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Is it OK to expect Android Oreo on 2017 Sony Android TVs?
Do you know if those USB-ports on xf9005 are USB2 or USB3, or does that matter?
For inst. TP-LINK USB 3.0 Ethernet adapter UE300 is very cheap and recommended adapter.
https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Foldable-Gigabit-Ethernet-Compatible/dp/B00YUU3KC6
Usb 2 or 3 should work its the gigabit Lan adaptor that matters
The adaptor I have is more bulky as its a hub as well, but on another thread someone is saying they've not had success with other adaptors.
The one I have is an anker adaptor via amazon - apologies as not sure the link is working.
The 2 USB ports on the side of the xf9005 are usb 2.0 and the one on the rear is usb 3.0 (judging by the blue connection)
I have ordered one of the Anker usb ethernet adaptors (refurbished is £14.39 on amazon today) so will see if it works - have 350Mb broadband and 1Gb netgear ethernet bridge with cat 6 cables connecting my devices
Hopefully this will work
Good that you found out a solution but more than 100mbps are quite never used in streaming and for sure by no streaming service (like Amazon prime or Netflix). Quite no tv on the market has a gigabit network interface and it doesn't help to compare the prices for a pc network card since tv have specific soc that have to have onboard the interface.
@rooobb agreed re netflix etc. the 100 lan port should be more than enough. But some people want to stream high bit rate files from their local network and that can require around 100Mbps and therefore struggle with the required speed
Interestingly the wired LAN port speedtests on netflix and the fibre app only got to 30 or 40 Mbps, which is quite close to the 25 required by netflix, and I think some higher frame rate files on YouTube can be 40Mbps.
I've seen similar discussions on the use of usb adaptors with gigabit Lan connectors for other devices like 4k chromecast and 4k firestick where the manufacturers wired lan adaptor only has 100 NIC. For those devices it's a different form factor but similar requirement for wired high bit rate local streaming
@Tonycv51 I had a similar discussion with @Kuschelmonschter some times ago and we tested that, under normal condition, the ethernet port can go to the physical cap of 100 mbps without problems (youtube can have streaming as high as 60mbps and can handle it even if with some issue with the interface - not the streaming itself - on 4k 60fps HDR video).
Keeping in mind that an UHD BD can manage max 128 mbps by spec definition (that the tv cannot handle of course) a normally compressed rip normally is below the Ethernet limit. Nonetheless I agree it should be better if a gigabit port was available.
Sadly I'm not sure this is working as turned on the TV this afternoon and it's now showing ethernet is not connected.
The adaptor is still flashing on the lights but the connection itself isn't working.
Does anyone in the UK know if this update adds the BritBox app?
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