I got a cheap universal remote that is supposed work well with it. I might eventually change my vote to None of the Above if the AppleTV works out.
What remote did you buy for the AppleTV?I broke down and ordered an AppleTV to try in the Living Room this weekend. We continue to have issues with the Firesticks losing network connectivity. I got a cheap universal remote that is supposed work well with it. I might eventually change my vote to None of the Above if the AppleTV works out.
The One For All Streaming remote. The reviews are a bit mixed, but I think the negative ones are largely due to people not wanting to learn how to program it. At least it is inexpensive, and might solve my Roku remote issues if I don't keep the AppleTV.What remote did you buy for the AppleTV?