#340721 - 05/01/2011 20:25
Korean thieves strike again
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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#340729 - 05/01/2011 22:35
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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pooh-bah
Registered: 15/01/2002
Posts: 1866
Loc: Austin
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#340745 - 06/01/2011 15:29
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 13/02/2002
Posts: 3212
Loc: Portland, OR
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I guess we'll know for sure if Samsung really stole the design, when we start getting reports that the remote only works if you're holding it the right way.
Edited by canuckInOR (06/01/2011 15:30) Edit Reason: cut out image re-post
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#340746 - 06/01/2011 15:55
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: canuckInOR]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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I guess we'll know for sure if Samsung really stole the design, when we start getting reports that the remote only works if you're holding it the right way. Ba dum tish!
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#340747 - 06/01/2011 15:57
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: canuckInOR]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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I'm surprised they didn't give it one of their "Keeping it Real Fake" labels. Perhaps because it's not a phone, otherwise it would be a definite "KIRF," as they call things like these.
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Matt
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#340770 - 06/01/2011 22:23
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 23/09/2000
Posts: 3608
Loc: Minnetonka, MN
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I really want hard buttons on a TV remote.
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Matt
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#340784 - 07/01/2011 00:45
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: msaeger]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 17/12/2000
Posts: 2665
Loc: Manteca, California
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I really want hard buttons on a TV remote. Hard buttons arranged to be selected by touch! One of the best remotes I had, was for a 9" bedside television was kind of ugly. The buttons were on a rectangular array, but with enough gaps and missing buttons that I just knew by touch were it was my thumb had landed. It was super easy to operate without looking at it.
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Glenn
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#340786 - 07/01/2011 00:52
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: gbeer]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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One of the best remotes I had, was for a 9" bedside television was kind of ugly. The buttons were on a rectangular array, but with enough gaps and missing buttons that I just knew by touch were it was my thumb had landed.
It was super easy to operate without looking at it. My vote goes to the TiVo peanut remote.
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#340787 - 07/01/2011 00:57
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tman]
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veteran
Registered: 21/03/2002
Posts: 1424
Loc: MA but Irish born
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My vote goes to the TiVo peanut remote. Ditto. Our Tivo died last year, but we still use it's remote for on/off, volume and switching inputs over the TV's remote or the also compatible DVD remote which are both Sonys.
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#340806 - 07/01/2011 03:25
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tman]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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My vote goes to the TiVo peanut remote. Clearly, I'm in full agreement (and now, specifically, the Slide). My first big-time universal remote was the Philips Pronto TSU1000. It had only 7 hard buttons (channel and volume up/down, mute, and two additional buttons). That just wasn't enough for me, so I upgraded to the TSU3500, which has the channel and volume sets and mute, but instead of the two additional buttons has a d-pad surrounded by four buttons, effectively adding six buttons to the face. That has been a big difference, although I still tend to use the Pronto primarily to turn things on/off and switch inputs. Tivo peanut FTW!
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Matt
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#340813 - 07/01/2011 10:25
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: gbeer]
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veteran
Registered: 25/04/2000
Posts: 1525
Loc: Arizona
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It was super easy to operate without looking at it. Our first remote was huge (bigger than the Harmony 8xx that I have). It had three buttons, volume down (all the way down to turn off), volume up (turns on the tv also), and channel (only advanced the channels up). It was impossible to not know what button you were getting ready to hit and could double as a home defense weapon (weighed a ton).
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#340819 - 07/01/2011 13:58
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: Tim]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 27/06/1999
Posts: 7058
Loc: Pittsburgh, PA
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This is probably a good place to ask a question that's been bugging me for a while, which is: why do there seem to be so few players (and so few options) in the universal remote market?
I know a lot of people will use whatever universal came with their cable box, or are fine swapping between their multiple remotes and don't even consider the idea that they might want a universal. But, looking at the stuff coming out of CES every year, I see a whole lot of devices people want to sell me, but very few options for controlling them. The Logitech Harmony series has, what, three current models? Four? Then there are some offerings from URC, some lower-end models from One-for-All, then... what? In the medium-to-high end, there isn't nearly the variety I would expect.
I can't imagine even the highest-end remotes cost more than a few bucks to produce, yet some of them sell for hundreds of dollars. Surely there's some cost to develop the hardware and firmware, and test out the remotes with various devices, but I find it odd that there isn't more variety, and therefore more competition on price and features. Anyone have any insight into this?
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#340821 - 07/01/2011 14:07
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tonyc]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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There are a lot of players in that mid section as well as the high end section. Just that most of them don't have the distribution that would enable you to know about them as readily. Take a look at Remote Central sometime for some of the more obscure brands. Cost of developing a remote can't be measured only by the bill of materials. There's a ton of research and development and in some cases licensing costs that go into producing such a product. In the case of Harmony there are also ongoing costs for the servers that power their back end, which by now, I'm sure are pretty robust, even if their software stinks. BTW, Logitech bought Harmony for about $21 million USD back in 2004. On the expectation that they would grow the business to over $50 Million per year. They have the distribution to make that happen and as history shows us, they came in and dominated the universal market. This past year Philips pulled their Pronto line out of the market so that's one less player. My current remote, URC's MX-980 carries a list price over $600. I would venture to guess its BOM is probably under $50. But it also ships with software which has to be developed and maintained. It's also a dealer-centric product so it naturally carries a higher price than a consumer-oriented affair. I worked on this "problem" for a couple of years so I have all kinds of insight and IP tied up around it. I still think there's a play to be made, but I'll have to see how a number of other things pan out in my life.
