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Sun City Palm Desert Residents

Home Automation Planning

“Home automation” refers to the automatic and electronic control of household features, activity, and appliances. In simple terms, it means you can easily control the utilities and features of your home via the Internet to make life more convenient.

Posts


    Home entertainment technology and how to get the most bang for the buck
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    @Joe said in Home entertainment technology and how to get the most bang for the buck:

    @mschwartz I agree with your post, I was just offering a couple of different options, both for hardware and software options for watching tv. Wasn't trying to take away anything from what you said.

    I was very glad to see your post as like you said, Spectrum DVR is junk. A few other options out there for those that want something different.

    We decommissioned our TiVos and went with the Apple TVs.

    The cable card requires another ugly set top box…

    As far as bandwidth goes, people may think it really just takes 3-5 minutes to upload a photo they just took with their phone so they can include it in email or post it to messages. Just because people don’t know what they’re missing doesn’t mean that 20mbit up is good for most people.

    I suspect that most people take photos with their phones.


  • Home entertainment technology and how to get the most bang for the buck
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    @Joe the whole point of my post was to explain how you can ditch the DVRs entirely and use the Spectrum App on smart TV or Apple TV or other streaming box. Whatever you record on the DVR is almost surely available through video on demand in the app.

    I am truly surprised that Spectrum hasn’t upgraded the set top boxes they use. The ones they use are made by Arris, and are the same ones I had in San Diego in 2008.

    If they have upgraded the boxes, they are giving us the old used ones because we pay so little for the services than non bulk customers do.


  • Home entertainment technology and how to get the most bang for the buck
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    @Videoguy I wasn’t speaking to storage, but the number of tuners. If you have 3 tuners, you can watch 1 program while recording 2 at the same time.


  • Home entertainment technology and how to get the most bang for the buck
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    We SCPD residents get Spectrum cable for Internet and TV. The equipment Spectrum uses is mediocre at best and outright terrible if you know anything about it. They give us 2x DVRs because one of them is insufficient to record a couple of shows and let you watch a third. It really is terrible. Plus you have these big ugly boxes on your TV stand(s).

    Well, it turns out that you don't need these DVRs to watch Spectrum TV. They have an app you can use on most smart TVs, Apple TV, Amazon Fire stick, and other streaming devices. You can watch live TV using the app and you can watch shows you would record with a DVR with their Video On Demand in the app. So you can ditch those DVRs.

    I recommend Apple TV. It simply is the best streaming device made - its menus are gorgeous and everything works very fast because it has a fast computer processor in it. It also supports the best in advanced video and audio capabilities offered by streaming services and 4K DVDs.

    You will want to create an account at spectrum.com. You can use this username and password to sign in to many apps you can download for the Apple TV because we get some streaming services for FREE because of what we get with Spectrum.

    For example, we get MAX for free, instead of having to pay $16.99 /month for it like everyone else does. But you have to sign into max using your TV Provider, which is Spectrum. And for that you need an account with Spectrum.

    We also get access to any app that we have a channel for with our Spectrum HOA subscription - like ESPN and CNN and CNBC and others.

    VIDEO

    The TV you have matters if you want near theater (or better than theater) experience. You will want a BIG screen if you want 4K programming (which is gorgeous). The smaller the TV, the closer you have to sit to the screen to get the benefit of 4K. For example, for a 55" TV the recommended maximum distance from where you sit to watch to the screen is 7.7 feet. For a 65" the maximum distance is 9 feet. A 70" TV has about a 10 foot maximum recommended distance.

    We have a 77" 4K TV and sit about 6 feet from it. Watching movies is an immersive experience.

    My preference for brand of TV is Sony. They say you "pay the Sony tax" for the TV, but their software and hardware combination is as good as it gets. At the low end, Vizio is a "cheap" brand, but makes some fantastic quality screens.

    AUDIO

    For the longest time, we were stuck with low resolution picture tube TVs. Even with cable, programming was designed for this format. But while the state of the art in picture quality was stagnant for 30+ years (1960s through about 2000), the quality of audio vastly improved.

    You may have heard of Dolby Labs (or just "Dolby"). What they have done over these years is provide TV programmers with better and better quality sound. Originally, we had a tinny sounding speaker on the TV but Dolby came up with stereo and ways to encode 5 channels of sound on a stereo signal (compatible with stereo players and with 5 channel players).

    What do these channels get you?

    With stereo, two people talking on screen, the person on the left's voice comes out the left speaker and the person on the right's voice comes out the right speaker. With 5 channel sound, you have 2 surround speakers to your left and right and front left/middle/right speakers. A race car sound might come from the rear right to the front right to the middle to the left as it passes by on the screen. It's exactly what you'd hear in a theater.

    Today with streaming services and 4K DVD, they can provide 7 channel sound (add two more surround speakers behind you) to make the sound "stage" 360 degrees around you.

    All audio formats, from stereo to the 5 and 7 channel surround formats also allow you to add a subwoofer to significantly enhance the low end or bass sounds. An explosion in the movie will have a much richer sound with the subwoofer.

    If you see 5.1 or 7.1 or 2.1 as the audio format, it means 5 channels plus subwoofer, or 7 channels plus subwoofer. You will see these numbers while browsing movies to watch on Netflix or MAX or whatever services you subscribe to.

    Stereo, 5 channel, and 7 channel sound are mixed by a recording engineer. He'll record the sound track so the race car's volume decreases in the rear right and increases in the front right as it passes by on your right, etc.

