Introducing the Amazon Echo Dot
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Yeah the new consumer on the scene was something I realized as I was writing my last post.
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@Dashrender said:
But you don't think that Best Buy's wall of receivers is a bad idea just because you already own one, right?
I have no idea what you're getting at here.
You are basing the reason for why the Dot isn't useful to you on the fact that you already bought the functionality that it primarily provides. So, by extension, anything that competes with your existing receiver would be subject to the same logic, right?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But you don't think that Best Buy's wall of receivers is a bad idea just because you already own one, right?
I have no idea what you're getting at here.
You are basing the reason for why the Dot isn't useful to you on the fact that you already bought the functionality that it primarily provides. So, by extension, anything that competes with your existing receiver would be subject to the same logic, right?
Aww - in other words - what you don't believe in upgrades/updates? LOL
Yeah yeah I see the point now.
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@Dashrender said:
Yeah the new consumer on the scene was something I realized as I was writing my last post.
Or just imagine anyone who uses pure audio systems. You are thinking of one used for home theatres, which isn't the key demographic. Think of one that is just for music. Which I own a few of (at least one with no receiver, so a perfect fit). Mine is traditional bookshelf speakers, so pretty "what you picture as the 1950s living room stereo." But what about people who have like in ceiling, multi-room music? No video, nothing fancy. They just want this on the coffee table or wall mounted, and talk to the room to have it do things.
Alexa, play some soft jazz. - Whole house starts to play soft jazz.
Alexa, turn off the lights. - Lights turn off.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Yeah the new consumer on the scene was something I realized as I was writing my last post.
Or just imagine anyone who uses pure audio systems. You are thinking of one used for home theatres, which isn't the key demographic. Think of one that is just for music. Which I own a few of (at least one with no receiver, so a perfect fit). Mine is traditional bookshelf speakers, so pretty "what you picture as the 1950s living room stereo." But what about people who have like in ceiling, multi-room music? No video, nothing fancy. They just want this on the coffee table or wall mounted, and talk to the room to have it do things.
Alexa, play some soft jazz. - Whole house starts to play soft jazz.
Alexa, turn off the lights. - Lights turn off.
For a person putting something new in this definitely make sense - but someone who already has the whole home audio thing, it seems likely they they would already have a solution in place... but of course, this doesn't mean that this isn't a better one, and one they want to try.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Yeah the new consumer on the scene was something I realized as I was writing my last post.
Or just imagine anyone who uses pure audio systems. You are thinking of one used for home theatres, which isn't the key demographic. Think of one that is just for music. Which I own a few of (at least one with no receiver, so a perfect fit). Mine is traditional bookshelf speakers, so pretty "what you picture as the 1950s living room stereo." But what about people who have like in ceiling, multi-room music? No video, nothing fancy. They just want this on the coffee table or wall mounted, and talk to the room to have it do things.
Alexa, play some soft jazz. - Whole house starts to play soft jazz.
Alexa, turn off the lights. - Lights turn off.
For a person putting something new in this definitely make sense - but someone who already has the whole home audio thing, it seems likely they they would already have a solution in place... but of course, this doesn't mean that this isn't a better one, and one they want to try.
It's a different approach. You don't tend to have lots of digital sources, typically only one.
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@aaron said:
My first gen Kindle Fire sucked, my Paperwhite works well... I have mixed feelings about additional Amazon devices at home.
it's really the Fire line that sucks. All of our Kindles (non-fire) have been amazing and our Echo is excellent. But our four Fire tablets are garbage and our Fire TVs too.
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@scottalanmiller I love my Fire TV stick... i replaced the start menu with FireStarter, and it runs Kodi like a friggin' champ.
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@RojoLoco said:
@scottalanmiller I love my Fire TV stick... i replaced the start menu with FireStarter, and it runs Kodi like a friggin' champ.
I just picked up one of those and really enjoy it. Now to look up FireStarter and see how that works.
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@coliver said:
@RojoLoco said:
@scottalanmiller I love my Fire TV stick... i replaced the start menu with FireStarter, and it runs Kodi like a friggin' champ.
I just picked up one of those and really enjoy it. Now to look up FireStarter and see how that works.
Here is a basic how-to, but it has the download link. I love the Firestarter interface vs. the standard Amazon one (which is still accessible when running Firestarter).
http://www.htpcbeginner.com/install-firestarter-on-fire-tv-without-adb-and-computer/
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@RojoLoco said:
@coliver said:
@RojoLoco said:
@scottalanmiller I love my Fire TV stick... i replaced the start menu with FireStarter, and it runs Kodi like a friggin' champ.
I just picked up one of those and really enjoy it. Now to look up FireStarter and see how that works.
Here is a basic how-to, but it has the download link. I love the Firestarter interface vs. the standard Amazon one (which is still accessible when running Firestarter).
http://www.htpcbeginner.com/install-firestarter-on-fire-tv-without-adb-and-computer/
Still runs all the same apps?
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@coliver yep, it's just a start menu that runs on top. Better access to your apps, loads / updates Kodi for you, but everything underneath is untouched. Instead of having to dive through 4 menu layers to get to apps, they are all right there on the start screen.
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