HDTV Antenna & blueray wireless

busterb • Oct 5, 2012 8:52 pm
I have no TV, cable or other wise. But I have a HDREADY TV I also have a b lueray player that's intrernet ready.

But I'm lost about I need to use the things I have. I don't understand why I need a routher foir bLUERAY. Why not a donngel?
I really need help about this.
Dumb redneck 1 eyed old man
Clodfobble • Oct 5, 2012 10:02 pm
What kind of internet service do you have?
BrianR • Oct 6, 2012 12:02 pm
The short answer is, because a BluRay player is considered a computer which requires an IP in order to get data from your modem.

I have the same setup. No cable or dish, only BluRay. Netflix rocks, esp now that the second season of The Walking Dead is available and it's better than the first!
busterb • Oct 7, 2012 7:28 pm
I think what I was asking , was an outdoor annnina a thing that would work for me? 1 live about 60 miles from any TV station
Ok I have a wireless on my computer, so why should I need a router for the blueray? Also how do you control the blueay after you have the router? Why no an ethernet dongle
BrianR • Oct 7, 2012 8:17 pm
You can use ethernet if you want to. I find that it gives me better bandwidth than wireless.

You can try an outdoor antenna. Can't hurt. I live 50 miles away from the nearest transmitter and I got four Spanish stations and five English ones. Too bad none of them had programming worth watching. I put the TV away and use a monitor with my bluray set to watch everything now.
Undertoad • Oct 7, 2012 8:25 pm
You might be able to see what channels you can get, by going to antennaweb.org

They don't make it easy though. I tried what I *think* is your city, and got only 4 channels. The furthest specified a [COLOR="Indigo"]purple[/COLOR] antenna to receive it. That means a large outdoor antenna with an amplifier. But other channels were closer than 60 miles.
glatt • Oct 8, 2012 3:13 pm
We have a typical old fashioned style roof top antenna strapped to our chimney. It came with the house when we bought the place 20 years ago. We're in a major city and can pick up around 25 channels from DC and another handful from Baltimore. One thing working in our favor is that the antenna is directional and we have it pointing at downtown DC and Baltimore is in the same path an hour's drive farther away. With the new digital channels, you don't get fuzzy channels or channels with static or snow. If the station is too far away, like some of the Baltimore stations, the picture will be perfect for a minute, and then it will freeze for a few seconds or get pixelated for a few seconds.

Antennaweb was very accurate for us when we were checking what we could get. Actually, that's not true, we got more channels than they said we would, but they are sometimes pixelated or frozen.
BigV • Oct 8, 2012 6:59 pm
you got a digital antenna twenty years ago?
glatt • Oct 8, 2012 8:49 pm
Yep. And it was probably 20 years old when we got it.

The TV tuner is digital and the information in the signal is digital, but the actual signal is just radio waves and this old antenna picks them up beautifully.
busterb • Oct 11, 2012 10:03 pm
If I run ethernet to BRP from my wireless modem, and get it working, then what do I do.
Hell I'm lost big time. Instructions that came with it doesn't tell me much.
tw • Oct 11, 2012 10:53 pm
busterb;833889 wrote:
If I run ethernet to BRP from my wireless modem, and get it working, then what do I do.

Default conditions for an ethernet connection make further setup unnecessary. Your router would probably have an IP address of 192.168.1.1. So the Blueray would be assigned an IP address of 192.168.1.x where x is selected and leased by the router. IOW you do nothing more. The Blueray can now get anything it needs from the Internet.

Wireless always adds a significant increase in confusion. Always important is to have at least one computer connected by ethernet to the router. Then any surprise problem is easier to solve.
busterb • Oct 12, 2012 1:02 pm
OK. I got that. Does the brp show what's on my computer? Say I want to watch something from ????.com, how do I get there?
busterb • Oct 13, 2012 10:48 pm
Also what cable do I need cat 5 or cat 6?
BigV • Oct 15, 2012 11:02 am
busterb;834171 wrote:
Also what cable do I need cat 5 or cat 6?


[SIZE="7"]For your purposes buster, there is no difference between cat 5 or cat 6 cable. Either one will do the job.[/SIZE]
busterb • Oct 15, 2012 1:08 pm
Thanks
Happy Monkey • Oct 15, 2012 6:11 pm
This is one of those threads where I keep wanting to help, but then I realize I only know enough to confuse the issue more.
busterb • Oct 18, 2012 10:05 pm
I has computer to TV now!! Still no help on blueray. Come on guys. Maybe will have the HDTV antenna ready to try this weekend.
tw • Oct 19, 2012 12:15 am
busterb;834859 wrote:
I has computer to TV now!! Still no help on blueray. Come on guys. Maybe will have the HDTV antenna ready to try this weekend.
Difficult to provide any assistance without details of your location and nearby stations. For example, antennaweb.com requires a zip code.
busterb • Oct 19, 2012 3:27 pm
I'll sort the antenna out after I find out about the blueray.
busterb • Oct 21, 2012 1:40 pm
Well, ain't that nice!!! After hooking up the !@#$ player to internet, sob won't work. Sony tells me, after running up my phone bill, that the internet is only good for player updates.
Forking hell.
BrianR • Oct 22, 2012 10:17 am
WTF?

My blu-ray player goes right to internet as a device on my router and regularly is used as entertainment.

What model do you have?
busterb • Oct 22, 2012 9:14 pm
BrianR. I have a BDP-S360
BigV • Oct 24, 2012 1:05 pm
busterb;835136 wrote:
Well, ain't that nice!!! After hooking up the !@#$ player to internet, sob won't work. Sony tells me, after running up my phone bill, that the internet is only good for player updates.
Forking hell.


busterb;835306 wrote:
BrianR. I have a BDP-S360


Bad news buster.



[SIZE="5"]The good: Profile 2.0-compatible; onboard decoding for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio Essential; excellent video quality on most Blu-ray movies.

The bad: Cannot access streaming video services such as Netflix; no Wi-Fi option; no eject button on the remote; relatively slow load times; recessed USB port.

The bottom line: The Sony BDP-S360 handles all the Blu-ray basics with ease, but it lacks the streaming Internet content found on competing models.
[/SIZE]
busterb • Oct 25, 2012 7:12 pm
Yeah screw me again. I got a new one from the egg that works a charm..
For sale cheap shit from Sony, cheap!!!!