okay I wander into this thread every few months and try to figure out how to properly ask a question to see if what I want is possible. I'm about to try again: What I want is to be able to do without cable or satellite altogether; I want to be able to put anything I can see on the computer (or tablet, whatever), whether streaming service or local station website or...alternative outlets... on the TV screen, be able to watch different things on the two different TVs if we choose and to not have to go to elaborate means to "flip channels" Is such a situation yet possible?
Connect the computer (or tablet) to a large screen monitor. times 2. If you want everything you get on the computer or tablet on a TV, that's the only way. Otherwise there are multiple inexpensive solutions that allow streaming content to TVs. They don't have web browsers (some might) or Office applications. Most legitimate streams you watch on your computer have an equivalent channel you can stream on a Roku or Firestick (or FireTV). 10mbps or faster internet connection required for HD.
so....will a flat panel TV accept input from a tablet like a monitor? or do i need an actual computer monitor? Because getting a basic tablet and hooking it to me TV would be pretty direct (assuming I could work out the wifi aspect - or would it need to be hard wired? - if that would work you could at least have as much convenience as you'd have playing a DVD.
It depends upon the tablet. If you have some flavor of iPad, you'd need a Lightning to HDMI cable, or an Apple TV. If it's Android tablet, then you've got a couple of options. If it has a mini-HDMI port (not all of them do), then you'd need a mini-HDMI to HDMI cable. If it doesn't have the mini-HDMI port (or a full-size HDMI port), all is not lost. You can get a Chromecast, plug that into your TV, and stream, via WiFi from your tablet to the TV. A Roku or an Amazon Fire Stick and stream that way. As for the stuff you want to watch, that depends upon the programs and network. For some things, you can get them via a streaming service like Hulu, others you can get via a specialized streaming service for a particular channel (HBO Now, CBS All Access, etc.). You can also buy episodes/seasons from services like Amazon and Apple (though anything bought from Apple can only be played on an Apple TV, iPad, iPhone, or iTunes). If you're a sportsball fan, you can often buy a season pass to watch games (though they may be subjected to blackouts in your area), or you can get a Sling TV subscription which includes ESPN. My personal recommendation is to get a Roku. It has more channels available than the Apple TV does, and it has all the major streaming services. It also has a plethora of other channels on just about any subject you can think of. Most of which are free (or are only a couple of bucks per month). I have over 700 channels on my Roku, and I've never had trouble finding a channel focused on something I'm interested in.
For those wanting to know how they can record over the air TV signals these days, I just found this article.
so, let me walk through this for my slow-witted (on tech) self: Assuming the tablet has no HDMI port of any sort.... I have an ordinary Android Tablet and an ordinary flat-panel "dumb" TV With these I can get a Chromcast and stream via wifi to my TV any video which is playing on the laptop, be it Netflix, Youtube, a local stations evening newscast from their website, or a torrent of, say, The Tick. The reason I ask here is that while I currently pay for Netflix, Hulu, Crunchyroll (my sons) and have had APrime in the past....I literally cannot afford 23 different streaming services because any give one might have one show I want to see (*cough*StarTrek*cough*) - I watch a lot of such shows on alternative sources now, but that means I'm watching alone and the point is to be able to share programs we both/all like with other members of my family. The reason I haven't gone with Roku is that it doesn't solve how to watch shows on a streaming service that you don't subscribe to (does it?).
If it's playing in the Chrome web browser, then yes, you should be able to do that. There might be some content which prohibits you from doing that, but not much. There's probably a way to get content you've downloaded to the TV via a Chromecast, but I'm not sure what it would be. Not directly, no. What you would need to do, if you were going to use a Roku, is to install Plex software on your PC (or tablet), and then install the Plex channel on the Roku. This would allow you to stream the stuff from your PC to the TV that you've downloaded from wherever.. It can be complicated to set up, but once you get it set up, it works just fine. If your PC has an HDMI port, you can plug it into the TV and do that, as well.
well the alternative stuff I watch is just streamed, I don't actually save any of it to my machine so that's not a factor
Purely anecdotal: we moved a year ago and Comcast offered 75Mbps service for $50/mo as an introductory offer. FF one year later and the service goes up to $85/mo. We pressured them to do better, the only thing they would do is another introductory offer including cable TV, HBO, and Showtime for $50 a month and 75Mbps service. Sometimes more is less. Not wanting to go through the renegotiation follies every year we opted for 25Mbps service at $65/mo. This is with our own modem and router. I hope competition comes to the masses soon. AT&T only offers 5Mbps service via the twisted pair phone line (that we don't have). The drop from 75 to 25Mbps is only noticeable on some websites that have lots of graphics. These may take half a second longer to download. No impact to streaming. It does take 3 times longer for large downloads to process, but I rarely do these (once in the last month with a new laptop that had to update itself).
Just found out about this app, which keeps track of shows you want to see that are airing on broadcast TV. This site covers broadcast and streaming, though is of questionable legality. As is this site, which handles movies.
Which is why all the content producers (Disney, CBS, BBC, yadda yadda yadda) want their own streaming services. So that it can work like cable television, and be an overpriced pile of shit where you pay for tons of stuff you don't want just to get the one or two things you do.
This deserves reposting: Autoplay trailers are now optional. That’s it. That’s the news. The short but horrible tyranny of autoplay previews are at an end. Here, do this now: Click Manage Profiles Choose your profile Untick “Autoplay previews while browsing on all devices. Now live, damnit! Live! Scroll free, friends. I was just looking for a way to do this last week.
This is a really interesting-sounding service, if pricey. One of the things that it does (and it does a lot of stuff) is if you've got a media server with video files on it, you can create your own "channels." Say, you've got every episode of every series of Star Trek on your server. You can create a channel, that when you launch it, you get a TOS episode. You can even program it to go in a specific order, or randomly select one, you can even pre-set where it starts in the episode, so it's like the old-fashioned experience of flipping channels. It's also got Slingbox-like capabilities.
Stream over 15 new linear channels, including local news from ABC Owned Television Stations, on The Roku Channel
Out of curiosity, anyone have a Plex server set up?preferably one with Prodigy in it? @Amaris I figure you'd probably know the most about this sort of thing.
I do, yes. It's very easy to setup, all you need is Plex on your PC, your media files, and a smart TV or Roku box/Fire stick with Plex on it.
Yep. I use a dedicated micro PC that always runs cool and silent. Stays on 24/7 (barring power outages).