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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: October 16th, 2023

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  • As a person who has used both extensively:

    The Shield is better at sideloading. So if you use apps like smart tube next, or other apps like cinema HD, Bee TV to tap into torrent streaming, Kodi for its addons, or real debrid streaming, then Shield is the way to go. It’s got better support for those types of apps.

    I’m a heavy Plex user but use the Apple TV 4K (latest gen). Both are great for Plex but if you have a home theatre setup, the Shield is better because of its TrueHD capability.

    The Apple TV has a faster UI. Shield is fine but it can definitely lag in places and my Shield is prone to crashing from time to time. Mic on the Siri Remote is the best I’ve seen on a remote. The Google Assistant has never worked consistently for me.

    If you’re in the Apple ecosystem, the ATV4k has nice support for Apple AirPods which integrate very well.


  • Tangbuster@alien.topBtoApple@hardware.watchATV wifi vs LG wifi?
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    10 months ago

    It depends what you mean when you say it buffers. If it’s transcoding then one issue is that the LG TV client doesn’t support the video and it’s trying to convert on the fly. If it is, then it isn’t a bandwidth issue.

    It’s debatable whether the WiFi on the Apple TV is faster than the LG TV. But it should direct play nearly all videos, and moreso if you use Infuse player (paid app/subdcription).


  • Tangbuster@alien.topBtoApple@hardware.watchKiller ATV apps?
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    10 months ago

    TV Launcher - this is like a EPG for terrestrial TV. It’s got a great interface and you can easily customise it for the channels you want/need. It’ll open up the correct app too. Really like it for the Now and Next and TV guide features.

    Other apps I use: Infuse (I’m a heavy Plex user, this is essential for me), twitch, just watch.

    My friend also picked up a high end Samsung TV the other day. Honestly, the OS already lagged when setting it up. I was not impressed. I even owned a Samsung TV and the OS was not easy to navigate. You’re making the right choice with using the Apple TV on it.


  • Used Watchtower on my Synology for a while and it worked well. No issues in that time.

    Now I’ve moved to a Nuc and am more experienced with Docker and understand a lot more of it but by no means am a professional by any means, I would say that I wouldn’t use Watchtower. I can definitely see it messing a config up and prefer not to deal with the headache of troubleshooting something without knowing it was an auto update. If I had the time, I may tag the apps I’m happy to auto-update but for now I prefer to have the higher availability.


  • Tangbuster@alien.topBtoApple@hardware.watchBenefits of Apple TV?
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    10 months ago

    You could. But it’s not a direct replacement for the home pod. The speaker is similar to an Alexa speaker and is always on and waiting for you to say, “Hey Siri” or just “Siri”. The Apple TV does not have an always on mic. You’d have to use the remote and press it down. To be fair, I’m not sure if the remote is always listening. I assume not, I’ll check in a bit b

    If using the remote only to toggle Siri options is enough then yes you could use it as a sort of replacement.



  • Tangbuster@alien.topBtoApple@hardware.watchBenefits of Apple TV?
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    10 months ago

    Things I benefit from:

    Apple Ecosystem: easy to input text using your phone rather than on screen keyboard. One underrated feature is airpods. The spatial feature when using them is very very good.

    Speed: It’s the fastest TV box/streaming device out there. Snappy and responsive. I have a Shield and I love it but only yesterday it crashed on an app and rebooted itself.

    Codec support: I’m a heavy Plex user and via the device itself and an app called Infuse I consider it the best Plex experience regarding its UI and it flawlessly plays everything I have on my home server. Ethernet connection is also important to be, something a lot of streamer sticks tend to omit these days.

    Mic: I personally think it has a pretty decent mic and voice assistant. I’ve had experience with the Shield (google) and Fire sticks (Alexa) and I never used their mics because they could never recognise what I was trying to say. The Siri remote is fantastic. I don’t use Siri in day to day life but on the Apple TV Siri does its job well compared to others.

    It can do a lot more. It has a bit of a gaming ecosystem but you need to pair a controller for that, but that could be useful in a pinch. You can game stream to your TV with apps like Steam Link or Moonlight from your PC. The app support is pretty good, all the streaming services are well supported here.

    Negatives: If you are a home theater nut with an expensive surround sound setup, the Apple TV 4K does not support lossless surround sound. Also, you cannot sideload apps on it, or at least you cannot do so easily. Android TV wins out by a mile if sideloading is your jam. Android TV has some great sideload apps like Smart Tube Next and SoundTV as just some examples.


  • My Macbook Air M1 is almost 3 years old now. I think my Air runs fine, very well even. I’ve updated it to Sonoma, and I honestly have no issues with the speed.

    At one point, Safari seemed quite slow but I discovered that I had too many adblock extensions installed. Got rid of a few of them and Safari is a lot speedier now. Some apps are slow but they tend to be apps that haven’t been converted to support Apple Silicon yet but I’m very content with the way my Macbook Air is running.


  • From a plex perspective, there could be the chance you are transcoding. On your local network, you are probably Direct Playing on your client devices. This is seen by the dashboard on your computer’s Plex app. But normally when a remote user accesses Plex, it is likely to start a transcode. This could be due to a number of reasons but most of the time it will be because the bandwidth isn’t enough to allow Direct Play. Transcoding can give your CPU a workout, especially if you are software transcoding. You will need a Plex Pass for hardware transcoding which uses less CPU overall.


  • I’m living in the EU myself and I’m also quite weary of just downloading, but amongst friends and myself, we just use usenet and sometimes torrents with VPN and as long as we are careful, downloading generally isn’t an issue.

    Of course, that does mean you have to pay for a service first such as VPN, and maybe that’s not something you are willing to stomach. This is definitely feasible. Your method might work but involves a lot of work to get it going and anything could take out that workflow. Downloading onto your local machine is generally going to be fine.

    Look into usenet, vpn torrents and seedboxes.



  • Some of the self hosting is a bit pointless, let’s be honest, but it all depends on a case by case basis. Having an automated Plex server is 100% an improvement. Got a new mini PC this week and was messing around with it and setting things up. One was adguard home and whilst it is very good, it does feel like adblockers these days do a very good job. Since I’m in the setting up phase and rebooting the server, internet on devices will go down and I there isn’t redundancy on DNS server.

    I think most on this sub are tinkerers at heart and like getting the most out of it and seeing how low power to utility we can squeeze out of our gear or just the pure number of containers etc. I don’t think it matters if you use everything on a daily basis but it’s there when you need it whilst other services do their job just by being active.