View in: Desktop
Copyright @2024 TigerDroppings.com. All rights reserved.
- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Posted by
Message
Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stick
Posted by Broke on 3/5/15 at 3:52 pm00
If my internet is spotty at best and I get intermittent loss of wireless which should I look at getting. I'm confused by the specs of each and what they do.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by busbeepbeep on 3/5/15 at 3:54 pm to Broke
quote:
If my internet is spotty at best and I get intermittent loss of wireless which should I look at getting. I'm confused by the specs of each and what they do.
if your wireless is spotty, go with the Fire TV since it has an ethernet port. If you can't get an ethernet cable directly wired to it, buy a set of powerline adapters (~$30) and connect one end near router and one end by Fire Stick.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by Broke on 3/5/15 at 3:58 pm to busbeepbeep
I have Ethernet at my TV
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by LSUtigerME on 3/5/15 at 4:23 pm to Broke
I ran a new access point in my house for my Fire Stick, otherwise connection was terrible. I like it, but it can be a bit slow when loading. I assume the Fire TV would be a bit better. Streaming is fine though.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by MasCervezas on 3/5/15 at 4:26 pm to Broke
fire stick works great at my house, and I just have the U-Verse basic speed for wireless.
The amazon prime content has to buffer from time to time, but netflix works perfectly.
The amazon prime content has to buffer from time to time, but netflix works perfectly.
just got a free fire stick in the mail with my 3 month subscription to sling tv, and i was pretty bummed to open the package and find you had to plug it into the wall. i thought it went straight into the tv and was USB powered or something.
if i could do it again, i'd just get another box. broke is rich and wipes his arse with $100 bills, so the extra $40 or $50 is nothing. if i were you, i'd get the box.
if i could do it again, i'd just get another box. broke is rich and wipes his arse with $100 bills, so the extra $40 or $50 is nothing. if i were you, i'd get the box.
TD SponsorTD Fan
USA
Member since 2001
USA
Member since 2001
Thank you for supporting our sponsors Posted by Site Sponsor to Everyone
Advertisement
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by Hopeful Doc on 3/5/15 at 5:46 pm to link
quote:
i thought it went straight into the tv and was USB powered or something.
If your TV has a USB port, it's very possible that it's a powered USB port and all you need. If it's 5+ years old, you may not be so lucky and may require the wall to power it. It can definitely be powered straight from some TVs.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by LSUtigerME on 3/5/15 at 6:33 pm to Hopeful Doc
Still requires the extra connection. I also thought it was all self contained. Figured it could plug directly into USB and that was it. I was wrong.
It's not a big deal for me, but definitely an extra wire/plug I didn't expect. If you have the space for it, the box is probably better.
It's not a big deal for me, but definitely an extra wire/plug I didn't expect. If you have the space for it, the box is probably better.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by Hopeful Doc on 3/5/15 at 7:27 pm to LSUtigerME
quote:
Still requires the extra connection. I also thought it was all self contained. Figured it could plug directly into USB and that was it. I was wrong.
Are you. Saying that it plugged into a USB port and provided picture while being self powered and that was it? Or, in other words, you did not realize it was actually an HDMI stick that requires power over micro USB that terminates in a full-sized USB plug that can go into a USB port on the TV or wall adapter?
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by jennyjones on 3/5/15 at 10:29 pm to Broke
quote:
I have Ethernet at my TV
I would probably go with a box then. I originally bought 2 of the fire sticks at the prelaunch price ($19), but ended up giving 1 as a Christmas gift and selling the other 1. I found that the stick had weak WiFi reception (compared to other devices) and had to be rebooted (unplugged) from time to time to reset the WiFi connection (even though my stick was only 2 ft from my router)
Now I have 2 fire TV boxes that are hard wired with Ethernet and never have issues. I also needed an optical audio output for 1 of my receivers., if you are planning to run kodi/ xbmc, the extra processing power & ram doesn't hurt
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by NEMizzou on 3/6/15 at 8:58 am to jennyjones
I can't speak to the Fire stick but we have the fire box and it is awesome. Besides the ethernet port, it also comes with the voice search, which works really well and I believe a bit faster processor and/or more storage space. We use ours on a daily basis and wouldn't give it up for anything.
re: Amazon Fire TV vs Fire stickPosted by TheCaterpillar on 3/6/15 at 9:45 am to NEMizzou
I came to this board to start this exact thread. I thought I was getting the stick, but this thread has me worried.
It will go on a TV where I have Apple TV currently and that works just fine. I want to move the Apple TV to another room so I can play Spotify through Fire Stick on my main TV's sound system.
It will go on a TV where I have Apple TV currently and that works just fine. I want to move the Apple TV to another room so I can play Spotify through Fire Stick on my main TV's sound system.
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News