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I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I
subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd |
#2
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![]() "Lloyd Parsons" wrote in message ... I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd I used to get stop-motion or slow frame rates with Netflix on a slower computer. I now have a Roku box. Your frame rate will be smooth, but with a 3meg connection your picture sharpness will be poor. |
#3
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In article ,
"QN" wrote: "Lloyd Parsons" wrote in message ... I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd I used to get stop-motion or slow frame rates with Netflix on a slower computer. I now have a Roku box. Your frame rate will be smooth, but with a 3meg connection your picture sharpness will be poor. Thanks for that info. I'm surprised that a 3Mb DSL connection would cause poor sharpness. Oh well, the Apple TV is looking better and better. It'll be here next week. |
#4
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In article ,
Lloyd Parsons wrote: In article , "QN" wrote: "Lloyd Parsons" wrote in message ... I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd I used to get stop-motion or slow frame rates with Netflix on a slower computer. I now have a Roku box. Your frame rate will be smooth, but with a 3meg connection your picture sharpness will be poor. Thanks for that info. I'm surprised that a 3Mb DSL connection would cause poor sharpness. Oh well, the Apple TV is looking better and better. It'll be here next week. I just tried Netflix and Hulu with Firefox instead of Safari 4. Smooth video and very good quality. I thought that Safari 4 was faster than Firefox. But I guess it isn't for video. |
#5
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Lloyd Parsons wrote:
In article , Lloyd Parsons wrote: In article , "QN" wrote: "Lloyd Parsons" wrote in message ... I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd I used to get stop-motion or slow frame rates with Netflix on a slower computer. I now have a Roku box. Your frame rate will be smooth, but with a 3meg connection your picture sharpness will be poor. Thanks for that info. I'm surprised that a 3Mb DSL connection would cause poor sharpness. Oh well, the Apple TV is looking better and better. It'll be here next week. I just tried Netflix and Hulu with Firefox instead of Safari 4. Smooth video and very good quality. I thought that Safari 4 was faster than Firefox. But I guess it isn't for video. I have been trying this also. I watched some old SD missed TV shows (Bones) using Hulu with Firefox on a 512Kb (yes .5Mb) connection and it was good with only a few very brief glitches. I was pleased and surprised. I used an Acer Aspire 5672WLMI with a DVI out to my HDTV. |
#6
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In article ,
Mike Ray wrote: Lloyd Parsons wrote: In article , Lloyd Parsons wrote: In article , "QN" wrote: "Lloyd Parsons" wrote in message ... I've been researching online video to bring it to my TV at home. I subscribe to Netflix, so that is the first thing I looked at. From my computer, on a 3Mb DSL service, the quality is all over the place. Some very good, others suck badly, but what all of it seems to have is stop-motion often enough to be irritating. Is it better with a Roku box or other hardware? At this point in time, I've relegated the 'watch now' at Netflix to preview something I think I might want to rent, vice watching it online. Hulu seems fine, a bit of stop-motion, but nowhere near like Netflix. But so far I've not seen something in hardware to get that to my TV, is there something? I have recently purchased an Apple TV because they have a broad selection of things I can buy that I like, and since it downloads to my system, it doesn't suffer from poor video quality nor stop-motion. I would like to add something to get the internet streaming video to my TV in addition to the Apple TV, but am still looking. Roku looks nice, but it doesn't do anything more than Netflix and Amazon. Amazon's video is better than Netflix overall, but it still suffers from stop-motion. Lloyd I used to get stop-motion or slow frame rates with Netflix on a slower computer. I now have a Roku box. Your frame rate will be smooth, but with a 3meg connection your picture sharpness will be poor. Thanks for that info. I'm surprised that a 3Mb DSL connection would cause poor sharpness. Oh well, the Apple TV is looking better and better. It'll be here next week. I just tried Netflix and Hulu with Firefox instead of Safari 4. Smooth video and very good quality. I thought that Safari 4 was faster than Firefox. But I guess it isn't for video. I have been trying this also. I watched some old SD missed TV shows (Bones) using Hulu with Firefox on a 512Kb (yes .5Mb) connection and it was good with only a few very brief glitches. I was pleased and surprised. I used an Acer Aspire 5672WLMI with a DVI out to my HDTV. That is interesting. I would have expected it to be pretty bad with that connection speed. I can't hook a computer to my HDTV 'cause it doesn't support connecting to a computer (and I tried anyway). More than likely I'll get a Roku box somewhere along the way as I like tech toys. With it and Apple TV I would have iTunes, Netflix, Amazon and YouTube covered. Hulu seems to not want to come to your TV at all unless you do what you've done. Roku was supposed to get it at one point, and Boxee was too, but as of now, neither will. |
#7
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On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 13:42:20 -0600, Lloyd Parsons
wrote: That is interesting. I would have expected it to be pretty bad with that connection speed. I can't hook a computer to my HDTV 'cause it doesn't support connecting to a computer (and I tried anyway). It won't give you HD, but have you considered using an S Video cable? |
#8
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In article ,
metspitzer wrote: On Thu, 05 Mar 2009 13:42:20 -0600, Lloyd Parsons wrote: That is interesting. I would have expected it to be pretty bad with that connection speed. I can't hook a computer to my HDTV 'cause it doesn't support connecting to a computer (and I tried anyway). It won't give you HD, but have you considered using an S Video cable? I've seen video on my 61" HDTV from an S Video cable. It isn't pretty! ![]() I'm contemplating setting up a media center with a Mac mini to allow for those sites I can get to online. So far, I've not found a solution that makes that work too well for good SD and HD. But that is a somewhat expensive solution, even if I get it to work. I have an Apple TV coming that will fill many of my wants in this arena, but doesn't connect to Amazon or Netflix. Amazon isn't a big deal as most of what they have, iTunes has. Netflix is the bigger part and the Roku box will do that just fine. Cheaper than doing a media center. I would like something to do Hulu and others with. And as I found out today, I may have to add a windows box to the mix somewhere along the line as some sites won't work from the mac. Like tnt.tv. Can't play full episodes there because of the FSCKING DRM they are using. ![]() I'm retired so time isn't of the essence in this. Lloyd |
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