I really love Roku.  Always seems to work when other things don’t.

From: Sam Lambie 
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2019 10:44 AM
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Mikrotik and Netflix

I have found that most of the time, the in TV APPs Suck a big d*** in terms of 
streaming. Once you put in a Chromecast, Roku, Apple TV, all is well. If the 
rest of the network is humming along just fine, I would blame the TV 
manufacturers on making crappy Apps. 

On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 10:24 AM Mark - Myakka Technologies <[email protected]> 
wrote:

  Ken,

  I like my rokus.  One real nice thing is the vudu app on the roku.  I believe 
that is the walmart movie rental app. If you fire up that app, you can go to 
browse without any login.  Part of the browse screen is the settings/options.  
If you go to that screen you can do a network test.  It will measure the 
connection and report back the highest resolution you can watch.  I'm not sure 
if it gives a raw speed, but it is nice to use to test to see how well the roku 
is connected.




  --
  Best regards,
  Mark                            mailto:[email protected]

  Myakka Technologies, Inc.
  www.MyakkaTech.com

  ------

  Tuesday, February 19, 2019, 12:13:09 PM, you wrote:


       The other thing I notice in the original post is both these people are 
using the built-in apps in the TVs.

        Just like the proliferation of streaming services has led me to use 
Netflix as a benchmark, I feel we need a benchmark streaming device or app.  
Like is it a Roku or a Roku TV?  If not, stop by our office and borrow a 
standalone Roku, if that works, blame your app or device.  Or ask them if they 
have updated the apps on their TV, that will befuddle most customers.  Just 
because Samsung or Insignia or whoever loaded some apps in the TV so they could 
call it a “smart TV” and charge $20 more doesn’t mean the apps work well or 
that TV manufacturer tech support knows anything more about streaming than 
“tell them it’s their ISP’s fault”.  A few years back we even saw a flurry of 
Samsung TVs that were incompatible with certain popular WiFi routers, we would 
tell customers to call their computer guy, who would come out and say yep, you 
need to either buy a new TV or a new router.

        The other problem is people want to use these little streaming sticks 
because they’re cheap, but hiding behind the big screen all the way across the 
house, it’s just asking for WiFi problems.  At least with a smart TV there’s 
probably (but not necessarily) an Ethernet port, but asking someone to try 
plugging it in with a cable instead of using WiFi is like asking them to walk 
across a bed or hot coals.  Plug in a cable?  What is this, the stone age?  I’m 
not going to do manual labor like plugging in a cable.


        From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Eric Muehleisen
        Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2019 10:47 AM
        To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group <[email protected]>
        Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Mikrotik and Netflix

        If it's PPPoE, check your MTU. We've found in a few cases that 
mismatched MTU can cause random buffering issues. Seems to only affect Netflix. 
Amazon, Hulu, Sling and others are not affected by this for some reason.

        On Mon, Feb 18, 2019 at 8:24 PM Nate Burke <[email protected]> wrote:

             I'm only posting because I've had 2 reports, one on my network, 
and one 
              on another network (In-laws out of state) within the last 2 
weeks.  
              Mikrotik RB951 routers doing NAT and WIFI.  Everything looks 
good, but 
              both people say that netflix/streaming keeps buffering/stopping.  
              Running current firmware and have been installed for years.  
Speedtest 
              apps show no problems.  WIFI signals look good.  Haven't heard 
any 
              reports from other parts of the network.

              Now both of these people are using the Apps built into their TV, 
I don't 
              know what brands.  I'm not even sure where to start 
troubleshooting 
              something like this.  I'm visiting the customer on my network 
tomorrow 
              to see if changing the wifi equipment helps.  My customer 
regularly sits 
              at 5mb/s for multiple hours so It appears that streaming should 
be 
              working fine.

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-- 

-- 
Sam Lambie
Taosnet Wireless Tech.
575-758-7598 Office
www.Taosnet.com


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