this post was submitted on 15 Feb 2026
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My father considers buying an Android TV box. Initially, I thought that's a bad choice as a mini pc has much greater capabilities and control.

However, he does have a point that Android TV boxes are cheaper (~60) and work with tv cable which most mini PCs don't have a connector for.

What are your thoughts on this?

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[โ€“] stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca 2 points 14 hours ago

The whole TV streaming space is just super depressing. Even though I try to self host as much as I can, nothing I've found comes close to the experience of Android TV even with the ads (though you can replace the launcher to fix that problem).

[โ€“] gila@sopuli.xyz 3 points 19 hours ago

The downside of an android tv box/stock is that Google maintains your OS. An update may break your functionality. For me some issue with a firmware update stopped Kodi from launching properly. It's not without workarounds - I'm running a flow with the Automate app that clears cache on launch to resolve the issue. But it can be a pain in the ass and require tinkering.

On the other hand there's not much I've not been able to sort out remotely for family using scrcpy via Tailscale, support capability is good.

[โ€“] Majestic@lemmy.ml 3 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago)

If most of your content is self-provided (through whatever means) then a mini-PC may offer a decent experience (subject to certain limitations even there compared to hosting on one PC and streaming to a dedicated streaming device of decent quality which together cost significantly more).

Most commercial streaming services due to DRM will not work with a min-PC, at least not above 720p resolution and only through a browser interface which is not the greatest to try and navigate with a remote control. So if a significant amount of content is watched via streaming services I could not recommend a mini-PC by itself as a solution.

IMO with the info you've given I say get a decent streaming box. Some you can replace the Android default launcher on to remove ads or otherwise root (though beware these methods have been patched more and more so someone saying they did so successfully in 2024 does not mean you'll succeed with the 2025/26 model). There's also options like Apple TV, not $60 (twice that) but it comes with no ads by default and is pretty overpowered with a smooth experience if you already have an iPhone (you can use the phone as a remote). If you don't have an iPhone or other apple devices it's a toss up, ATV 4K is still a very nice device but you might want to go with the Android side of things.

[โ€“] monovergent@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago

I can attest that having full control over a mini PC feels great compared to Android TV, if you have rather niche media consumption habits. Someone in my family had below their TV a laptop hooked up to an external drive full of local media, a DVD drive, and a crappy Android TV box only ever used to play YouTube videos. Replaced it all with an old SFF PC, put GNOME with 175% scaling on it, with a mini wireless keyboard to control it.

But as others have commented, a Linux setup falls apart as soon as you want to watch the mainstream streaming services.

If you are not 100% pirating your content I would not suggest a linux setup.

I'm pretty sure they have jellyfin apps on Android tv. I have a cheap projector that is running, I believe, Android tv and I use jellyfin on it.

[โ€“] Andrzej3K@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

So the main problem with a Linux TV box these days is that you can't get a decent experience with legit streaming services thanks to hardware DRM. So the best thing to do really is to have a Linux server (any mini PC will do), and to stream from that to the Android TV box via Jellyfin. I would recommend using Proxmox, as you can have Jellyfin, your downloaders, a nextcloud instance if you like, all in their own containers with a nice web UI to manage them.

[โ€“] VoxAliorum@lemmy.ml 2 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

I don't really understand. I use Linux and have no problem with Netflix. Not sure how it goes with other streaming services.

[โ€“] hexagonwin@lemmy.today 1 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

afaik you can't get high resolution or something. i think it can be partially mitigated by running google chrome instead of firefox or (open source) chromium but i never attempted these.

[โ€“] Andrzej3K@hexbear.net 0 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

There was a brief golden age when all these services had web APIs so you could plumb them all into Kodi and have a unified experience. But yeah, these days you have to use a browser, watch in 1080, and find a way to make that into a user friendly, remote control experience. Also bear in mind that the streaming provider will change things just to fuck with you.

Alternatively, while Android TV is far from perfect, you do get the official streaming apps in their official form, and you can stream your pirated stuff on the side. I think it makes sense to separate downloading from your tv box anyway. Alternatively, I believe there are pretty good torrent streaming options these days that may be worth looking at.

[โ€“] hexagonwin@lemmy.today 1 points 10 hours ago

android tv might indeed be good. something like nvidia shield tv that is officially google certified for those drm bs...

afaik those torrent streaming stuff are based on leeching, i believe having a proper seedbox+jellyfin is a much better choice

[โ€“] shrek_is_love@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

For context: I personally use a 2015 Intel MacBook running Linux connected to my tv, and use a small wireless keyboard and trackball to control it from the couch. I'm actually planning on checking out KDE Connect after seeing it on https://hexbear.net/post/7662659

I've been researching some simpler options for my own parents since they use Roku which is somewhat limited and has ads. But a mini PC would be too complex for them. They need something with a simple remote and automatic updates. I think an Android box would make sense for their use case. I plan on installing something like SmartTube, PipePipe, or Tubular on it.

If your dad thinks he would like to do something like web browsing, email checking, or gaming on the tv, a mini PC is probably gonna do it better than Android TV.

[โ€“] VoxAliorum@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

KDE Connect works great. I already use it occasionally. My parents definitely need a keyboard free solution, but that is no issue with kde connect..

[โ€“] Majestic@lemmy.ml 1 points 21 hours ago

There are various bluetooth remotes that can be paired with computers, as well as air mice with remote-like features. There are also IR receiver USB dongles you can buy which allow you to use an IR remote with them with some 3rd party software installation and configuring. (FLIRC for one makes one of those).