Anyone use Amazon Firestick?
Anyone use the Amazon Firestick and if so how do you like it? Is it easy to set up and use? Reviews are good but would like to hear from those that actually have one.
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WE DO AND WE LOVE IT. GARY SET IT UP BUT i DID NOT HEAR A LOT OF MOANING AND GROANING. NO COMMERCIALS!
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I have 2 of them, but they are almost out of date because of the newest Smart Tv's include everything you can get on the Fire stick. Still a good thing when we travel and the rentals only have basic cable channels.
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Love our Firestick! Just plug and play! It couldn't
be easier. If I could get my hubby to change his viewing habits, I would kick cable to the curb. |
We have 3 Firesticks and love them. We have one with the voice and decided that it is just a toy. Never use the voice. We have Smart TV's, but never use them because we can't disconnect them from the internet like we can the Firestick. I let Pandora run most of the day and love it.
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We just got our Fire Stick we love it. My wife is hooked on watching old episodes of shows that you may have missed. I like it for the movies.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk |
Well, I had Amazon Fire TV since 12/15, almost a year and a half, and if I could set the thing up, you can do it too. If you have Samsung, Smart TV, it was quite easy, because their Smart TV's have YouTube already installed and you get that for a no charge. Which helps. Actually I have a total of about 15.00 total for the month in comparison to $155.00 per month for Comcast. A savings of $1800.00 a year.
I absolutely love to just pay for the channels I wish to look at plus there are so many apps to choose from. Netflex has all the movies and Sling TV is great also. Setting it up was a little confusing, but with a little patience and computer experience, it really is easy. Good Luck on your new toy. I think you will be pleased you installed it. |
Unless you want it for travel and use in a hotel, a blu-ray player with WiFi will do the same thing and also allow you to play dvds and cds. They only cost about 60-70 dollars, and will convert any tv into a smart tv, but better.
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Yes. Yes.
I am learning new stuff to do with the FS daily. My husband has become somewhat of an aficionado with it and NOW we can get EVERY TV SHOW EVER RUN after he availed us of an app on Amazon. wild stuff.In the not too distant "soon", we will let the cable/dish stuff be a thing of the past. Internet is all that is needed. he has turned approx 15 folks on to this device. LOVE IT TO BINGE!!!!! (THE NO CAL TYPE) |
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Yes you pay for various subscriptions but much less expensive than cable or satellite .
Streaming is the next huge change coming to TV . The Cable and Dish companies will be dinosaurs within 5 years --- and it couldn`t happen to a more deserving industry . |
I haves ROKU and love it. Is the fs better? I also have a smart tv but don't use it because it uses the tv's sound instead of my surround sound.
John |
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Note: Buying an Amazon Fire TV does not give you access to the content you can watch on it, just like buying a TV does not give you access to cable TV shows. You need to have accounts with each service that provides the content (some free, some paid) and/or subscribe to a cable/satellite package that gives you permission to access shows from specific networks through the Fire TV. When you see an app listed as “free” on the Fire TV interface or the Amazon website, it just means there’s no cost to install the app itself on your player. It has nothing to do with whether the content accessed by the app costs money. |
Doubtful. Cable companies also provide internet access and TV programming is just another form of data coming through the internet access pipe. There is fundamentally no difference between a TV show you watch "on cable" and a Netflix show - they are just packets of data coming down the pipe. You aren't going to stream anything without internet access. You will probably continue to see an evolution in the services provided by cable companies. I suspect more choices instead of packages of 250 channels. Cable companies provide the infrastructure as well as programming services. I cut the cord about 7 years ago but I am totally dependent on a "cable" company for internet access so I can stream programming from Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, etc.
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