Yeah, because everyone is asking for that. They will force ads into everything they can, because Google is an Ad company.

  • cbarrick@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    God damn it Google.

    When I turn on the TV, it’s fine if the masthead is a banner advertising a new show. I’m literally using the product to find things to watch.

    But fast food? That can fuck right off.

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      8 months ago

      I’ve had an Nvidia Shield since they came out, about 6 months ago when I started seeing a car ad I was like “it’s time to switch to something else…”

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          8 months ago

          I have yet to find one that isn’t lacking basic features like being about to put the device to sleep.

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            8 months ago

            I’ve been using Sideload Channel Launcher since they started putting ads on the home screen. It’s a simple clean layout that is easy to set up and get everything you want on it. It even has a icon you can add for power settings.

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            8 months ago

            You can block ads on the NVIDIA shield launcher using Pihole of adguard DNS. Just need to go into settings for your wifi network on your shield, change dns1 and dns2, then reset the home app. It won’t be able to download new ads, so the banner on the home page will stay the default ad for several of Google’s own apps like play store and YouTube or whatever.

            I too was not able to find a third party launcher that looked as nice as the original.

        • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          There are other issues with it, so I just decided to ditch it completely. I mainly use it for Kodi.

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        8 months ago

        What did you switch to?

        My shield has always been laggy… I’d like to find a TV “OS” that can run apps and is actually fast.

        • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          The Zidoo Z9X Pro, it’s about the same price and supports Dolby Vision and Atmos in Kodi (they have their own build called ZDMC) and is generally faster then the Shield (USB 3, SATA, 4 GB RAM, etc… ).

          It doesn’t seem to support the DRM protected streaming apps that use Widevine though (Netflix and the like) since I can’t find them in the Google Play Store, which sucks, but I can just use the smart apps on my LG TV for that.

          It seems that it’s really difficult to find a STB that supports everything these days and doesn’t come with shitty specs/is years old 😑

        • HelloHotel@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          my TV responds to button presses on the remote in 10 seconds or less. That thing is like 3 years old, for a 1024 TV, you should probably aim for sub 8 second response time.

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    8 months ago

    If you have a CCwGTV, you should be using Apps Only mode. Sucks that Google hides this, because I’ve found that this is the best streaming device for my needs, but they just keep pushing ads like this. Makes me want to do a homebrew chromecast device.

    But switching to Apps Only mode is a decent workaround… for now. https://support.google.com/googletv/answer/10070784?hl=en

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      8 months ago

      Will this really remove the ads? From your link:

      In Apps only mode, you don’t get personalized recommendations on your home screen. You’ll find a list of installed apps that you can open to find something to watch. You’ll also find sponsored content and teasers for popular movies and shows.

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        8 months ago

        There’s still a single banner at the top, but it’s not a giant scroll of ads, and you only have to click down once to get to the apps, instead of scrolling past a whole page of “suggestions”

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        8 months ago

        Yes, It turns the home screen to a grid of app icons and nothing more.

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        Yes, but you can’t change the default launcher in the settings. You have to configure the custom launcher to automatically launch everytime, which does require a some adb commands, if I recall correctly.

        Otherwise, setting it to apps mode is the only alternative. Aside from disabling ads, it does disable a few other useful features, but the trade-off is worth it.

        But honestly, now that AppleTV allows VPNs and proxy apps, I’ve mostly stopped using my Google TV boxes.

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      8 months ago

      It’s a shame that this turns off the ability to use the google photos screensaver too, to the point it’s a deal breaker for us.

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    8 months ago

    Google and Roku primarily make money from ads.

    Apple does some stuff that isn’t great, but the Apple TV doesn’t have ads like their competitors. Apps can advertise what’s inside of them when they’re selected, but that’s it on the Home Screen.

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      8 months ago

      Ya, so… They didn’t GIVE me the Google TV device, I had to buy it. Therefore they got their money from me for that hardware. I’m not using other ‘free’ google products that cost them money on that device so why would they be showing ads? What cost are the recouping?

      For the record, I have not seen this and we do have a number of google TV’s in our house. However our primary TV uses an Nvidia Shield.

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        8 months ago

        I’m a product designer who has worked on a lot of products that have been monetized with ads.

        It’s pretty common for a company to split their revenue targets between register sales and monetization deals. You break even on the hardware, and make profit on the ads.

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          8 months ago

          I sure would like the option to pay for the HW/profits up front and not have perpetual ads.

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            8 months ago

            Fun fact: Amazon actually have you this option with the original Kindle. They sold two different versions where the only difference was that the cheaper one would show ads.

          • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Agreed, this tends to be why I keep going back the Apple. It’s performant, will be supported for a decade, and can be configured as a minimally annoying app launcher.

            Biggest problem is that a lot of the setup and security stuff isn’t as nice if it’s not paired to an iPhone.

