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Chris-K's avatar
Chris-K
Streaming Star
3 years ago

What is this question trying to achieve?

I don't understand this question, of course I can hear music which has nothing to do with a remote control, but if I press yes it tries another code?????? so I'm not quite sure what it's trying to achieve? Any advice greatly received

 

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  • It’s trying to find the right code.  Of course, if your sound is not being produced by your TV (or a TV that is successfully controlling an AVR via HDMI-CEC), then it might not be a question that matters to you.  For example, if you have Roku -> HDMI Extractor -> TV & receiver, then the music will never stop.  But in the most common configuration of Roku -> TV, it will. (Assuming it ever finds a code for your TV.)

    • Chris-K's avatar
      Chris-K
      Streaming Star

      Nope. I don't get it

      "It’s trying to find the right [remote control] code."

      Precisely! No amount of sound output going to determine that!?

      It plays a tune, doesn't ask you to use the remote and instead asks you if you can hear it? If you can, then it's deemed to have *failed* and tries another code?? 

      Rinse and repeat until all codes are exhausted and it deems the test has totally *failed*

      But remote works perfectly???

      Bizarre

      I don't get it?????

      Is it not testing for remote settings but testing for sound output?

      • AvsGunnar's avatar
        AvsGunnar
        Community Streaming Expert

        Chris-K 

        As Strega indicated, the sound playing is for the remote control configuring itself behind the scenes since related to volume/mute codes.  If the music is playing and you can hear it, Roku has enabled sound (volume controls).  When asked later if you can still hear sound, Roku has attempted to mute sound (again, by either lowering or muting sound with codes).  If successful, then Roku concludes the appropriate codes were discovered.

        In order to visualize it...

        1. The TV has no sound.

        2. Roku attempts a remote code.  If you can hear music then Roku successfully programmed volume keys/mute off.  If no music heard, Roku attempts more codes until you hear sound.

        3. Are you still hearing music question?  Roku is attempting to mute sound.  If sounds goes away, Roku successfully found this code for volume keys/mute on.  If not, keeps searching.

        -----

        The code searching is not perfect.  For some Roku remotes to work with certain TVs you even have to lie to it and say you hear sound when you don't (and vice-versa) for the remote to work properly.  If yours is working properly, I wouldn't worry about it and consider it just one of the random Roku quirks.  The end goal is to get the remote working, so wouldn't focus too much on how it gets there.