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#340823 - 07/01/2011 14:33
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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After reading the coverage of the Samsung CES keynote, I'm even more confused by this device. They showed a guy using the touchscreen to scroll through his twitter feed on the TV screen. The commenter had the question "Why not just read twitter on the device your holding, instead of shrinking your TV viewing experience to fit it up there?"
I could see it being useful in a similar way that the Remote app is on an iPhone, used for selecting music playing through the AirPlay speakers and other similar use cases. Just seems odd to get rid of all physical buttons though for a TV remote, including the basic volume up and down buttons.
Oh, and "Zoll's back!"
Edited by drakino (07/01/2011 16:42)
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#340836 - 07/01/2011 19:45
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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This past year Philips pulled their Pronto line out of the market so that's one less player. Holy cow! How did I miss that one? Damn, that makes me sad. They made really nice remotes. Unfortunately I could only aspire to own the fancier models, and only picked up used ebay cast-offs, but I like them a lot! Thanks for bumming me out, Bruno!
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Matt
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#340837 - 07/01/2011 19:56
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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After reading the coverage of the Samsung CES keynote, I'm even more confused by this device. They showed a guy using the touchscreen to scroll through his twitter feed on the TV screen. The commenter had the question "Why not just read twitter on the device your holding, instead of shrinking your TV viewing experience to fit it up there?" Apple should just put some kind of IR learning/transmit ability into the next iPod touch and iPad and market it as an AV remote along with the existing abilities. It wouldn't have the physical buttons though which would be a downside. I wonder if anybody has made a thin jacket or iPhone 4 style bumper with buttons and IR for the iPod touch. I know you can get docks which you pair with the iOS device which handles the IR transmission itself but having it as part of the remote would be nice. [edit] IR case exists but no buttons[/edit]
Edited by tman (07/01/2011 20:02)
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#340839 - 07/01/2011 20:17
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tman]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14493
Loc: Canada
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There are sites selling a simple/tiny plug-in gizmo that allows the iWhatevers to become universal remotes. The one I saw looked like a simple headphone plug with an IR LED grafted to the end of it. Probably completely passive, just driven by the iWhatever's serial port or audio-out or something.
Cheers
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#340840 - 07/01/2011 20:24
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: mlord]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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There are a number of products that let the idevices do remote control duties. I hope to have something this year as well, but I'm currently working toward some other ideas first. Even though the idevice-capable idea is the oldest of the things I'm working on (dates back to 2004).
Some of the new tech in BT and WiFi finalizing this year are really exciting for such hardware design.
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#340841 - 07/01/2011 20:32
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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Yeah. I've used some of those IR dongles which connected to the headphone socket on old PDAs. I was just wondering if somebody managed to add some hard buttons to an iOS device.
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#340845 - 07/01/2011 20:57
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 13/07/2000
Posts: 4180
Loc: Cambridge, England
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The surprising thing isn't that these things are becoming rarer, it's that they ever existed. It's an unbelievable aberration that everyone involved can justly be deeply embarrassed about, and it's inevitable that they will all disappear as the consumer AV market matures, and by "matures" I mean "gets past the stage where Harmony and Pronto have to change their nappies for them".
HDMI CEC is nail #1 in their coffin, but even CEC is a bit half-assed (13 ASCII characters of OSD? So desu ne, tovarisch?) and it has been for a long time not rocket science to do it properly (UPnP, for example).
Peter
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#340846 - 07/01/2011 21:08
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: peter]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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I don't see the market for universal remotes going anywhere but up in the next 5 years.
It's been growing for the past 10 years and for the past 5 has really rocketed. The reason you may think you see less products is because Harmony has taken a huge percentage of the market.
I don't see CEC changing the way most people have their equipment controlled over the next 5 years. While devices are proliferating, the implementation just doesn't have enough traction yet to even register as a blip on the consumer landscape.
There's also always (foreseeable future, up to 10 years for this comment) going to be a market for an aftermarket or premium remote handset. Both in the retail and custom install channels. It's simply not practical to have HDMI linking absolutely everything together. Especially for esoteric things like lighting.
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#340847 - 07/01/2011 21:30
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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The only thing that constantly bugs me about home theater devices and remotes is the lack of discrete codes. It really doesn't make any sense to me that companies don't supply their customers with something so simple yet so important. The ability to know, absolutely, that you're sending a command to turn your device on or off is such a big deal, and the only way that I have full confidence that anyone other than me can operate my home theater.
All it takes is simply putting two power buttons on a device's remote instead of one. These companies should know that the remote is probably going to go into a drawer anyway, and even if it doesn't, what's one more button on some of these already cluttered remotes?
