Who has time to watch all this TV? I guess that is a hobby?
Who has time to watch all this TV? I guess that is a hobby?
I get that but I dont think that is what the OP is talking about nor the majority of the posts I am reading.YT has an incredibly high amount of educational content. If you have a hobby that is normal, there will be content there to help/guide/inspire you with it.
My line of work requires constant education, learning new skills and technology. If you don't, you don't get hired anymore. YT has lots of videos for this. I've spent many days of my life all added up, learning on YT.
I get that but I dont think that is what the OP is talking about nor the majority of the posts I am reading.
I watch you tube videos for certain things when I need a reference for something but not for TV type programming. These posts seem to be not about learning and if you read the OP it to me doesnt seem like anything other then TV type programming.
Do you pay for no ads? I can see that maybe as a learning environment but do you also for enjoyment watch You Tube instead of more traditional Roku type player apps?
For entertainment I would not use anything related to google and completely disagree with Alphabet's corporate model. (aka google)
That isn't what I said.If that is all you see on YouTube...
If it looks like click bait it is ignored except from certain channels. Sure there is tons of bad stuff on YouTube, If you continually avoid the junk it quits coming up IME.That isn't what I said.
To not acknowledge that there is an absurd amount of crap mixed in with decent YouTube programming is being disingenuous.
On Android devices you can use Newpipe. It's a YouTube client without the ads.Ad blockers work fine on AdTube on the PC but not on mobile devices. Someone suggested Opera but Opera fir mobile is built on the Apple Web Kit and isn't really Opera. Ad blockers seem to have little or no effect on ads on Opera for mobile.
I'll have to check that out, thanks!On Android devices you can use Newpipe. It's a YouTube client without the ads.
With YouTube Premium movies are enjoyable again. I have watched 10 or so movies in the last year. Most recently the original Patton.I get what you're saying but it's not all that black and white for me. I don't watch movies on YT, I think that's all paid content anyway. But what about truck reviews, towing reviews etc., I find that both educational if I'm researching a truck, and also entertainment when I'm watching a truck I'll never purchase (like a 1 ton diesel towing review).
Some of that content you just don't get anywhere else.
No I don't. You have a point. I figured it was gmail scarfing up everything.DO you log out of Facebook when you are done with it or do you just close the browser?
Not sure if it matters but I log out of everything including BITOG. For all you know the info came from this site.
With difficulty. You would need to be savvy enough to know how to redirect ad requests to Roku's hard-coded DNS servers through a device running on your network that sends the ad requests nowhere. You need the know-how and a fancy home router that can do this, of which I have neither.Ok how about this
YouTube through a Roku on a TV monitor. How to block those ads?
You need to purchase an Android-based box like this and install SmartTube.Ok how about this
YouTube through a Roku on a TV monitor. How to block those ads?
All routers are capable of defining the DNS servers that are used by everything on the network. As long as you are not using an ISP supplied router this is not difficult to set-up, just enter the DNS server IP addresses that you want to use. There are free ad-blocking DNS servers available like AdGuard DNS, but I don't know if this technique will work on Roku and I don't know if this will counteract the YouTube ads.With difficulty. You would need to be savvy enough to know how to redirect ad requests to Roku's hard-coded DNS servers through a device running on your network that sends the ad requests nowhere. You need the know-how and a fancy home router that can do this, of which I have neither.
There are other ways with resetting the Roku and using VPN tricks of which I'm not familiar.
In this case, probably just pay for YouTube.
Roku devices get IP and default gateway info from your network but they use their own hardcoded DNS servers to keep people from doing exactly this.All routers are capable of defining the DNS servers that are used by everything on the network. As long as you are not using an ISP supplied router this is not difficult to set-up, just enter the DNS server IP addresses that you want to use. There are free ad-blocking DNS servers available like AdGuard DNS, but I don't know if this technique will work on Roku and I don't know if this will counteract the YouTube ads.
https://adguard-dns.io/en/public-dns.html
Cast it from your phone to your TV if you have that capability.Ok how about this
YouTube through a Roku on a TV monitor. How to block those ads?
Everything on the Internet should be for free. Creators shouldn't get paid (by ads)) and just support the "common cause" for those of us that have nothing better to do!
I shouldn't have to put up with adds on my 130 (whew) channels!
Unbelievable.....................
SlowCast it from your phone to your TV is you have that capability.
Better spend at least $1200 on a new phone, lol.Slow