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Does Roku work in hotels anymore?
I've been carrying one around for a while and it seemed to work just fine, but lately I've noticed it either won't connect to the hotel's wifi or even if it does and everything appears fine, the channels won't load.
At the last Hyatt, setup said connection was excellent, but download speed was zero. I liked using it mostly to keep up with the local news back in the hometown and an occasional film. |
probably need to use VPN
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Originally Posted by rufflesinc
(Post 30988523)
probably need to use VPN
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This might be better placed in the "Travel Technology" forum, where there are other posts about Roku. I'm going to ask a mod to move it there.
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Originally Posted by kokonutz
(Post 30988585)
I finally threw my Amazon Fire Stick away because I need VPN to stream to TVs in hotels, guest houses and short term rentals: https://readyjetroam.com/2019/04/02/...ile-traveling/
You can load a VPN on your fire stick and use it to watch from apps. we have a USA and a UK Amazon account. I have a VPN on my "UK account fire stick". Turn on the VPN and watch BBC, ITV ect. |
www.ustvnow.com is a legal way to watch Amrrican TV and you can buy a subscription that includes a cloud DVR. No VPN needed. The local channels are out of Pennsylvania
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Did you try logging into the wifi from another device first? Most of the time in hotels you have to use a browser window to get connected. |
Originally Posted by MoreMilesPlease
(Post 30990409)
www.ustvnow.com is a legal way to watch Amrrican TV and you can buy a subscription that includes a cloud DVR. No VPN needed. The local channels are out of Pennsylvania
There seems to be a consensus that the contract they bought to run a small cable service is legit, but a nearly equal consensus that they don't have a legal contract to stream those channels. This is why Roku dropped them from their platform as content and copyright owners threatened lawsuits. If the Omniverse lawsuit goes the way the content owners hope it does then there will be no question that USTVNOW has no legal right to stream. |
Originally Posted by anrkitec
(Post 30990852)
USTVNOW is quasi-legal at best.
There seems to be a consensus that the contract they bought to run a small cable service is legit, but a nearly equal consensus that they don't have a legal contract to stream those channels. This is why Roku dropped them from their platform as content and copyright owners threatened lawsuits. If the Omniverse lawsuit goes the way the content owners hope it does then there will be no question that USTVNOW has no legal right to stream. |
Originally Posted by MoreMilesPlease
(Post 30990967)
Interesting. I thought it was developed for the US military and subsequently was able to expand to non-military. Sorry if I gave incorrect info. We used USTV now in the UK and Mexico without issue and no VPN needed on a paid subscription. So obviously at that point it worked.
I am not even going to pretend that I understand every legal subtlety that they claim allows them to stream these channels, but USTVNOW is owned by a Dutch phone company that is primarily in the business of providing "ex-patriots worldwide" with "affordable" VOIP phone service. As for their target audience, it has been reported that they don't in any way check for military status, that that is just a sort of adverting come-on, and they will sell service to pretty much anyone anywhere. |
Originally Posted by readywhenyouare
(Post 30990439)
Did you try logging into the wifi from another device first? Most of the time in hotels you have to use a browser window to get connected. |
Originally Posted by kokonutz
(Post 30988585)
I finally threw my Amazon Fire Stick away because I need VPN to stream to TVs in hotels, guest houses and short term rentals:
Originally Posted by MoreMilesPlease
(Post 30990297)
You can load a VPN on your fire stick and use it to watch from apps.
if you have Comcast TV, you can also sideload the Xfinity app and watch your DVR programming, LIveTV and OnDemand that way as well. |
Originally Posted by tmorse6570
(Post 30991644)
I think the hotels are on to us.
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I tried using a Roku once, more of a headache then its worth. Instead I use an HDMI to Thunberbolt adapter into my MacBook Air or wife's MacBook Pro. Use screen mirroring and it works like a charm. The hardest part can be trying to access the HDMI port in the back... but if I'm in the same hotel long enough I've been known to take down the TV to plug it in :D
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Originally Posted by rugitis
(Post 31356310)
I tried using a Roku once, more of a headache then its worth. Instead I use an HDMI to Thunberbolt adapter into my MacBook Air or wife's MacBook Pro. Use screen mirroring
Hell, my travel Amazon Fire stick even controls the volume and power on the hotel's TV. |
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