Forum Discussion

Dman1's avatar
Dman1
Binge Watcher
11 months ago

Streaming OTA content to all my televisions in the house

I have two Roku's devices connected to two television sets and I have two Roku television sets.  Four television sets in all, two downstairs and two upstairs.  I would like to connect my antenna to a device and stream the antenna content to all four of my televisions.  I tried the newest Tablo device and for some unknown reason it would reset to the Roku home screen while watching antenna television.  I returned the Tablo because it was very annoying.  The Tablo would also lock up and say there was a conflict with the closed caption and ask if I wanted to turn off the CC.  I need to use the CC on my televisions. Another problem I have experienced when I connect an antenna to the rear of my Hisense Roku tv is that the antenna channels will disappear at some point AFTER scanning the OTA channels?  This is very annoying too.  Thus the reason I tried the Tablo device.  I don't want to connect four antennas to four television sets.  I also don't want to wire coax cable to four television sets when some are downstairs and some are upstairs in my house.  Has anyone else experienced these problems and solved them?  I can't be the only person out there having these particular issues?  Please help. 

13 Replies

  • renojim's avatar
    renojim
    Community Streaming Expert

    I'm using a Tablo as I write this and it does have its issues.  With captions enabled, the Roku device sometimes runs out of memory and crashes.  I have no idea why.  I think it only affects watching live TV.  Recorded programs don't have the problem.  I'm thinking of trying it on a non-Roku device like a Fire stick.  I wasn't happy with the Tablo app on Android streaming device.

    Another thing I use is a Silicondust HDHomeRun box.  Its Roku app has its own issues and I've never explored its recording capabilities other than pairing it with the now unsupported Windows Media Center running on a PC.  Recording is must for me and I watch little to no live TV.

    There may be other similar products out there, but it seems like less and less people are watching OTA TV, so there's not much of a market anymore.  Those are the two I've tried and I'd have a hard time recommending either one paired with a Roku device.  One thing to keep in mind is that if all four TVs are going at once you'll need a device with four tuners if everyone wants to watch something different.

    • Dman1's avatar
      Dman1
      Binge Watcher

      I appreciate the information. I will never have four television going at the same time. There is only two of us that live in the house to start with.  The majority of the time we are watching the same thing on the same television.  I would say that at the most two televisions might be going on at the same time.  

      I contacted Silicon dust HD and they basically said I would have the same issues with them because the problem is with Roku.  Which was very strange to me. Here is what Silicon dust told me (below).  I hope that Roku monitors and sees this reply. 

       
      We have an app for Roku devices, but limitations with the Roku platform mean it doesn't work well. Roku devices are designed to play web streaming video, which is always perfect and always conforms to a very specific way that things are transmitted. Broadcast TV is less than perfect due to the nature of TV signal reception, and there is a lot more flexibility in the way things are done. Roku's video player is not designed to be resilient in handling imperfect signals or things in the broadcast it doesn't understand, and this tends to result in the player app aborting playback or crashing the app if there is a reception issue. It sounds like you were encountering some of those issues with the previous device, and it's likely you would encounter similar issues with the HD Home Run, and the problem is with Roku and not with the tuner device. You will have a better experience with live TV watching via any other device, such as an Amazon Fire TV Stick or the Onn. Google TV box from Walmart. On these devices, we can provider our own video player that is more resilient and can handle broadcast streams a lot better.
       
      Live TV does not require a subscription from us. Recording with our DVR requires a subscription, $35 per year. The warranty on new HD Home Run devices is 2 years.
      • renojim's avatar
        renojim
        Community Streaming Expert

        Dman1, the issues with Tablo's and SD's Roku apps are absolutely because of the significant limitations of Roku devices and, more importantly, the Roku "OS".  The Tablo and SD developers have probably done the best they can, but Roku couldn't care less about anything that doesn't make them significant ad and/or subscription revenue.