You need a Roku device on each TV and then you can load all your apps on each ( you just need to remember your passwords for each app
Use the same email address for all sets
yes separate device for additional TVs
mans then you load all your apps on each
@VAR wrote:You need a Roku device on each TV
Not if as the person stated they would have a mix of Roku TVs as well. With a Roku TV you do not need a Roku player connected to it. Link it to the same Roku user account and it will automatically have the same apps/channels on every Roku TV and Roku player. As you mentioned, not all channels store login credentials in the Roku cloud, so they might need to log into each channel on each device.
I currently have Roku for the two tv,s in my house. I am going to rent an apartment and want to access the Roku streaming channels on the tv that comes with the apartment. Is this possible and what do I need to do to make that happen.
Roku devices have something called Guest Mode that should provide what you're looking for. See this support page for detailed information about using Guest Mode.
I believe your tenant would be on your acct and possible your Wi-Fi ( depending on your set up)
yes you could give them access
I have 7 TVs between 2 locations but remember some apps are restrictive to how many set can be viewing their content at one time.
the real question is Are you OK sharing your email address with your tenants?
@VAR wrote:I believe your tenant would be on your acct and possible your Wi-Fi ( depending on your set up)
yes you could give them access
I have 7 TVs between 2 locations but remember some apps are restrictive to how many set can be viewing their content at one time.
the real question is Are you OK sharing your email address with your tenants?
That's not the way guest Mode works. Yes, the Roku is connected to their network. But the guest has no access to their WiFi password or their Roku account information, such as their email address. The Roku appears to the guest as a brand new Roku that isn't logged into anything other than the network.
The guest would log into the desired content (for example Prime Video or Netflix) using their own personal credentials, not the Roku owner's. When the guest checks out, their login credentials are deleted from the device. There is not account information exchanging between the owner and the guest.