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              8 months ago

              Ya I’m an android user but my wife/kid use iPhones and I actually have a MacBook. I hate iPhones, and don’t love apple but I do really like my mbp :)

              • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Yeah, we’re also a “blended family” with regards to platforms. Some of the stuff in my house is in Google’s ecosystem, some is in Apple’s, and I have a Pi in the house that plays mediator between the platforms.

                I have a box of chrome cast devices in many different flavors. I mostly only use them for traveling. Home media I keep on the bulkier AppleTVs.

                • dmtalon
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                  8 months ago

                  Oh, we’re all in google here (because of me) except the two outcasts (even though I’m outnumbered)

                  We have 6, and about to have 12 chromecast audios that run speakers all through the house. All tv’s have google TV dongles except the main tv that has Shield TV (still android) Google mini’s in every room

                  You say “Pi” to mediate? What do you mean there? (Raspberry pi?). I run Pihole in our house for ads,trackers etc.

      • Cort@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Typically they’d be recouping the cost of the tv they sold at a loss. They sell it at a loss because they know they’ll make more money in the long run via the ads.

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          In this case, these are not TV’s but small HDMI plug in devices. $30 device that I’d be surprised if they’re selling at a loss https://store.google.com/us/product/chromecast_google_tv

          And personally, If they are doing that, I want two versions, one I can pay the actual cost w/some profit for them, and no ads. The ads keep making them money long after they recoup any hw costs as they continue to profit off users. When I bought an amazon Kindle way back when, I chose the one without ads for the same reason. I’m ok paying for a product vs. being the product.

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            8 months ago

            I worked on the original Chromecast and I was told the price point at launch was specifically set at the break even point.

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              8 months ago

              I still use The audios, and just got 5 more unopened from Japan (eBay) that are tested/setup for the second 6 zones of audio as we finish our basement :)

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      It’s fairly easy to block Roku ads with a Pihole. I’ve got all mine in a special group and all I see is a nice, empty space where the ad should be.

      • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        True. Just saying there is a reason why Google and Roku’s stuff is dirt cheap. The real money is in the ads and selling your data.

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            8 months ago

            Agreed. Although even if you’re blocking the loading of ads, they’re still capturing and selling behavioral data. Also, I have remotes that advertise video services that don’t even exist anymore.

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              I don’t know about Roku but Google doesn’t sell data, just ads. You can’t go to Google and buy data about users.

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                8 months ago

                They “sell” it in the sense that, as a marketer, you buy the ability to target behavioral and demographic cohort of users. You’re not actually buying a database of names and numbers.

                • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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                  Right, so the “sell” it in the sense that they don’t sell it. I get the same response every time. I don’t understand why people think it’s ok to just lie, and then when they’re called out try to argue that lying is fine you said something that feels true.

  • flop_leash_973@lemmy.world
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    I almost completely stopped going to the movies once the pre-roll stuff was ads for cars, food, etc instead of just movie trailers.

    The more inconvenient Google makes avoiding ads on their platforms and services, the less of Googles platforms and services I will use.

    For now I have a third party launcher setup on my CCwGTV in my living room, but the Apple TV 4k I have in my bedroom sure is looking nice these days with how well it performs and how much less trouble it is to setup and reset should I need/want to do that.

    Going the HTPC route is less desirable to me since services like Amazon and Netflix go out of their way to restrict resolutions offered to things like a Debian box running Firefox. I could use Windows and Edge, but that would mean hitching myself to another company that seems more interested in selling me to advertisers than selling things to me.

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      8 months ago

      Serious question, does 4K resolution even really make that much of a difference to you? I have like 30 TB of shows and movies at 1080p and I’ve never had any users complain about resolution.

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        My hardware supports it and I am paying for the premium Netflix tier for the extra screens, so I like to use the 4k resolution when I can.

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    8 months ago

    Has there been a company that has experienced such a fast fall from grace as Google?

    Mere years ago they were viewed as the bastion of intellectuals in tech. They worked on stuff that was deemed “not evil”, people that worked there were deemed the best and brightest, and their culture was celebrated so highly that literal movies have been made about working there.

    Obviously, the reality is different from the vision, but in a short amount of time they’ve implemented URA, have had multiple mass layoffs where people were locked out overnight with no more than a sentence in an email after a decade of work, have doubled-down on enshitification of their services, and have alienated a significant chunk of their workers through RTO and cost cutting.

    • gaifux@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Anyone who bought into the don’t be evil story / marketing is being willfully naive. Like all the big tech companies they’re basically intelligence fronts. Big tech is big brother. You don’t even have to look hard to see how intertwined with the CIA / NSA Google had been from the beginning. Furthermore, Snowden’s exposure of PRISM made it clear that it wasn’t just a few grants early on, it was setup by design to limit govt liability yet allow mass surveillance to go on unabated and the entire launch of Gmail is yet a single token example. Don’t trust big tech.

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        8 months ago

        Maybe, but I do believe at least then being aspirationaly not evil made it a much different company. It made people try to be better both in and outside google even if at some level it was still a big corp doing big corp things.

