Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The iOS 7 betas limited FaceTime Audio to calls placed on a Wi-Fi network (the same original limitation of the video version of FaceTime), but the final release has removed that restriction to allow it to work over 3G and LTE data connections, as is the case with most carriers and plans about FaceTime with video.
A software update for Apple TV devices coming this fall can turn customers’ big-screen TVs into videconferencing hubs with the addition of Apple’s FaceTime, and later Zoom and Webex. The tvOS ...
For TV sets in the US, Argentina, Australia, Canada, the UK and elsewhere. [46] Roku Roku OS For Roku TV sets. Also for Roku TV Streaming Sticks and Players. [47] Samsung: Tizen OS for TV: For newer TV sets. Samsung Smart TV (Orsay OS [64]) Former solution for TV sets and connected Blu-ray players. Now replaced by Tizen OS. [65] Sansui Roku OS
The Wi-Fi Alliance suggested that Miracast could also be used by a set-top box wanting to stream content to a TV or tablet. Both devices (the sender and the receiver) need to be Miracast certified for the technology to work.
FaceTime is a videotelephony app available on supported iOS devices running iOS 4 and later which allows for video calls between participants using any camera of their device. FaceTime Audio, an audio-only version, is available on any iOS device that supports iOS 7 or newer. [ 18 ]
PRIVATE WiFi will automatically activate and connect to an encrypted server whenever you access the internet. If you change this default setting, you can activate PRIVATE WiFi at any time clicking on the status icon ( PC: right-click the icon in the Taskbar at the bottom right of your screen, Mac: click the Menu Bar icon at the top right of ...
The term set-back box (SBB) is used in the digital TV industry to describe a piece of consumer hardware that enables them to access both linear broadcast and internet-based video content, plus a range of interactive services like electronic program guides, pay-per-view, and video on demand as well as internet browsing, and view them on a large screen television set.
The first triple-play deployment was by the US operator Cox Communications in 1997, delivered via a Hybrid fiber-coaxial network using digital and analog TV set top boxes, digital telephony devices from Arris International, and a cable modem system from Motorola.