Rocker Ute
12-01-2016, 03:47 PM
If we already have this, please feel free to merge, but I couldn't find it. I think we should have a cool tech thread where we can talk about cool tech that we've come across or recommendations.
I've got three items that I've purchased or used in the past year that I think are worth posting about:
1. Amazon Echo or Echo Dot - Someone gave me the Echo, I've since bought two more Echo Dots for other parts of the house. The past little while I've been automating things in our house from lights to our thermostat, etc. This was a good addition. We keep it in our kitchen, it plays music, makes grocery lists, answers questions, works as a timer and is always learning new cool stuff. I'm surprised at both how well it understands and also how good the sound is on the Echo. The Echo Dot really makes more sense financially, just hook it into your stereo system, and truthfully if you had it on your desk the sound is plenty good.
You can also order stuff from Amazon on it and it will ship right to you. They are promoting this heavily and so they do some pretty spectacular deals on it. I just got a 40" LED TV by ordering it through Echo for $100. At that price I don't really care if it isn't that good, will be perfect for the remaining CRT in our home (yeah I know). Anyway highly recommend.
2. Circle Go by Disney - So, like all scared parents, figuring out tech is always a challenge. We came across Circle Go by Disney about 6 months ago. I've used it long enough to tell you the pros and cons.
First, filtering simply doesn't work. It can't keep up and never will. Software that monitors usage and provides accountability is really the only thing that works. So knowing that someone can easily review your history is key. With our kids we believe in accountability anyway, but this makes it easy for anyone to review. You can also limit usage, so if you are wanting a kid to do his homework, you can shut off internet to their phone etc (more on phones in a minute).
The big problem with a lot of these systems is they aren't easy for the average user to set up. This setup couldn't be easier. I had the whole thing set up and filters and rules set up for everyone in my house in 15 minutes. This system basically works like a man-in-the-middle hack on your network. What you do is plug it in, you connect your phone to it like a wireless network. Next you identify your normal wireless network, provide the password and you are almost good to go. After that, set up people on your network and overarching rules and you are done.
Of course, a network is only as good as the people connected to it, and so a kid on his phone can easily drop the wifi and connect through their phone's data plan. Circle Go, for $10/mo for up to 10 devices sets up a VPN on your phone so whether you are on your data plan or on any wifi, it is still enforcing the rules. VPNs are easy enough to turn off, but if someone does you get notification it has been shut off immediately
It has it issues and shortcoming but is improving. But if the criteria is you want to be able to monitor usage, have some basic filtering rules and have it be easy to set up and manage, this it it. $99 on Amazon.
3. VidAngel - Before you ignore this as a moral crusade, it isn't. Sure it is nice to filter a film you are watching with your kids, but really the great thing about VidAngel is how easy it is to use and how cheap it is to get current movies. That is what I use it for mostly. You can load it as an app for AppleTV, Roku and Fire TV. The way it works is you buy a movie for $20 (you actually buy a physical copy of it that they warehouse for you and stream to you). You watch the video and then sell it back for $1 (standard definition) or $2 (high def) less for each day you use it. So watch a HD movie, sell it back within 24 hours and you have an $18 credit. Next movie you buy for an additional $2, etc. It streams great, so it is like having a redbox without having to leave the house. Perfect.
Potential downside, they do require you to filter something, but you can even pick something like closing credits or minimal stuff. With the filtering it is pretty slick, you can go and filter out anything you want or don't want. Never want to hear the f-bomb, filter it out. If you don't want to see Snoopy lick Lucy on the Charlie Brown Halloween movie, filter that out. No bleeping or black screen, it either goes silent or rather seamlessly jumps to the next thing.
But like I said, I mainly like it for the cheap and easy movies.
Right now Hollywood is suing them, I'm hoping they win. They claim that they are complying with the law because you own a physical copy of the movie and can do with it as you please in private use. Hollywood thinks otherwise. Frankly, if I want to mute a swear word or fast forward through some violent scene I can do it now, so why not automate it. Hollywood is stupid. Plus their videos are pretty funny:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9TZRTkRgAFc&feature=youtu.be
Any cool tech you guys have come across that I should check out?
