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Need to replace my universal remote
Harmony - wife proof, kid proof, me proof!!!
You tell the harmony web site what you are controlling and how you want to use the components, plug in the remote via a USB cable, wait a couple of minute for it download and you are done. "watch TV" turns on the TV (if it is off), turns on the receiver, sets everything to the correct inputs. The volume button controls the receiver, the channel button controls the TiVo. Press "listen to radio" the TV turns off, the receiver is set to the right input, controls on the remote do the right thing. "off:" turns off everything that is on. The remote remembers the status, so it can get confused, but the "help" button solves most problems. Pricy ($120 on the web), but worth every cent. "Nomen Nescio" ] wrote in message ... X-MessageID: What do you think is the best universal remote? I have a Tivo from 2000, 14 hours but I'm still using it. I've been using an RCA Universal Custom 8 remote, I think I bought it in late '01. Looks like 3 years of daily use has worn out the remote. Many of the buttons on the bottom of it have worn out from all the commercial zapping. What I liked about this remote was it can control 8 devices. It can learn a few keys, and it holds its memory over a battery change. I don't like picking it up and not knowing which device it was last set to. But since I watch TV and listen through a sound system it's nice to have the volume locked to the receiver, and the macros to turn everything on and off. It has not been perfect, but it must be somewhat of a success, I mean, it has been in my hand every day for nearly 3 years. The remotes with the RCA brand, I have always liked, personally I think they are well built. Do I try to find another one just like this or is there something better? |
On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 22:50:04 +0200, Nomen Nescio wrote:
X-MessageID: What do you think is the best universal remote? One For All. I use the cheap 8810 learning remote, about $19. Got 2 of them now. I use it with Tivo S1, several TV's, VCR's, and even my just aquired RCA DRS 7000N. Lot's of buttons and you can program almost all of them. Also keeps the program during battery change. 8 devices and a 9th Home entertainment button. Screw spending $100 for a remote that will wear out just as fast and not do much if anything more. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
Best Buy carries a Philips (Magnavox) Universal Learning remote that is
pre-programed for Tivo. It controls up to 8 devices. I think it goes on sale for about $30. pstryjew at att dot net Nomen Nescio wrote: Wes Newell wrote: : One For All. I use the cheap 8810 learning remote, about $19. Got 2 of : them now. I use it with Tivo S1, several TV's, VCR's, and even my just : aquired RCA DRS 7000N. Lot's of buttons and you can program almost all of : them. Also keeps the program during battery change. 8 devices and a 9th : Home entertainment button. Screw spending $100 for a remote that will wear : out just as fast and not do much if anything more. So you think that OFA's are better than RCA? I paid about $60 for the RCA Universal Custom 8, and have used it for almost 3 years. I guess none of the remotes are perfect, but one of the things about the RCA I didn't like is that it takes 2 hands to hold it. I have to pick up the remote with my left hand, the press the buttons with my right hand. The remote that came with my S1 Tivo, it can be worked with 1 hand. One of the best ergonomic things I've seen. They actually gave consideration to the user. Every Tivo user knows the most used sequence is the FF 3 times till the commercials end, then play. And maybe a hit or two on the button which moves back 7.5 seconds. The buttons on the RCA, it's good they lasted 3 years having been hit so much. They've just worn out. I thought of something, I could "learn" the channel buttons 7 and 9 to the Tivo's FF and reverse. Hardly ever do I use the numbered keys. Might get another few months of use out of this remote. Also, I could get another benefit, if I hit one of the channel change buttons by mistake, the Tivo dumps the 30-minute buffer. If these buttons no longer change channels they won't cause this problem anymore. |
"Nomen Nescio" ] wrote in message ... Wes Newell wrote: : One For All. I use the cheap 8810 learning remote, about $19. Got 2 of : them now. I use it with Tivo S1, several TV's, VCR's, and even my just : aquired RCA DRS 7000N. Lot's of buttons and you can program almost all of : them. Also keeps the program during battery change. 8 devices and a 9th : Home entertainment button. Screw spending $100 for a remote that will wear : out just as fast and not do much if anything more. So you think that OFA's are better than RCA? Who said OFA's are better? -- Les |
On Fri, 01 Oct 2004 16:50:06 +0200, Nomen Nescio wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: : One For All. I use the cheap 8810 learning remote, about $19. Got 2 of So you think that OFA's are better than RCA? Yes, without a doubt. I paid about $60 for the RCA Universal Custom 8, and have used it for almost 3 years. I had the same one. Wore out in less than a year. I use all the recorder buttons a lot. made it last almost 2 years by taking it apart and painting the pads. That's still the only thing wrong with it. But I couldn't find a replacement keypad for it. I guess none of the remotes are perfect, but one of the things about the RCA I didn't like is that it takes 2 hands to hold it. I have to pick up the remote with my left hand, the press the buttons with my right hand. I just sat it down and punched it that way, but it is rather large. The new one is not quite as large but has no display, but one of my old VCR's has tons of special features and I needed a remote with a lot of programable buttons. The remote that came with my S1 Tivo, it can be worked with 1 hand. One of the best ergonomic things I've seen. They actually gave consideration to the user. But you have to have multiple remotes for other devices. I don't like that. Every Tivo user knows the most used sequence is the FF 3 times till the commercials end, then play. And maybe a hit or two on the button which moves back 7.5 seconds. I hit a single button once that I have programmed with 3 FF's on the 8810. The buttons on the RCA, it's good they lasted 3 years having been hit so much. They've just worn out. I thought of something, I could "learn" the channel buttons 7 and 9 to the Tivo's FF and reverse. Hardly ever do I use the numbered keys. Might get another few months of use out of this remote. Also, I could get another benefit, if I hit one of the channel change buttons by mistake, the Tivo dumps the 30-minute buffer. If these buttons no longer change channels they won't cause this problem anymore. Yep, I reprogramed unused buttons til they were all wore out.:-) -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
