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Television Android Entertainment

Dish's New AirTV Set-Top Box Does Over-the-Air and 4K Streaming (techcrunch.com) 22

On Tuesday, Dish unveiled a new streaming device, the AirTV, which uses Android TV as its base operating system, and provides access to the wealth of Android media apps available. TechCrunch reports: But it's also able to grab over-the-air signals with an antenna for streaming live TV, and it works with Sling TV for a cable-free streaming subscription cord cutting experience. The AirTV also handles 4K, which is good news if you picked one of these up over the holiday shopping season. The 4K support will primarily grab content from Netflix and YouTube apps, but because the underlying platform is Android TV, there are other sources available, which is not necessarily true for other smart TV devices looking to bring more 4K into the living room. It's also not necessary for AirTV users to even use Sling TV, the subscription over-the-top streaming service Dish owns. Which is yet another sign of the changing world that TV and cable providers now find themselves in. The AirTV is also available in both OTA and streaming only hardware configurations, and retails for $129 for the antenna-compatible version, and $99 without.
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Dish's New AirTV Set-Top Box Does Over-the-Air and 4K Streaming

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  • by nwaack ( 3482871 )
    The concept is nice but the thing looks like a children's toy. I have a feeling they're gonna lose out on a decent amount of sales simply because people won't want the thing in their entertainment center.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    if it's getting a broadcast signal from an antenna, that's not streaming television. thats receiving a broadcast signal with an antenna, like tvs have done since the beginning

    do I blame millenials here? someone must be blamed

    • by Kenja ( 541830 )
      It's a TV Android box, with an optional antenna. The 99$ version has to be hooked to ethernet.
  • by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Tuesday January 03, 2017 @02:05PM (#53599327)

    I'm not clear why Sling is even a part of anything offered by a satellite service, but avoid them.

    I just canceled a Sling subscription. There were many reasons, including ignorant support people and awful quality. I would often watch the first half of a show just fine then have it lock up and get an error message telling me to check my Internet connection and fight with my Internet provider. When I would check my Internet connection it was working fine and at the full speed expected and that I had watched the first half of the show with. But the worst offense by Sling in my mind is that they really don't provide the channels that they claim. I had the $25 "Blue" package because there was really nothing that I would watch on the $20 Orange package. But as soon as I signed up I found that I couldn't watch the advertised FXX or National Geographic Wild packages. After much absurd hoop jumping with support I finally got an email telling me that the FXX channel did not provide a "live stream" but that there were a few archived programs that i could watch that might have been shown on FXX once. The same seems to be true for Nat Geo Wild, and it might be the case for other channels that I have not even checked. If you tried to tune into a sports channel that had a game you wanted to see, you wouldn't accept it if the streaming service told you that the game was not available but they had a small set of recorded games from 2014 that you could watch. Why should Sling customers accept this on FXX, Wild or any other advretised channel that is part of the paid package?

    • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

      . If you tried to tune into a sports channel that had a game you wanted to see, you wouldn't accept it if the streaming service told you that the game was not available but they had a small set of recorded games from 2014 that you could watch

      Hmmm. Was going to go pick up Sling this evening, but this was the exact use-case I was thinking of.

      Supposedly, you CAN use Sling to watch NBC Sports [worldsoccertalk.com] live sports channels. I assumed that included the ability to stream NBC Sports Live Extra online (or from mobile devices). It requires login credentials from a provider to do so, where currently I'm supplying my Cox credentials.

      Looking a bit more online, I'm seeing someone saying Sling can't do that, but you can do that with PlayStation's VUE [reddit.com]. Any comments

      • I can't speak specifically about NBC sports (I don't watch sportsball), but another disadvantage of Sling is that, at least for the websites that I have tried, Sling is not considered a "provider". So if you want to be able to log in to sites like Syfy and USA and watch on-line content, you have another reason to avoid Sling TV. The sites that I have tried simply do not accept Sling TV as a provider, even though you have paid to receive those same channel over Sling. Sling pretends to have some of the same
        • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

          I went home and checked last night. It is indeed true that NBC Sport Live Extra (that's a mouthful) does not have Sling listed as a provider, but does have PlayStation VUE. I'm going to sign up for the free trial of the latter today and see how it works.

          The interesting thing about sports is its the one thing that really loses value if you don't provide it live. It just isn't the same sitting through 2 hours of a competition for which the result is already known, and for which you can't really participate

  • So mythtv(backend) + kodi. *yawn*

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