Hi Charles,

This is a really important issue for our communities, especially public 
libraries that have higher populations of underserved and low-income residents. 
I experimented myself with a hi-def antenna when I "cut the cord" from cable, 
and even with my own technical experience and financial privilege, I found it 
confusing and difficult. And, yes, the changes in signals from local stations 
even makes the effort I made obsolete or less functional.

I think you are on the right track with considering how to use devices, such as 
the Roku stick, for your patrons, as streaming access from local stations 
increases. I am encouraged to see various state governments using federal and 
state funding to increase broadband access in rural areas, yet I know the 
monthly cost remains out of reach for many.

I wish I could offer you more substantive feedback, but at least I can cheer 
you on and say that I believe you are on the right track. I hope that as you 
work through potential solutions, you consider giving a lightning talk or 
submit an article to the Code4Lib journal to report on your work. It is vitally 
important that we do all we can to make information as fully accessible as 
possible, especially in this era of misinformation and disinformation.

Cheers,
Tim


Tim McGeary

Associate University Librarian for Digital Strategies and Technology

Duke University Libraries

tim.mcge...@duke.edu<mailto:tim.mcge...@duke.edu>


Request a meeting: 
https://outlook.office365.com/owa/calendar/tim.mcge...@duke.edu/pbp/

________________________________
From: Code for Libraries <CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG> on behalf of ander kierig 
<000000c0e12c3a34-dmarc-requ...@lists.clir.org>
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2022 10:22 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG <CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG>
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Roku - TV - Over the Air

Dear Charles:

IMHO, this is not an appropriate use of this list. Roku support is
online at 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://support.roku.com__;!!OToaGQ!sCxKt9jtSQd49-LU545H7H6Rv-3PCticYppiH7za9auqkE8GBaz9ur_OtBxexbC7zbXGE_sjOWy7tv_0h20NbL1a0Zb6SmeZEw$
  . Please don't send questions like
this to a list with 4000 people on it.

respectfully yours,

ander kierig

--
ander kierig
Application Development
University of Minnesota Libraries
[lib.umn.edu](https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.lib.umn.edu__;!!OToaGQ!sCxKt9jtSQd49-LU545H7H6Rv-3PCticYppiH7za9auqkE8GBaz9ur_OtBxexbC7zbXGE_sjOWy7tv_0h20NbL1a0ZbRM7us1w$
  )
they/them

On 2022-09-22 at 09:13 (-0500) charles meyer wrote:

> Hi my esteemed listmates,
>
> We seem to generally broach more advanced tech questions than this but
> we
> have some patrons visiting with simpler needs.
>
> I was trying to help patrons locate any outdoor TV antenna or tower
> climbers who could help with their outdoor antennas but it seems they
> have
> all retired aso trying to receive over the air TV (as programs assert
> can
> be done with a TV antenna) is not available for a lot of areas.
>
> Just to experiment, I bought the best indoor antenna for my house and
> placed it on almost every square inch of evereye all in every room ang
> received about 4-5 TV stations, no local PBS just mostly 1960 TV
> shows.
>
> My thought was tey could buy a Roku ($50 Amazon, Walmart) and with a
> library hotspot connect that Roku to their digital TV (not analog even
> with
> a digital converter box) and then use the Roku device to downloads PBS
> and
> local TV stations via their hotspot.
>
> Some patrons need hand holding so once you plugin the Roku will it
> search
> for the hotspot and then you type  in the hotspot name and password
> and the
> Roku connects to the net to download those TV stations?
>
> I hear the over the air signal are all going 4K soon so does that mean
> you
> need a particular Roku, not just any Roku.
>
> Thanks so much,
>
> Charles.
>
>
> Charles Meyer
> Charlotte County Public Library
> Port Charlotte, FL

Reply via email to