On Fri, 01 Oct 2004 15:29:57 -0500, Lester Crane wrote:
Who said OFA's are better? Me. At least they are lasting a lot longer than the RCA remote I had, which cost about 4 times as much as the OFA. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
On Wed, 06 Oct 2004 18:30:20 -0400, Jeff wrote:
I hit a single button once that I have programmed with 3 FF's on the 8810. Where does one find the codes to do all these things? The instruction sheet that comes with it. Only exception is programming the regular keys. The sheet says you can only program the 4 learning keys, but you can actually program almost all the keys using the same procedure as programming a learning key. I have an OFA but some of the keys (info, etc.) do not do what they are supposed to. I've been to their website and though it has codes, it does not have all of them. Device codes? It has one for Tivo. This assigns just the basic functions. I just programmed all of the Tivo functions onto various other keys on the remote. So I have a key on the remote for all Tivo keys. I've also programmed all the TV functions I wanted in to this devce mode so I don't have to switch to the Tv mode when watching Tivo. An I'm not using any of the 4 learning keys that I recall, and only one of the macro keys for the 3FF's. I assume you have one of the learning remotes. If not, then you can't do this. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
I have a programmable remote, the 6131. I am not sure if it is one of the
"learning remotes", but I can program the keys individually. Could you send me the codes (or tell me how I can find them) for individual TIVO functions so I can program them individually into various keys? That is what I am having trouble finding on their website. I can find the main key for TIVO, but not the codes to program the individual keys for selected functions. -- Jeff Williams Email address deliberately false to avoid spam "Wes Newell" wrote in message news:[email protected] net... On Wed, 06 Oct 2004 18:30:20 -0400, Jeff wrote: I hit a single button once that I have programmed with 3 FF's on the 8810. Where does one find the codes to do all these things? The instruction sheet that comes with it. Only exception is programming the regular keys. The sheet says you can only program the 4 learning keys, but you can actually program almost all the keys using the same procedure as programming a learning key. I have an OFA but some of the keys (info, etc.) do not do what they are supposed to. I've been to their website and though it has codes, it does not have all of them. Device codes? It has one for Tivo. This assigns just the basic functions. I just programmed all of the Tivo functions onto various other keys on the remote. So I have a key on the remote for all Tivo keys. I've also programmed all the TV functions I wanted in to this devce mode so I don't have to switch to the Tv mode when watching Tivo. An I'm not using any of the 4 learning keys that I recall, and only one of the macro keys for the 3FF's. I assume you have one of the learning remotes. If not, then you can't do this. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
On Thu, 07 Oct 2004 14:46:01 -0400, Jeff wrote:
I have a programmable remote, the 6131. I am not sure if it is one of the "learning remotes", but I can program the keys individually. Could you send me the codes (or tell me how I can find them) for individual TIVO functions so I can program them individually into various keys? That is what I am having trouble finding on their website. I can find the main key for TIVO, but not the codes to program the individual keys for selected functions. The 6131 is not a learning remote and one can only program device keys. You can program the tivo code (see manual) onto a device key, but you cannot program individual function keys afaik. If you all the functions of a Tivo remote, you'll need a learning remote. You can pick these up locally here for under $20. You must have the original remote for the learning remote to learn the keys. you point the original remote at the learning remot and press the original button so the learning remote learns the key function codes. As I said, the 8810 does it fine. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
Thank you.
-- Jeff Williams Email address deliberately false to avoid spam "Wes Newell" wrote in message news:[email protected] net... On Thu, 07 Oct 2004 14:46:01 -0400, Jeff wrote: I have a programmable remote, the 6131. I am not sure if it is one of the "learning remotes", but I can program the keys individually. Could you send me the codes (or tell me how I can find them) for individual TIVO functions so I can program them individually into various keys? That is what I am having trouble finding on their website. I can find the main key for TIVO, but not the codes to program the individual keys for selected functions. The 6131 is not a learning remote and one can only program device keys. You can program the tivo code (see manual) onto a device key, but you cannot program individual function keys afaik. If you all the functions of a Tivo remote, you'll need a learning remote. You can pick these up locally here for under $20. You must have the original remote for the learning remote to learn the keys. you point the original remote at the learning remot and press the original button so the learning remote learns the key function codes. As I said, the 8810 does it fine. -- Abit KT7-Raid (KT133) Tbred B core CPU @2400MHz (24x100FSB) http://mysite.verizon.net/res0exft/cpu.htm |
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