No it's not, complaining about red button is a complete waste of time and doing nothing isn't.
The direction of travel is clear given so many new TVs don't even support red button.
You can do that via several methods if you buy another HDR Fox T2, one method was even officially supported by Humax and there are better methods enabled by the custom firmware. There are plenty of HDR Fox T2s on eBay for very modest cost.
It's not even within my comfort zone and I use custom firmware. I don't trust auto updates to keep my recordings working across the channel changes. I do the retune as a manual operation once or twice a year with a backup and restore of the recording schedule and I retune all the boxes I look...
Many years ago myhumax.org used to be a useful place since Barry had some sort of link into Humax. I had a couple of alpha test builds from Barry to check out the multiple transmitters auto tuning updates on HDR Fox T2 and HD Fox T2, and the changes Humax made in them did substantially improve...
I second the request for the information to be copied here so we definitely have it provided hummy.tv keeps running. We can't be sure how long personal web sites will last.
While I'm here, thanks for the work and posting it Mike.
Correct. Think about it, if traffic between devices on 100Mbps ports also sent that traffic to all 10 Mbps ports the 100 ports would be limited to 10 and there would be no point it being a dual speed hub, a 10Mbps hub would work just as well. Also there are separate collision LEDs for 10 and...
So this 10/100 megabit 8 port Netgear hub I'm looking at is a figment of my imagination is it? I've had it for over 20 years. It's a 10 megabit hub and a 100 megabit hub with a switch between them. Each port is connected to the hub for the speed the port negotiates at. It's great for traffic...
It is a gigabit ethernet switch. I can see from the traffic LEDs when speed testing my Apple TV 4K that the traffic is only going between the Apple TV port and the port to my router.
Ethernet switches know nothing about MAC - IP mappings, they work entirely in layer 2 using ethernet MAC...
An ethernet hub sends the packets everywhere (except the originating port). I have some old hubs at home since they are useful for packet snooping. I'm not aware of any gigabit hubs, the last hubs made were 10/100 and even those had a switch between the 10 and 100 megabit sections.
An ethernet...
Oh and to prove a point, neither the Apple TV 4K nor the connection to the router are on the socket misleadingly labelled "Uplink". I have my existing gigabit switch connected to that, in a "Downlink" sense in that this device is less hops from the router.
No it's not, complaining about red button is a complete waste of time and doing nothing isn't.
The direction of travel is clear given so many new TVs don't even support red button.
You can do that via several methods if you buy another HDR Fox T2, one method was even officially supported by Humax and there are better methods enabled by the custom firmware. There are plenty of HDR Fox T2s on eBay for very modest cost.
It's not even within my comfort zone and I use custom firmware. I don't trust auto updates to keep my recordings working across the channel changes. I do the retune as a manual operation once or twice a year with a backup and restore of the recording schedule and I retune all the boxes I look...
Many years ago myhumax.org used to be a useful place since Barry had some sort of link into Humax. I had a couple of alpha test builds from Barry to check out the multiple transmitters auto tuning updates on HDR Fox T2 and HD Fox T2, and the changes Humax made in them did substantially improve...
I second the request for the information to be copied here so we definitely have it provided hummy.tv keeps running. We can't be sure how long personal web sites will last.
While I'm here, thanks for the work and posting it Mike.
Correct. Think about it, if traffic between devices on 100Mbps ports also sent that traffic to all 10 Mbps ports the 100 ports would be limited to 10 and there would be no point it being a dual speed hub, a 10Mbps hub would work just as well. Also there are separate collision LEDs for 10 and...
So this 10/100 megabit 8 port Netgear hub I'm looking at is a figment of my imagination is it? I've had it for over 20 years. It's a 10 megabit hub and a 100 megabit hub with a switch between them. Each port is connected to the hub for the speed the port negotiates at. It's great for traffic...
It is a gigabit ethernet switch. I can see from the traffic LEDs when speed testing my Apple TV 4K that the traffic is only going between the Apple TV port and the port to my router.
Ethernet switches know nothing about MAC - IP mappings, they work entirely in layer 2 using ethernet MAC...
An ethernet hub sends the packets everywhere (except the originating port). I have some old hubs at home since they are useful for packet snooping. I'm not aware of any gigabit hubs, the last hubs made were 10/100 and even those had a switch between the 10 and 100 megabit sections.
An ethernet...
Oh and to prove a point, neither the Apple TV 4K nor the connection to the router are on the socket misleadingly labelled "Uplink". I have my existing gigabit switch connected to that, in a "Downlink" sense in that this device is less hops from the router.
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