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Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net to 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone – 633 points –
76

I used to have so much fun back when cell phones had IR blasters. Changing channels and messing with people before it was common knowledge that you could do that on a cell. I wish phones still had that.

Back in the day when they were actually focused on putting features into phones instead of stripping them out...

RIP FM antennas, too.

used to have a FM tuner on the modem. International models do still carry modems with FM tuners on them. And the antenna was you headphone cord. Which is why it doesnt and won't work with Bluetooth..... And for all likely hood it won't work with USB c headphones either

RIP headphone jack 🫑

The Redmi line still has ir transmitters afaik

I confirm. The kid in me made me buy it

There are still ways to do that. A friend of mine loves to mess woth Telas. He can open their charging door with a device.

Long before smartphones, Casio used to make an IR blaster watch. Nobody ever suspected the person checking the time was messing with the TV.

When the teacher took your watch at the beginning of class it was either test time or tv cart time.

GS4 owner checking in. That was the best phone I've ever owned for the year it was...

I loved it when my phone had IR. I really hate it when restaurants have tvs on in the dining room. I would turn the volume down or even turn it off. I really miss being able to do that.

My Galaxy S5 was great when people insisted on watching Fox or Nancy Grace at full volume on the lunch room TV.

Most Chinese brand phones like oppo and Xiaomi still has it as standard.

I use it to control my air conditioning all the time.

what is a good phone that has it?

In the US, OnePlus Open is a recent phone I can think of with an IR blaster, but that's a $1700 phone.

I wonder if that's why phones no longer have IR blasters.

Phones don't have IR blasters anymore for the same reason they don't have aux ports or SD card slots anymore. For one, they remove these features to make room for other things that take up the real estate of a thin slice of technology. And for two, cutting those things increases the profit margin of the phones they sell, even if only slightly.

They also removed radio capabilities. Rip the days I would listen to live radio at 2 am while I washed dishes at chili's.

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2 more...

i still have redmi note 4 with one
fully controllable with an api too

I had that phone for like 4 months and loved it! Unfortunately the police stole it when the house I was living in was raided... it was a good phone, I spent quite lot of hours researching which to get and decided that would be the best.

you had the snapdragon one right?

I'm pretty sure it was the Helio series one? How come

I wonder if an IR dongle is a thing that's available and would function well...

look irplus wave if you have a headphone jack

if you have a headphone jack

about that... :(

Yeah, mine doesn't either, but I guess I could get a USB to 3.5mm, then the 3.5mm IR dongle... Eh, I've lived fine without it, as much as I'd enjoy having it back.

yeah my phone doesn't have one (pixel 7a)

mine has tho (a52s)

well main reason I have a pixel is I hate one ui

oneui is pretty decent but actually i don't like the build quality on most older a series, including mine.
it got better with a54, a53 and a7x ones tho

Did that in my high school. Turned on Thomas the Train.

I was a rebel. They unplugged the TV after that

I just brought a universal remote to class, admittedly causing the TV to get unplugged as well.

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So you're the reason I find my TV turned on in the morning.

I'm going to find you. I will bill you for the power, and I will additionally calculate the cost of screen burn mileage on my TV. You will pay.

Connect your TV power cable to an outlet or splitter with a switch, turn the switch off every time you won't watch tv for long. Enjoy 90% defense against remotejackers and 1% higher calorie burn bonus.

Don't do that if you have an OLED, though. AFAIK, they need to turn themselves on from time to time to do some panel refresh stuff to prevent burn in.

Pretty sure that's incorrect. They do, however, shift pixels from time to time to prevent burn in, but that's while they're on.

Depends on your model. Most run a pixel refresher and quite a few do it only after being off for a few hours.

My lg has a quick refresher it does every 4 hours of screen time and a heavier one every 2000 hours.

I have an LG Oled but that feature is not an automatic one, nor it is recommended to do it every day. Maybe LG shifted policy on it to activate it automatically at a tight interval on never models (mine is 2021 model), but tbh I haven't seen it necessary yet, although I have used the TV both as a TV and a PC screen with constant interfaces, albeit taking care as to rest the screen regularly via watching movies, adjusting brightness, and using that offline refresh feature once in a month. I believe it is fairly acceptable to turn off Oleds completely, unless you want absolutely no responsibility on keeping them healthy.

I used to have a Samsung Galaxy S4, and its main gimmick was the IR blaster that also made the phone a universal remote. Great way to mess with people when I was in college at parties muting the TV or slowly making it louder over the course of a long time.

My roomie and I also had the same exact TV, which made it fun to point the remote in her room and turn it off from time to time.

S4 was peak Samsung. IR blaster, removable battery, SD card, water resistant, amoled screen that phone just had it all

It was not water resistant, actually. I'd know. Mine was broken when I got pushed into a swimming pool. :(

It was, even had a cover for the USB port. I took a few baths with it (really dumb idea now that I think about it)

Lol you're thinking of the S5

Honestly, though. The S5 has a user-replaceable battery, IP67 water/dust resistance, USB 3.0, a fingerprint reader, a headphone jack, an AMOLED display, expandable storage, awesome cameras...It was absolutely peak Samsung and the phone's only major flaw is the Micro Type B port.

You mean the micro USB 3.0 v1 which was backwards compatible with micro usb. That's right you could use the new fangled USB 3.0 port and cable and get those speeds as well as charging rate. Or....... Use a bog generic USB micro USB 2.0 cable and it would still fit on one side of the port and was still useable for USB 2.0 speeds and charging rates.

But I concede that it is one of the worst and most delicate ports ever stuck on something expected to have a plug jammed in it literally a thousand times.

I still use my s4 with LineageOS. It's on it's third battery but still going strong.

All I want from my next phone is a headphone jack, an OLED screen, and expandable memory. User-replaceable battery would be nice.

So anyway, this is a route I might seriously consider.

I have the app "Unified Remote" on my S4, which allows me to control my amp, tv's, my laptop (Which is just a glorified dvr for my yard cameras now), and even my computer.

It's a bit of a pain to set up, but works nicely once that's done.

Great ROM support too, going to stock 4.4 KitKat when it was new was a great upgrade from TouchWiz. Can go to up Android 11 at least iirc as well.

Wouldn’t this only work with a remote that’s already paired to the Roku, though?

The Roku TV remotes don't operate via Wi-Fi like remotes for the dedicated Roku boxes, instead they suck. The Roku TV ones are simple IR remotes.

On my Roku box I believe the remote requires pairing

My parents have a rough powered device

This isn't how they work

When I was in high school in the 90s, someone started selling little keychain universal remotes and kids would occasionally bring them to school to fuck with the TV while the teacher was trying to show a video.