lovinthetelly
Member
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2011
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 69
- Points
- 18
- My Satellite Setup
-
Sky+HD, Wavefrontier T90 with 16 quad/octo LNBs receiving 42E/39E/33E/28E/26E/23E/19E/16E/13E/10E/9E/7E/5E/3E/1.9E/1W/5W/12.5W through 3 EMPCentuari 16-way DiSEqCs to TBS6522, Octagon SF8008 & Edision Primo IP S2.
90cm for 7W/15W; 1.2m CM in storage.
- My Location
- UK
I don't suppose many on here will be interested in such a restrictive device, but anyway...
The third generation of Freesat devices has been released. At present, only the '4K TV Box' is available - with 500GB, 1TB & 2TB PVRs to be released in the coming weeks. These boxes will sit alongside the non-smart Manhattan SX box, which provides basic access to satellite services only.
The 4K zapper box is currently available on Amazon, priced at £124.99. It is expected that CurrysPCWorld, Argos & John Lewis will also stock the new boxes - followed by some independent retailers. An important difference with G3 devices is that Freesat is directly involved in the supply chain; they now sell the products (manufactured by Arris) to retailers, rather than (say) Humax.
These boxes are not the revolution that some expected - they're using a slightly modified version of the G2 user interface, which dates from 2012. So in terms of end user interaction and day-to-day usage, these are virtually identical to the old G2 boxes from Humax.
There are some differences, though:
- 4K support - with UHD content currently available through Netflix and YouTube
- Wideband LNB support - allowing compatibility with SkyQ LNBs and the ability to record up to 4 programs at once on PVR models
- A standardised Freesat remote control that can also control your TV
- Dolby Atmos sound
- Improved internal specifications - to allow future development with streaming apps, light-encrypted content, app connectivity, IP-delivered channels etc.
The third generation of Freesat devices has been released. At present, only the '4K TV Box' is available - with 500GB, 1TB & 2TB PVRs to be released in the coming weeks. These boxes will sit alongside the non-smart Manhattan SX box, which provides basic access to satellite services only.
The 4K zapper box is currently available on Amazon, priced at £124.99. It is expected that CurrysPCWorld, Argos & John Lewis will also stock the new boxes - followed by some independent retailers. An important difference with G3 devices is that Freesat is directly involved in the supply chain; they now sell the products (manufactured by Arris) to retailers, rather than (say) Humax.
These boxes are not the revolution that some expected - they're using a slightly modified version of the G2 user interface, which dates from 2012. So in terms of end user interaction and day-to-day usage, these are virtually identical to the old G2 boxes from Humax.
There are some differences, though:
- 4K support - with UHD content currently available through Netflix and YouTube
- Wideband LNB support - allowing compatibility with SkyQ LNBs and the ability to record up to 4 programs at once on PVR models
- A standardised Freesat remote control that can also control your TV
- Dolby Atmos sound
- Improved internal specifications - to allow future development with streaming apps, light-encrypted content, app connectivity, IP-delivered channels etc.