Im pretty sure Samsung, Panasonic, LG and Toshiba require you to buy their own ones. I think Toshiba even has 2 different dongles so you would need to make sure that you get the right one for your set in that case. That said someone has tried a different dongle as listed above and had success so it might only be the big brands that stop you.
There are other options you can use that will work on every tv like WIFI to ethernet dongles. They are more expensive but they will work on anything with an Ethernet socket.
Fixed so far : 1 Home cinema system, 16 LCD Monitors, 4 LCD TV's
How to resize your pictures guide click HERE
Retiredcaps Ideal post example click HERE
For my Sony home theater I'm using a refurbished Linksys E2000 with DD-wrt software and I have set it up as a Bridge repeater(this way extends the signal too with less bandwith course). This way I can use it on 2.4 and 5Ghz bands, plus I have three more ports available for other devices, for example Directv receiver, media player, etc..
I might give it a try, I could always return eBay item if it doesn't work, just picked the tv up today so I'vegot to fix it first, I'll report back on my findings, it could save a few people some money
You would have to know the PID and VID values for the supported dongles before using a third party dongle, of which you again need to know the PID and VID values.
Switchable (not simultaneous) dual band routers with DD-WRT installed in bridge mode would make them more useful.
I still don't know why there are still new devices which do not support dual band dongles.
My first choice in quality Japanese electrolytics is Nippon Chemi-Con, which has been in business since 1931... the quality of electronics is dependent on the quality of the electrolytics.
If you go into Device Manager, then plug in the USB wireless dongle, click on the new device that appears, and then click on "Details".
My first choice in quality Japanese electrolytics is Nippon Chemi-Con, which has been in business since 1931... the quality of electronics is dependent on the quality of the electrolytics.
Most wireless dongles are built on standard cheap chips made by ic companies like realtek, marvel, silicon image. So there might be some that will work with name brand tv's just because they have the same chip as the official dongle uses.
The pid and vid are the product id and vendor id i believe, im not sure if you can fake those on a wireless adapter, by updating an eeprom or firmware on the device.
Fixed so far 12 lcd's , 1 plasmas, 5 monitors, 0 dlp's (plan to keep the dlps at 0). and 3 atx power supplies, and 2 motherboards.
i'd need an original dongle to see what that is tho, and i havent got one, so would have to trial an error it anyway, dont fancy shelling out $90(ebay) (£60 over here) on a Philips dongle so trying to save my self £50, i might just fix the tv and sell it on, not 100% yet, might give the cheap dongle a try first tho when its up and running
Comment