So I droped my Cisco Meraki 300N Wifi and I got a TPLink Archer C7 C1750 (so it meens 900 Mb theorical on AC 5 Ghz) So I search again and discovered that the Onboard wifi was 5 Ghz AC compatible. 1 week later I got a person with no knowledge whatever who told me that I needed to run a speedtest because it was my internet (WAN) connection that was slow. So I wrote you a mail Sony, to explain that to you. To confirm that it was not decoding problem, I putted the file on an external HDD plugged directly into the TV and had no problem at all. Let's do some math : Movie 2h00 / 63 GB = 64512MB to send to TV in 2 Hr so / 7200 = 9 Mb /s we are pretty close of the max we can output on 100mb network so as the bitrate is variable and some actions scene require much more of it you get bad picture lag and audio drop in half of the movie. Sony are you kidding me ? How do you plan to stream 4K HDR content to the TV with 100 Mb link ? So as I use the TV ONLY with network stored media, I plugged the Ethernet cable to get something reliable and fast. The main reason I chose Sony was for Android TV (I didn't wanted WebOS or Tizen). I just bought this TV with a pretty great discount (2000€) and picture quality is very good.įor Android TV, I find it stable and fine. Link = data.Just a new thread to tell you guys how I am disappointed (sort of) with my new Android TV from Sony KD65XD9305. Parin2pos=$((parin2 % parin1len)) #position modĬhar=$".format(channel,YOUR_API_KEY) # Modified for use with SONY remote by glenzac #echo "out" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio20/direction #echo "out" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio21/direction #using GPIO makes it mandatory to use sudo in calls #- use to access GPIO and set status LEDs. My issue was identical to the one someone posted on reddit – as shown below: YouTube-dl to extract the videofile’s link and omxplayer is the inbuilt commandline video player in Raspberry Pi OS. Most tutorials on the internet refer to using youtube-dl and omxplayer. Using external players is the best way to go about achieving hardware acceleration for YouTube videos. This is mostly because the in-browser process is not hardware accelerated by the GPU. Though, I don’t think it’s not going to throw up heating issues once continuous HD playback happens. The latest lite package was just perfect.Ĭhromium browser came pre-installed and YouTube videos worked fine in it. (This is one thing I always hated about Raspberry Pi OS – filled with bloatware that one had to manually remove later). The next obvious choice was using the latest Raspberry Pi OS Buster with just the barebones desktop and no recommended software. I’m not sure if the substandard performance was because the latest Firefox didn’t run well on Ubuntu, anyways having more than 5 tabs open literally made the RPi crawl. In just a day, I was convinced that Ubuntu Mate was sluggish and had too many unnecessary applications preinstalled. Additionally, I’d read about Ubuntu Mate playing YouTube better than Raspberry Pi OS and without heating up in some forums. I’ve always used Raspberry Pi OS and the UI was too old school for a media centre. I had no intentions of switching to LibreELEC as it too was only a lighter version of kodi. It took me two days to go through all the kodi osmc forums and try out different solutions. Videos only played for 2 seconds and kept on buffering. Next time I decided to reboot and then when I opened the addon it was asking me to signin again, but the other options like ‘My Recommendations’ and locations based videos were all visible. I logged into my Google console and got all the API keys and fully signed in and also completed the 2 step device registration. Then I followed an online guide and installed the YouTube addon.
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