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Old 04-22-2017, 02:20 PM
 
Location: north central Ohio
8,665 posts, read 5,851,378 times
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Hi, I plan to cut the cable cord, but not sure which of streaming "Devices" to get? I am not an Amazon Prime member, yet ,but when I have the extra $100 to spend would like to get it.
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Old 04-22-2017, 02:28 PM
 
Location: Ann Arbor MI
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I have a Roku personally. My "box" allows me access to both my Netflix and Amazon Prime accounts. If I had a Hulu account it would get me that too. In my case I choose to hard wire my Roku to my Xfinity box rather than use WiFi.
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Old 04-22-2017, 02:30 PM
 
Location: North Carolina for now....ATL soon.
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I too, am struggling with this decision. I'm really not really that tech savvy, so I don't know the differences.
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Old 04-22-2017, 03:47 PM
 
Location: north central Ohio
8,665 posts, read 5,851,378 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by craig11152 View Post
I have a Roku personally. My "box" allows me access to both my Netflix and Amazon Prime accounts. If I had a Hulu account it would get me that too. In my case I choose to hard wire my Roku to my Xfinity box rather than use WiFi.

Speaking of Wi-Fi, will I need to keep it along with my internet, when I drop the tv part of cable ,to use a streaming device? Don't know what an Xfinity box is!
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Old 04-22-2017, 03:48 PM
 
Location: north central Ohio
8,665 posts, read 5,851,378 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by No2Monsanto View Post
I too, am struggling with this decision. I'm really not really that tech savvy, so I don't know the differences.

Me either!
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Old 04-22-2017, 03:51 PM
 
11,181 posts, read 10,537,988 times
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Either a Roku or a Fire Stick will probably serve you fine. I have both but only use Fire Sticks because they stream more smoothly, with less buffering than my Roku. My Roku is an earlier generation, the latest model may stream better. I've never once had a buffering problem with the Fire Sticks.

Here's an article that might be helpful:
The Best Streaming Media Device: Roku, Chromecast, or Amazon Fire.

Quote:
Originally Posted by i_love_autumn View Post
Speaking of Wi-Fi, will I need to keep it along with my internet, when I drop the tv part of cable ,to use a streaming device?
Yes, you'll need internet to stream.
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Old 04-22-2017, 03:56 PM
 
Location: Mayberry
36,427 posts, read 16,036,192 times
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I have a roku stick after reading reviews, still have direct tv though.
The reviews are what did it for me, hooked it up all by myself. Have to register it, then I have to pay for Netflix, never had it and Showtime. There are free channels too, of course, so I'm slowly creeping towards no cable.
My wifi is in the office, pretty far away from tv, I have no buffering problems, everything is totally easy.
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Old 04-22-2017, 04:02 PM
 
Location: NC
679 posts, read 810,283 times
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I've had Rokus and Fire Sticks. Ended up returning each Fire Stick I had. I definitely prefer Roku. I currently have 4 - one for each TV. I don't have issues with buffering. I find the Roku interface to be a lot cleaner and simpler. With the Fire Stick, it was very "in your face" with Amazon stuff and was a lot more cluttered than Roku.
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Old 04-22-2017, 04:03 PM
 
Location: Ann Arbor MI
2,222 posts, read 2,252,037 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by i_love_autumn View Post
Speaking of Wi-Fi, will I need to keep it along with my internet, when I drop the tv part of cable ,to use a streaming device? Don't know what an Xfinity box is!
My provider is Comcast of which Xfinity is now some sort of subsidiary.

You need the Internet at a reasonable speed to stream data (movies, music, TV etc) but I suppose you don't need "wifi". You can direct wire to your modem that provides your Internet. In my limited experience a provider who gives you Internet will usually give you a modem/router combo box that sends the WiFi signal included in your price.
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Old 04-22-2017, 04:15 PM
 
Location: north central Ohio
8,665 posts, read 5,851,378 times
Reputation: 5201
Quote:
Originally Posted by biscuitmom View Post
Either a Roku or a Fire Stick will probably serve you fine. I have both but only use Fire Sticks because they stream more smoothly, with less buffering than my Roku. My Roku is an earlier generation, the latest model may stream better. I've never once had a buffering problem with the Fire Sticks.

Here's an article that might be helpful:
The Best Streaming Media Device: Roku, Chromecast, or Amazon Fire.

Yes, you'll need internet to stream.

Thank you for the info, and the link.
The Roku stick I'm considering is the Express. Don't know how good/smooth it is. Roku seems to have more channels than the Amazon Firestick, but I believe I can get Kodi for either. I won't be giving up my internet.
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