        Whatever it is now is a boring husk of what it was and I think you can draw a line from that to those naive people and their belief in that principle trying to make awesome things and a better world.

        Maybe that’s just me looking back with rose colored glasses though.

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        Still, they completely pulled out of China to protect their users’ privacy the moment China asked for full access to their data. Google back then was completely different than today. Google today will never pull out of China and give up revenue from the most populous country in the world. In fact, I think Google will reenter chinese market the moment Chinese government let them. Out of all big tech, only Google not having any presence in China even though Android is very popular there. Google execs are probably cursing their “don’t be evil” predecessor for pulling out of China now.

      • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Unregretted Attrition. It’s basically stack ranking, where the company plans to fire a percentage of its staff every year.

      • hightrix@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Google is an advertising company. Apple is a hardware/software company. They have very different incentives from one another. Neither are my friend, but one’s entire business model runs on psychological manipulation, the other sells iPhones.

        • maniajack@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I like that even if Google does something I don’t like I can install my own launcher. Or buy a different device, apple is apple and you better be happy with what they want you to want.

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        8 months ago

        I wish Kodi had a more intuitive UI and support for Netflix, etc. We need an option powered by the people, for the people.

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    This is ridiculous. I would understand if this is subsidized devices where you pay less in exchange for having ads. You already bought the device and suddenly it got shittier. Might as well get a free, big brotherly tv with ads from Telly.

    • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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      It always has been a device that is primary subsidized by ads and selling your behavioral data.

      There is a reason why an Nvidia Shield or AppleTV costs a lot more. They’re making more from the price at the register than the ads and data sales.

      • Dempf@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        Yeah but Google started putting these home screen ads on Nvidia shield also.

        Not super up to date with that though because the second they did I switched to a custom launcher.

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        People in this thread said their Nvidia shield has ads too now. I guess costing a lot more doesn’t guarantee the device won’t be updated in the future to include ads.

        As for apple tv, is it usable in a household that’s primarily use Android? Can you cast stuff from Android apps to it? Or is it only supports airplay from apple devices?

        • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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          8 months ago

          Nvidia didn’t push the ads. Nvidia got their pound. Google is pushing the ads onto the shield.

          • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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            So, the price of the hardware is not an indication whether the device will have ads or not later down the line? Even if you spent your money on the top of the line models it’ll eventually got ads if it’s running Google TV OS?

            • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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              Correct. GoogleTV is completely owned by Google. Nvidia has no say in what google pushes to the platform. If you don’t want Ads… stay away from google/android TV.

              I own 3 shields (pre-ad-gate purchases). I was a huge advocate for it. It was a great device that did everything I wanted a tv console to do. I would not buy a new one. And will not buy a shield 2 if it has the same OS on it.

              The best you can do is stop the upgrades… or use a custom launcher. But the OS itself is going to find a way to get ads because that’s what google programmed it to do.

              It’s actually in Google’s best interest to do this anyway. Nvidia likely didn’t pay google anything to have the OS on the device. This is google’s way of extracting money out of you in this process.

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        8 months ago

        Same for cheap TVs these days btw, their home page ads are why they’re able to sell you a decent quality 85" TV for under $2k.

        On the Nvidia shield side, they’ve started adding more and more ads lately, which is completely unexcusable. Thankfully it’s not hard to use alternative launchers.

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      8 months ago

      My MCPC is a micro PC that’s at least 10 years old. It plays h.265 at 2k just fine. I’m excited to see things move back to media computers.

      • Dog@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        That’s amazing. I do have an old computer laying around, so I may be able to do that. May I ask what specs your MCPC has?

        • grayman@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          i7 (mobile processor) with the built in Intel gpu. 16G ram. 120G ssd. It’s an optiplex. They’re pretty cheap on Amazon / ebay as refurbs. I bought it for the processor. Bought and upgraded the ram and ssd separately. I just have kodi on it (on Linux Mint). Everything is stored on my synology, which has an m.2 ssd cache. My TV is only 2k, so I haven’t tried pushing any higher res stuff. I was surprised a few years ago when I started playing h.265 videos. No issues playing it at all. I didn’t upgrade the ssd at first, but noticed the box got pretty hot by the end of a movie. That upgrade dropped the temp in the box a good bit. I don’t think I’m pushing it much. It just gets warm a little and utilization remains under 50%. The box is really snappy too.

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      IDK if you’re being sarcastic, but it’s the Set-top/Ten Foot Interface version of Android that’s largely only used for Smart TVs and STBs.

        • ripcord@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          And I believe technically it’s a layer on Android TV (the thing that’s been around for a decade+), but their branding on stuff is pretty crap and inconsistent so I’m not sure

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            They keep switching the name, which does make it confusing. IIRC it was originally called Google TV back when Smart TVs became a thing (early 2010s) because I remember it being built into Sony TVs and thinking “wow this is awesome! It’s Android on a TV!”. That product eventually died because it was stupid expensive and clunky, and then they morphed it into the " layer on top of Android" like you said so other manufacturers could use it.