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:marseysuicide: just what I needed to hear today

How long will it be until they completely kill the backend for existing devices? All I see in the article is stuff about "continued """safety""" and security updates" but I give it a year tops. I'm still using an Ultra from 2016 with the ethernet port. I guess the lesson is the only safe way to do smart home products is to roll them yourself on a raspberry pi.

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2016 is a pretty good run. I have an android box that still works from back then, but those streaming apps get slow and running those pirate streaming apps can be demanding. So makes sense to upgrade. In terms of non-amazon chinese android TV boxes I prefer Firestick to Google.

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Sure, it's a nice long run for hardware, especially google hardware, but I will no longer have the ability to buy an updated chromecast that does the exact same functions as my existing one without additional bloat. I'm considering buying the last model released to ensure as long of a support window as possible.

Part of the whole magic of the chromecast was that it DIDN'T run apps at all, it was more or less strictly a mirror controlled by the phone. Processing on the device was limited to connecting to the stream server and nothing else. It didn't even have an onboard menu or settings app; there simply were no onboard "apps". As bloated as everything is today, I don't think the process of connecting to netflix's server and playing their streams has grown much in its compute requirements. It was/is beautifully simple, and performance is pretty much the same as it was when it launched.

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