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#17861 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#17862 | |
Blu-ray Count
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I have watched Netflix, Youtube, and Vudu, so far, and these services look really good, often excellent, even on this much larger screen. The only streaming service that has historically given me any trouble is Amazon Prime; I have yet to try them on this TV. I use the streaming apps that are installed on the TV. My 4K discs and blu-rays look awesome, which is of the most importance to me by far. I have yet to see how a DVD fares at 85", but I am confident that they will look tolerable to decent. Both of my TVs are hard wired to the internet because the wire is already in place to do so. I get the same streaming results over either a wired or a wireless network as I have said before. Last edited by Vilya; 10-02-2019 at 02:52 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | The_Donster (10-05-2019) |
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#17863 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Prime have always been crappy regardless using my Sony TV, Panasonic player and TV, Nvidia Shield.
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Thanks given by: | The_Donster (10-05-2019) |
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#17864 |
Blu-ray Count
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Many of our members have been critical of Amazon Prime streaming no matter how they stream it. I have called Amazon's so-called tech support and they just blame my ISP even though I have no issues streaming from anyone else.
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Thanks given by: | The_Donster (10-05-2019) |
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#17865 | |
Blu-ray Count
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I still have my first CD, too: Al Stewart's The Year Of The Cat. It still played fine the last time that I checked. |
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#17866 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Just received 7 catalog titles on Blu-ray and only one title, Apocalypse Now Final Cut, had a digital code. Apocalypse Now is the new UHD/4K Blu-ray release. When I scanned the QR code I was given a choice of iTunes or VUDU, there was no option for any other digital provider.
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#17867 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Yeah. I have 1 Gig connection with 600 Mbps sustained download in the worst case scenario, yet they still blame my ISP.
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#17868 | |
Power Member
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#17869 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I have no problem with Amazon Prime, but my ISP uses Century Link to tie into the Fiber Backbone, so that is a direct link to the CDN.
Last edited by alchav21; 10-02-2019 at 04:11 PM. |
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#17870 | |
Power Member
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#17871 | |
Expert Member
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Avengers: Endgame 7.56 GB - iTunes 5.88 GB - Movies Anywhere 3.71 GB - Vudu 1.38 GB - Amazon (Download Quality - Best, ~0.9GB per hour) For reference, the iTunes 720p version is 6.85 GB and SD version is 3.25 GB. I own the 4K but max resolution for download allowed by studios is 1080p afaik. I'm sure the iTunes version is 1080p and I'm assuming both MA and Vudu are also 1080p/HDX. Amazon, I have no idea what resolution they use for their downloads. Regardless of resolution, it's pretty bitrate starved. Actual average bitrate is like 1/2 of their estimate. According to the Prime Video app, Streaming Quality - Best is ~5.8GB per hour or ~13Mbps but I wouldn't be surprised if actual bitrates are well below that. On the upside, Amazon's videos are tolerable enough on an 8-10" iPad and the space savings is useful considering Apple's upcharge for storage. |
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Thanks given by: | sapiendut (10-02-2019), Wendell R. Breland (10-02-2019) |
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#17872 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Amazon uses Amazon CloudFront for Prime and other providers. You can check Amazon speed here. A more extensive test here. When finished mouse over the gray bars for a summary. Click Directory for testing other providers.
If you watch mostly during your local prime time then that is the time you should do your test because there can be substantial differences between prime time and other time periods. |
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#17873 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I'm sure you will be happy with the Hard Wire, you'll get the constant full Bandwidth and not worry about interference or loss of signal. Now you have to test out your Amazon Prime and see how that works.
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#17874 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#17875 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Wendell you're such a Genius, always trying to put people down and discredit them. I got the information about Century Link by talking to the main Tech and VP Scott of Cable Systems Nevada. I know that the Telco's started the Fiber Backbone, and it's just reasonable to believe that it ties into the CDN. I don't have any problems with any Streaming Provider including Amazon Prime. Could it be I have no problems because I'm Fiber all the way from the Streaming Server to my Home! I'll look into that trace, but I'm fairly confident that is the reason. When I have had Streaming problems, it had to do with Century Link issues.
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#17876 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If a service requires (say) 30 Mbps, it doesn’t matter whether I use wifi (measured at 200 Mbps constant) or wired (measured at 600 mbps constant). Even when there is a FULL 11 second interruption (yes, I experimented with that), there will be no degradation or hiccup on the movie. Again, yes, I cut the data flow by up to 11 seconds on my wifi, zero difference. There is something called buffer memory, y’know. |
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#17877 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#17878 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#17879 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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