Forum Discussion
Yes, the Voice Remotes are really two remotes in one shell.
They control the Roku via WiFi-direct and so each must be paired to the individual Roku it is to control. These WiFi signsls do not require you to point the remote at the Roku.
The TV controls (power, volume, and mute) are sent to the TV by infrared (IR) signals that can be recognized by the TV, sent from the panel at the top end of the remote. IR signals are line-of-sight so the remote should be pointed at the TV. There are many different sets of IR commands so the remote has to be configured to use a set recognized by your TV.
- RolandW20202 years agoChannel Surfer
Interesting, thank you. By "WiFi-direct," do you mean that the remote and the Ultra communicate with each other over 2.4GHz independent of my regular WiFi networks? So since I have the Ultra connected to my LAN by an ethernet cable, I don't need WiFi in the house at all for the remote to work? I suspect that is the case since another Ultra that I bought at the same time is hardwired, and it does not show as a WiFi client in the topology graphic for my UDM SE console. The one connected to the old RCA does show, of course, since I haven't had time to run a cable to it yet. My policy is: If it doesn't move, hardwire it. 😊
- makaiguy2 years agoCommunity Streaming Expert
My understanding is that WiFi-direct is just that -- a direct connection between the WiFi systems of both units, not going through the local LAN. That's what you're doing when you pair the remote to the Roku it is
manymeant to control - you're configuring the WiFi-direct connection between them.