pixxelkick

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] -2 points 2 weeks ago

I have no idea what people are fucking up tbh.

It's 2 button clicks to cast stuff, I just went and sanity checked.

The internet is full of disinformation and idiots though so I usually just assume people are the issue, when I have the same hardware and zero issues.

I don't think chromecasts have even gotten any kind of major change updates in ages so it's bizarre for it to change behavior.

I'm gonna just keep going with "people are dumb" until someone posts some concrete example (IE an actual video) of wtf their issue is.

The chromecast is designed so simply though that I can't imagine wtf people are fucking up.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

I'll just have to respectfully disagree in experience.

I have multiple gens of chromecasts and haven't seen any degradation in performance. They work pretty much the same.

I have no idea wtf is going on with your units.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I wrote it up elsewhere, but I don't mind the price point.

The built in ethernet port covers a lot of that.

A solid quality ethernet dongle is gonna be $25, so now that's $75 for the 4k CCwGTV + ethernet.

So you're paying $25 extra for the better form factor (2 chained dongles look so bad), the extra ram, better processor, etc

For some folks that might not matter, but I use Steam Link on my CCwGTV and those specs will likely make a tangible boost in gaming performance for quality, frame rate, latency, input lag, etc.

So in my demographic of people gaming with em, I 100% expect it'll be a popular upgrade.

The ethernet part is pretty big, overall. Don't overbook that.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

The built in ethernet cable seems almost worth it.

It's around $15 to $20 to add on a usb c ethernet dongle to the existing CCwGTV dongle if you want high speed connection to it (which you prolly do if you wanna stream 4k or lower latency game with Steam Link )

Better quality dongles are closer to $25 if you dont want it to crap out.

So, assuming the onboard ethernet is comparable to a higher end dongle, you'd be looking at closer to $75 to get the same experience with the Older CCwGTV model. ($50 + $25)

Add in the higher specs and the fact that chaining 2 dongles together looks ugly as fuck and easier to fail, and the +$25 remaining ($75 -> $100) is not actually too horrible of an extra price.

$100 for a better form factor (the dongle does look bad), better specs, built in ethernet, it's not terrible ngl.

I game with Steam Link all the time on my CCwGTV so I 100% am gonna spend the money on better specs so I feel like I'm taking better advantage of my 4060ti I'm Steam linking to.

If it has a better bluetooth card too that's gonna be even bigger, better wireless controller range is awesome.

That extra RAM is not something to scoff at.

The extra storage is kinda dumb though, prolly the real cash grab. I doubt anyone was maxing out their CCwGTV storage capacity o_O

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I own multiple gens of Chromecasts from gen 1 to to CCwGTV

I have no idea wtf you are talking about.

I click cast, I click the device I'm casting to, it works, never had this issue on any of my devices abd all of them are set to auto update and afaik running latest versions.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

That's literally what a chromecast is.

I have multiple generations of them, and casting a YouTube video is 2 clicks.

  1. Cast button
  2. Pick what device to cast to.

Done.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 2 weeks ago (12 children)

Why is this being framed this way.

Rebranding the next gen of your product isn't "killing" it, people are so fucking clickbaitable.

It's the same product, just next gen with better specs abd they're going with a new simpler brand name than "Chromecast with Google TV" (yes that's the actual product name before) and instead the next gen is named "Google TV Streamer"

It's the exact same thing, and all existing hardware will keep working.

Chromecasts are standalone and effectively just running a modified version of Android. They can't really be "killed" as they work over local network. Theoretically any chromecast will last forever as it's functionality is based off a specified open source protocol, so as long as you have a device that can output it (cast), you can cast to your chromecast.

So it's impossible to "kill". I have a gen 1 chromecast that still 100% works fine today.

Newer ~~Chromecasts~~ ahem Google TVs just have more features, like apps you can install and sideload.

People are dumb for falling for this clickbait title.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

killing

They're just releasing the next gen with a different name people need to stop getting clickbaited.

Newer chromecasts are just running a flavor of Android TV OS, and the new machine is the same thing but better specs.

I don't think Google can even "kill" chromecast, as all it's functionality operates over local network.

Even if my internet is down, for example, I can still stream my local apps like Plex.

The other majors apps are Netflix, YouTube, etc, so even if your chromecast stops getting OS updates that doesn't mean the individual apps will stop getting updates.

This is the equivalent to just if the new gen of your phone comes out. Doesn't mean the apps on your old phone stop getting updates 🙄

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 weeks ago

I wanna say Donald Trump, what with the random fox news voyage the rambling goes on.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 weeks ago

This one took me a second to connect the dots lol

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 weeks ago

Spamming AI generated content. Time to block.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I tried the new installer out the other day to see if it made ALVR more stable for doing Steam VR with my Quest 3...

The installer was very user friendly, and ALVR is way more stable now.

I'm pretty happy, the process to install nvidia drivers now can be done in a single one liner command, which is ideal.

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