Nicro

joined 11 months ago
[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 5 hours ago

From what I can see, this is still a Tizen based smart TV masquerading as a monitor, Apps and all.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 6 hours ago

When scaled to mass production, the SBCs become dirt cheap. Then they can subsidise with sponsored/preloaded content, ads and usage data.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 6 hours ago

I was eyeing Scepter, but I just saw that their stuff is made with exclusively US standards and EU power and broadcasting is different. Didn't notice that would matter.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 20 hours ago

Seen them recommended in dumb-tv articles. Will check them out.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 20 hours ago

I might resort to this. It's mainly just the e-waste potential that has me bothered. The OS will inevitable break after EOL, and the hardware becomes inoperable without the "hdmi-app". The computer parts are usually dirt cheap and eventually break themselves even on minimal use.

100
submitted 21 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) by Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de to c/privacy@lemmy.ml
 

The EMMC on my PC-TV finally broke down and I'd like to replace it with something that doesn't run an OS or will predictably fail with a countdown. But dumb TVs are hard to come by and monitors come at a premium at that size. I want to run a PC (DP/HDMI) and an SBC (HDMI) with it. I also have an S2 satellite cable, but that's secondary. I'd like to have ~43", 16:9, 4K but without an embedded smart-hub, ideally running of eeprom-firmware, or just anything independent of write-cycles. But I can't find any good options online. Are there companies for this. Comments and recommendations welcome.

Edit: I'm EU, hence the DVB-S2 cable. Scepter would be great, but doesn't run on EU power.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 9 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Afaik google-pay is prone to fail even with faked safetynet. Magisk can also fix safetynet, but I don't want to enable root-access. Kinda dumb that the way to fix overcritical security checks is to break security even more. :)

Thanks for the idea though.

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 6 days ago (5 children)

Custom roms with relocked bootloader only work on pixels by design. You'll have to live with an unlocked bootloader.

As for easy installs, Murena's e/os exists with support. But I can't vouch for their cloud ecosystem. Other than that, maybe an officially supported lineage device. You will lose safetynet on both unless you want to root.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de to c/privacy@lemmy.ml
 

Hey there,

Due to having an unlocked bootloader, I fail safetynet. So Google-Pay is locked out, even if I wanted to use it. I find cash or cards to inconvenient, since my dexterity is impaired.

So I looked into getting an nfc-token to pay with and found that my bank is partnered with Fidesmo. This would allow for mobile-pay without an extra party involved. They seem fine from what I found online and they do publish some client-code on Github, but I had never heard of them.

Does anyone have any info on them?

[–] Nicro@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 4 weeks ago

Interesting discussion, but many of the questions have pretty lame default answers. I have a Sony bravia from 2015 for reference.

  • The TVs that come with an OS instead of just firmware are smart-TVs in all aspects. Your cable TV or hdmi input is an app just like Netflix is, and is subject to a launcher. You can't make it dumb by disabling stuff.

  • You can mostly reject targeted ads and disable personalized data collection. But smart TVs are priced with ads included, so completely turning off everything will require unsupported modding.

  • cameras are only found in telepresence hardware, unless you want to be paranoid. Check the feature list. Microphones can be in the remotes of some TVs, but this will usually be advertised as a smart assistent if present.

  • I haven't seen any TV actively complain about missing wifi (except for during setup for updates)

  • unless you are tricking the TV into thinking it's online, any connection attempts/power usage would be a bug. Do note that smart-TV will by default have a standby-draw influenced by WoL or similar.

  • This is pure tinfoil-territory. No hotspot/carrier carries data without being payed for it. It's also not economical when telemetry can be sent over the customers home-wifi in 99% of cases. There is no gain in hiding sim-cards in every TV. Unless you are a person of interest and are sent a modified TV in that case.

Hope this helps.