Francisco,
So what tv has all your needed 'enablers'?
Appears you care more about features than video quality; jmho.
Duncan


On 12/02/2011 16:44, Francisco Tapia wrote:
well... it costs between $50 to $120 for these devices VS spending on a
$300 xbox/ps3 or +$500 on a new TV, and buying a new TV is sometimes a
difficult proposition.. example:

My Samsung in one room was purchased when USB video support was the thing,
and ethernet was new on TVs, so it supported minimal apps.  Samsung is one
of the hardware vendors out there that just kinda suck in software support
:(, I say that because the TV that I have has all the same hardware like
the newer TV that came out a few months after that supported dlna streaming
ethernet.. arg!  Past the time where I can go back and return it.. and am I
really going to hold on to the TV box for any length of time?  No, i'm
not...

My recent purchased TV supports dlna plus a plethora of Apps... no
roku/atv2 required.  it even has wifi :) (i purposefully skipped out on 3D,
dont like it, dont want it)


-Francisco
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On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 11:27, Joshua MacCraw<[email protected]>  wrote:

With dnla,netflix, hulu, and etc... I becoming mainstream features on tv
sets, nevermind xbox or playstation doing them, once you have dnla&
CIFS/NFS servers setup I don't see the point in many of these other
devices.

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