You can buy commercial televisions that have only functional software, long uptime ratings, and an absurd amount of inputs. They’re designed to be advertisement displays so they can have some lag, and some have low color accuracy, but they’re barebones workhorses.
Modern TV plus your streaming device. I only get home menu ads from roku. I don't like them, but at least the apps aren't full of ads aside from putting "continue watching" on the fifth or sixth row.
I keep seeing people say, “don’t connect your TV to the internet. Of course, this is good advice, and I follow it, but y’all know that pretty soon the TV won’t work unless it’s connected, right? I mean, that has to be coming.
Hopefully, the market will decide during transition. Keurig tried to use barcoded pods to ensure customers would exclusively purchase first-party coffee. Those coffee makers stopped selling and Nespresso had a market boom. Keurig returned to producing the non-barcoded machines a year later.
My TCL did this like 4 years ago. I went to sell it so I updated it, factory reset it... and it literally wouldn't get past the setup until it had connectivity. I didn't fight with it though. I just powered it off and handed it too a buyer who probably didn't think twice about it.
Thanks.
Honestly, we have a house full of Apple TVs and (except for the game consoles) I was struggling to find anything that was comparable that preserves (or claims to preserve) privacy.
I know a lot of people don’t trust Apple, and the latest tvOS is not as good as older versions.
Ads? Man, I need to replace my OLED because of screen burn-in, but I'm definitely not going to pay money to see ads. Are there any TVs left that don't push ads directly to the TV?
Depends where those ads are coming from. I don't ever connect my LG OLED to the internet and my roku gets filtered by a pihole. The only ads I see are from the over-the-air programming from my antenna.
We currently have an LG connected to the internet, but I never see any ads. It has to be connected to the internet because it's connected to the home WiFi for casting.
It looks like the only option these days is to connect your HTPC (doesn't have to be super fancy, a Raspberry Pi based solution works just fine) and never connect the TV to the internet (and keep PiHole running on your local network just in case).
Absolutely. Tell your friends and family members too: Don’t connect your TV to the internet. They are slow, buggy, insecure, and a privacy nightmare.
HTPCs are ideal, but unfortunately they are can be a little cumbersome for people who just want to maximize convenience.
Streaming sticks are equally bad on privacy, but they generally perform better (than TVs), are supported longer, and most importantly: they can be easily swapped out if they stop meeting your needs.
That being said, what kind of HTPC distros do y’all recommend? I’ve been using an NVIDIA Shield Pro for a while and I’ll probably go Linux HTPC when this thing finally dies.
I use a spin of Debian for ARM called DietPi. It's not HTPC focused, but it makes it easy to install and manage all sorts of applications (including HTPC solutions).
Has a solid community as well and they've been around for a long time (a decade or so).
and most importantly: they can be easily swapped out if they stop meeting your needs.
Important enough to repeat.
I have gone thru 3 different streaming devices over the lige of my current TV.
Each suffered, after several years, from needing to have an updated app to continue supporting one or another streaming service that no longer had an app available for that hardware.
That fault is mostly on the streaming services for updating something in their stream but only providing an updated app for a small list of hardware vendors/models.
If I was relying on built-in streaming hardware in my TV, it would have become e-waste many years ago.
Yes. Looking for business displays (digital signage displays) now, not consumer tvs. Afaik, these come bare bones without all the bloatware, except maybe a video player for an external or network source.