    The ultimate audio today is ATMOS. Rather than clever mixing to make the sound surround you (SURROUND SOUND after all!), the engineer places objects, like a helicopter, in 3D space and as it moves in 3D space, the audio equipment decides the volume per speaker and which speakers the sound comes from. It's far more accurate.

    ATMOS allows for as few as 5 speakers and up to 13 or more speakers. The idea is that the sound system is fed the 3D information about the helicopter and uses the 5 or 13 or 7 or whatever number of speakers you have to best present the sound.

    What's particularly exciting about ATMOS is that it provides for more than a 360 degrees around you (SURROUND) sound stage. If add speakers in the ceiling, those will be used to provide "height" to the sound stage. You will hear rain and thunder from the ceiling speakers, the helicopter from the ceiling speakers, and so on.

    The quality of the sound system you want is up to you. A sound bar and 2 rear surround speakers and a subwoofer is going to be really good sound. You will enjoy it.

    Dolby's WWW site has diagrams for how to set up speakers for the various formats. For example, here's how they recommend you set up 7.1 speakers:

    7.1 Virtual Speaker Setup

    Set up your home theater with 7.1 virtual speakers enabled with Dolby Atmos using our PDF and guide for optimal sound. Experience your entertainment in Dolby.

    favicon

    (www.dolby.com)

    fa1466ec-b990-4344-bfe9-6beb8d857034-2024-09-04 at 3.38 PM.png

    If you have any questions or want my advice, feel free to ask here.


  • Net neutrality
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    To please socialists?


  • Net neutrality
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    FCC reinstates net neutrality, FCC Commissioner Carr slams move

    The FCC voted to reinstate net neutrality rules that allow the agency to regulate broadband internet as a telecommunications service over the objections of Commissioner Brendan Carr.

    favicon

    Fox Business (www.foxbusiness.com)

    I built and ran one of the first commercial internet service providers in 1994. I have a deep understanding of how the internet works, especially on the network level.

    The net neutrality rules are BS and not needed. The internet already has fast lanes for data in a few ways, and it’s necessary.

    Google, for example, spends vast sums of money to build server locations all over the world so access to their sites (Google, YouTube, etc). The bandwidth is termed “premium” bandwidth.

    There are many companies that offer similar service to anyone willing to pay.

    Some of these services are free, even. I could have put this site on such a service but it’s not needed for the kind of traffic that is being generated.

    The network protocols include a QoS (quality of service) so video and audio streams get priority over email, web browsing, file downloads, and so on. If they disable QoS as net neutrality requires, then your tv shows, movies, music, and podcasts that are streamed will stutter and stop periodically so someone else can download a big file in 58 seconds instead of 60.

    Sorry if you don’t like Fox News. The article is what counts. I’m not a fan of Fox News myself.

    What’s key is what Commissioner Carr and others are saying. They’re correct.

    Last time we had this net neutrality debate, the claims were that the internet as we know it would end. Instead, when net neutrality rules were tabled, the internet got better in the ways we all care about.

    Netflix streams perfectly fine over our Spectrum and Frontier connections. The HOA deals are incredibly inexpensive for what we get. Without an HOA deal, I get gigabit speeds for about $50 from Frontier (the best connection is fiber, not cable).

    Companies like AT&T and Charter (Spectrum) and Frontier and T-Mobile are investing heavily into infrastructure- 5G and fiber - at impressive growth.

    The only thing that matters to consumers are data caps. Fortunately for us, I don’t think there are data caps for our home connections. The data caps for 5G are generous enough, but they are going to force those who use/abuse the bandwidth to pay a little more. Cox Cable has a data cap for cable internet, which is bad policy.

    I don’t see what the net neutrality rules are supposed to fix. It’s bullshit. It’s supposed to make voters feel better that the government has control or something. It’s like a scam intended to take advantage of seniors.

    Peace!


  • Tri Palm Estates needs our help
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    Laurie Hirth over at Tri Palm Estates Country Club asked me to send this out to the group. Tri Palm is still trying to recover from Hurricane Hillary and signing the petition online would benefit the golf course we are playing on, as well as the Tri Palm community. We are all qualified to sign as we live within the surrounding sphere influenced.

    Go to https://chng.it/jtK9SfWZNH


  • Spectrum features, clubhouse news
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    @cc said in Spectrum features, clubhouse news:

    @mschwartz Hi, Mike.... I have the MySpectrum app, but don't see anything about a "wifi profile". Can you tell me how a obtain that?
    Thanks,
    Cherryl

    Ignore the bit about free trial. Start with the “To automatically connect…” part.

    77b58713-fe47-4335-a5f4-86fcf106366c-image.png

    https://www.spectrum.com/internet/wifi-access-points#:~:text=To automatically connect and get,prompts to complete the installation.


  • Spectrum features, clubhouse news
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    @komcgov said in Spectrum features, clubhouse news:

    @mschwartz...another poor board decision IMO.

    I was against it at the time. I was looking at Nextdoor posts a few days ago that I made back then.

    I sent an email to the guy running the committee making the decision, and was ignored.

    Count me as another domain expert whose opinion is ignored.


  • Spectrum features, clubhouse news
  • mschwartzM Mike Schwartz

    If you read the fine print, Spectrum offers speeds up to whatever speeds you are paying for.

    Spectrum and Frontier bid against each other for the bulk contract. Spectrum paid like $2m while frontier offered $1.8m. This is a kickback, but typical of service providers contracts. The numbers are roughly accurate.

    The big thing about Spectrum is that they have the Dodgers games on their cable TV. I can appreciate that in SoCal we have a lot of residents who are Dodgers fans.

    Also, Frontier went through bankruptcy and the board used that as an excuse to change the bulk contract.

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