Forum Discussion
I was afraid of that. Plex isn't the way I want to go, I don't want to have my files going through their servers. At this point, I may as well find another dlna reciever - I know that Amazon fire sticks do the kob if I get the right app on them. I kight try that.
I wish Roku wiuld update their media player though.
Scott30, AAC audio should work, but I believe only mono/stereo AAC is supported. It's been a while, so I may be misremembering things. I've said it before, if playing your own media is important to you, there's much better alternatives. I sincerely doubt that Roku will ever add features to their media player that aren't required by the big players in the streaming game (i.e., Netflix). You either adapt/re-encode your media to something that's supported, use on-the-fly transcoding, or look elsewhere for a streaming device.
- Scott302 years agoReel Rookie
Yeah, I'm gonna look into Amazon's fire stick. I have over 800 files, most of which use 5.1 audio. I think what you mean by stereo would be 2.1. No way am I going to re-encode all of those.
Roku needs to get to work on this though, this is just stupid.
- andyross2 years agoRoku Guru
The poor audio support is probably why Tidal pulled their app from Roku.
If you want good audio support, you mainly need to pay for a quality device. Mainstream Roku and even Firesticks are somewhat basic. The Google Onn 4K streamer may be usable as it's basic GoogleTV and you can do most anything with it.
For true audiophile, look to Apple TV or Nvidia Shield.
- Scott302 years agoReel Rookie
Personally, I despise all things Apple, so I'll look into the nvidia shield. I might also look at Google.