I've got three items that I've purchased or used in the past year that I think are worth posting about:
1. Amazon Echo or Echo Dot - Someone gave me the Echo, I've since bought two more Echo Dots for other parts of the house. The past little while I've been automating things in our house from lights to our thermostat, etc. This was a good addition. We keep it in our kitchen, it plays music, makes grocery lists, answers questions, works as a timer and is always learning new cool stuff. I'm surprised at both how well it understands and also how good the sound is on the Echo. The Echo Dot really makes more sense financially, just hook it into your stereo system, and truthfully if you had it on your desk the sound is plenty good.
You can also order stuff from Amazon on it and it will ship right to you. They are promoting this heavily and so they do some pretty spectacular deals on it. I just got a 40" LED TV by ordering it through Echo for $100. At that price I don't really care if it isn't that good, will be perfect for the remaining CRT in our home (yeah I know). Anyway highly recommend.
2. Circle Go by Disney - So, like all scared parents, figuring out tech is always a challenge. We came across Circle Go by Disney about 6 months ago. I've used it long enough to tell you the pros and cons.
First, filtering simply doesn't work. It can't keep up and never will. Software that monitors usage and provides accountability is really the only thing that works. So knowing that someone can easily review your history is key. With our kids we believe in accountability anyway, but this makes it easy for anyone to review. You can also limit usage, so if you are wanting a kid to do his homework, you can shut off internet to their phone etc (more on phones in a minute).
The big problem with a lot of these systems is they aren't easy for the average user to set up. This setup couldn't be easier. I had the whole thing set up and filters and rules set up for everyone in my house in 15 minutes. This system basically works like a man-in-the-middle hack on your network. What you do is plug it in, you connect your phone to it like a wireless network. Next you identify your normal wireless network, provide the password and you are almost good to go. After that, set up people on your network and overarching rules and you are done.
Of course, a network is only as good as the people connected to it, and so a kid on his phone can easily drop the wifi and connect through their phone's data plan. Circle Go, for $10/mo for up to 10 devices sets up a VPN on your phone so whether you are on your data plan or on any wifi, it is still enforcing the rules. VPNs are easy enough to turn off, but if someone does you get notification it has been shut off immediately
It has it issues and shortcoming but is improving. But if the criteria is you want to be able to monitor usage, have some basic filtering rules and have it be easy to set up and manage, this it it. $99 on Amazon.
3. VidAngel - Before you ignore this as a moral crusade, it isn't. Sure it is nice to filter a film you are watching with your kids, but really the great thing about VidAngel is how easy it is to use and how cheap it is to get current movies. That is what I use it for mostly. You can load it as an app for AppleTV, Roku and Fire TV. The way it works is you buy a movie for $20 (you actually buy a physical copy of it that they warehouse for you and stream to you). You watch the video and then sell it back for $1 (standard definition) or $2 (high def) less for each day you use it. So watch a HD movie, sell it back within 24 hours and you have an $18 credit. Next movie you buy for an additional $2, etc. It streams great, so it is like having a redbox without having to leave the house. Perfect.
Potential downside, they do require you to filter something, but you can even pick something like closing credits or minimal stuff. With the filtering it is pretty slick, you can go and filter out anything you want or don't want. Never want to hear the f-bomb, filter it out. If you don't want to see Snoopy lick Lucy on the Charlie Brown Halloween movie, filter that out. No bleeping or black screen, it either goes silent or rather seamlessly jumps to the next thing.
But like I said, I mainly like it for the cheap and easy movies.
Right now Hollywood is suing them, I'm hoping they win. They claim that they are complying with the law because you own a physical copy of the movie and can do with it as you please in private use. Hollywood thinks otherwise. Frankly, if I want to mute a swear word or fast forward through some violent scene I can do it now, so why not automate it. Hollywood is stupid. Plus their videos are pretty funny:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9TZRTkRgAFc&feature=youtu.be
Any cool tech you guys have come across that I should check out?