The reason this issue gets to me so much is that if the industry were more supportive of discrete codes, there would be absolutely no need for any of these fancy universal remotes. I have done universal remote programming for several clients now, and when I leave they have a remote that lets them turn their system on and to any input with a single button (for each input, of course), and a single button to turn the system off. If the original remotes had discrete buttons for everything I needed, the process would be far simpler. Instead, I have to use my older Pronto in an elaborate series of programming, sometimes needed to get/convert hex codes for certain devices.
Thankfully, it seems that we're getting there. My new receiver has discrete buttons on the included remote for all the basics, and I was able to reprogram my Pronto without even needing my computer.
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Matt
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#340848 - 07/01/2011 21:40
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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IMO, as long as discrete codes exist that's all that's needed. It's not necessary to clutter a pack-in remote with buttons for those codes. Most people who set up a universal remote aren't learning codes from an original remote. IMO, every device should have both toggle and discrete codes. I dislike it when a toggle is missing. Lucky for me, with URC's software I can actually make my own toggle commands. The big issue is that a lot of manufacturers don't include discrete code support in the product at all, forget about their remote. That's a nice indicator of why I don't think CEC is going to be the silver bullet. Most manufacturers just don't try hard enough to integrate their own solutions, let alone play nice with products from other companies.
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#340849 - 07/01/2011 21:41
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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All it takes is simply putting two power buttons on a device's remote instead of one. Eww. No. If you want discrete codes then just make the device support it and the end user works it out from the IR data or document it somewhere. The proper way to do it is via correctly made data strings you enter and not a learnt IR code as learnt codes generally won't do the repeating and length of code properly. Having extra buttons is just a kludge which will affect everybody who doesn't have a universal remote which is actually quite a lot of people. Maybe make the long press code do it or something like that.
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#340850 - 07/01/2011 21:58
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tman]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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IR code as learnt codes generally won't do the repeating and length of code properly. To be fair, quality remotes don't just learn a raw signal. They take in the raw signal and then decode it to identify the protocol, device and command details so then it can be recreated programmatically, with the correct parameters, including repeat pattern and length. But yeah, cheap remotes just learn a sequence, which is definitely not the same thing. This usually works fine for most buttons as they won't need to repeat.
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#340851 - 07/01/2011 22:06
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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All it takes is simply putting two power buttons on a device's remote instead of one. Eww. No. If you want discrete codes then just make the device support it and the end user works it out from the IR data or document it somewhere. The proper way to do it is via correctly made data strings you enter and not a learnt IR code as learnt codes generally won't do the repeating and length of code properly. Having extra buttons is just a kludge which will affect everybody who doesn't have a universal remote which is actually quite a lot of people. Maybe make the long press code do it or something like that. Sorry, but your solutions sound a lot more kludgey than my suggestion of adding a single freaking button. Does this remote really look more cluttered than every other receiver remote out there? Sorry, but no manufacturer is going to do the things you suggested, so they might as well give me the button. IMO, as long as discrete codes exist that's all that's needed. I would agree with you if it weren't next to impossible to get the codes even when they do exist. Example: most of Sony's devices have discrete codes. I think that's great, but it took me a great deal of research to figure out how to find them, then a while to figure out how to use them. The process ended up being something that only a total remote control nerd like me would be able to figure out. If you simply add a "power off" button to a device's remote, I think anyone with a little patience and a remote control manual in front of them could figure it out. The thing I left out of my diatribe was the cost: the remote I leave with my clients costs $25. That's compared to over $100 for a Harmony, or FAR more for most of these remotes. I'm certain that one of my clients could program this remote if all their devices' remotes had at least discrete power buttons on them, and if the receiver has discrete input buttons (which is at least a little more common). I find it funny when you say that you don't like how cluttered the remote might look with an extra button. To me, the lack of that button means you're less likely to use a universal remote at all, which means you're likely to have remotes for all your devices on your coffee table. That seems far more cluttered to me, and adds dozens of extra buttons
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Matt
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#340852 - 07/01/2011 22:11
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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Sorry, but no manufacturer is going to do the things you suggested, so they might as well give me the button. Manufacturers already do what I suggested. Discrete codes exist for devices which don't have a discrete on and off button on the remote. Having an extra button is a kludge. I would agree with you if it weren't next to impossible to get the codes even when they do exist. I thought you just said that no manufacturer is going to do what I suggested? If you're using a universal remote and have special profiles designed then I'd class you as an advanced user or have an advanced integrator that did it for you.
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#340853 - 07/01/2011 22:15
Re: Korean thieves strike again
[Re: tman]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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Sorry, but no manufacturer is going to do the things you suggested, so they might as well give me the button. Manufacturers already do what I suggested. Discrete codes exist for devices which don't have a discrete on and off button on the remote. Having an extra button is a kludge. I would agree with you if it weren't next to impossible to get the codes even when they do exist. I thought you just said that no manufacturer is going to do what I suggested? Sorry, but you're misunderstanding me. I meant they won't provide you with this information. Do you know of any major company that does? Here's the site I had to go to for my Sony hex codes. The number of people who go to the trouble of actually using that information is extremely small. I believe that the number of people who I describe above is significantly larger. You didn't address any of that...
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Matt
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