The quoted text above is taken from the Logitech Harmony Remote website and it speaks the truth. Back when I was slightly more foolish than I am today, I set up my parents with a nice entertainment system in their bedroom. I thought they would enjoy watching movies with surround sound and all the rest of it. What I did not take into account was the fact that they have difficulty with electronics. What is so intuitive to me, can be totally alien and difficult to them.
As a consequence I would get phone calls from my parents everytime they wanted to watch a DVD in their fancy new set up. This lasted a couple of months before I dropped $100 on the solution. I bought them a Harmony 659 remote control. Although this particular remote is now outdated, it still performs. The brilliance of the Harmony remotes is that they are all programmed through a webpage which makes it really simple. You don't have to enter number codes to get it to control different devices, you just plug the remote into a mini-usb jack and tell it what equipment you have. Then you tell it how you want the equipment to run.
For example, for my parents, I asked the remote to turn on their receiver, set it to CD/DVD input, turn on the DVD, eject the DVD disk drawer, turn on the TV, set the TV to Video 1 and mute the TV speakers. So now, my parents press "Watch a Movie" and all of the above happens. They put the DVD in, close the tray and they're in business. It has made my life a lot easier.
These are expensive remote controls, so don't expect to pay $20 like you did for that RCA universal remote. But I bet you only ever got that RCA to control your TV
If you want to see the difference between the remotes, I recommend this thread.
This is the second time that I've posted about a Logitech product, but I bought both products before Logitech owned the original manufacturer (Harmony and Slim Devices). Interesting. I don't own any shares of Logitech in case you're wondering. But I'm thinking I like their acquisition strategy.
No comments:
Post a Comment