This feature was not demoed. The remote they had that were working are early prototypes.What are the voice capabilities of the new touch remote?
This feature was not demoed. The remote they had that were working are early prototypes.What are the voice capabilities of the new touch remote?
I don't think they would actually send a "signal" to the Joey. My guess is it is probably sending the encrypted MPEG4 data. MoCA is IP-based, so it is just packets. The Joey receives the data, decrypts it, and renders the video just like streaming from netflix or youtube.. It just happens locally within your home. In the case of 4K, it would be just higher bandwidth than 1080i or 720p. Of course I could be wrong.
Yup. But it also gives you a better experience in your 4K home theater as the4K Joey has no moving parts, which means no fan or hard drive noise.
The current wireless Joey is not 4K.If this is the process.........does that rule out the wireless joey?
The 4K Joey is more than twice as fast as the HWS. Over a Moca 2 connection it should be faster than a "local" HWS in most every way.If this is the process.........does that rule out the wireless joey?
If Dish is providing OTA modules, why not allow the psip info to pass thru for the subchannel locals instead of the very informative Digital Service? and hopefully not the ridiculous answer of it is not good enough, because it would be a heck of a lot better than Digital Service. At least one would know whats actually on.
Ok. I guess I just can't see how that really works,but if it is true 4k ,then I guess all is good.I don't think they would actually send a "signal" to the Joey. My guess is it is probably sending the encrypted MPEG4 data. MoCA is IP-based, so it is just packets. The Joey receives the data, decrypts it, and renders the video just like streaming from netflix or youtube.. It just happens locally within your home. In the case of 4K, it would be just higher bandwidth than 1080i or 720p. Of course I could be wrong.
Not at this time. If people want 4K add a 4K Joey. And ultimately the experience will be better then having a Hopper in that room.
I've always wanted a feature like that, especially ones announcing a show that's not coming up for weeks or longer that looks interesting. You have to resort to that "seek" timer....Dish seems to be close to this now... but how about one of those little "press select now" popups during show promos that automatically set the DVR to record whatever show.
I have a Directv HD set-top that I used to use for OTA service only. It appeared to only pull in guide data, at least beyond the current time or thereabouts, when you tuned to the channel. If you went channel by channel, it would populate the guide pretty well, but if you jumped from one channel to another one, you tended to have missing data.I agree, but there is a technical challenge doing that. Instead of scanning one transponder for all of the EEPG data e.g. once/day, the receiver would have to scan through all OTA channels sequentially and gather the PSIP data once/day, or however frequently the channels put out data. Do-able, but problematic.
This is exactly why Dish doesn't want to use PSIP data for their receivers, especially for DVRs. PSIP data is inconsistent and unreliable. Directv doesn't use it, nor does TiVo...We get 3 to 4 days of guide info on all but 1 station now. But even 12 or 24 hrs is better than Digital Service and no info at at all.
This is exactly why Dish doesn't want to use PSIP data for their receivers, especially for DVRs. PSIP data is inconsistent and unreliable. Directv doesn't use it, nor does TiVo...
Thats a choice you will have to make. There will be no changes and is exactly the way other providers work as well.If i have to go elsewhere to find the data, then I might as well go else to view it too.
Thats a choice you will have to make. There will be no changes and is exactly the way other providers work as well.