username0475
Regular Contributor
yes same for both: 192.168.50.1Just double check the TV is now obtaining the same IP for both gateway and DNS.
Sent from my MI 5 using Tapatalk
yes same for both: 192.168.50.1Just double check the TV is now obtaining the same IP for both gateway and DNS.
Sent from my MI 5 using Tapatalk
Try a different switch port.
Thanks for your input.Well I'm out of ideas. To be honest there's nothing to suggest there's a problem with your router (or network generally), everything points to it being a TV issue. I think you'll have to contact Panasonic, or ask around in their TV forums.
Shame that a $1500 TV only 5 years old is extinct already.
At least Chromecast is working on it & hopefuly I can stream over 5Ghz via Plex.
It's not extinct - but the Smart "stuff" to some degree is a victim of technology moving forward...
Yeah, these dongle's & STB's made the TV manufacturers lazy as they had no desire to keep up with those software updates when all they had to do was play around with panels g color schemes .It's not extinct - but the Smart "stuff" to some degree is a victim of technology moving forward...
STB's like the Chromecast, AppleTV, Roku, and the myriad of Android TV boxes from China go a long way...
Would Plex be simple enough?Have you tried installing a simple DLNA server on a PC as a test and see if the tv can see it?
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If you're asking if Plex is easy to set up, it's no harder than a DLNA server. Plex actually has it's own built in DLNA implementation that you can either choose to enable or disable.Would Plex be simple enough?
It couldn't see it .
The best option for me has always been some random "Kodi box" or Android TV box. They're so cheap and so powerful, it really doesn't matter that they might not be supported long term.
If you're asking if Plex is easy to set up, it's no harder than a DLNA server. Plex actually has it's own built in DLNA implementation that you can either choose to enable or disable.
I just don't like how the Plex client on certain platforms relies on transcoding despite the platforms supporting the required codecs. Also the fact that subtitles need to be muxed in on the fly or burned in before hand kind of sucks.
I have other issues (which you might run into) with the Plex ecosystem but if it's working and you're happy, that's all that matters
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Yeah ... Plex for me is a last resort only option. I've had too many WTF moments with it.Well you hit it on the money here.
Got Plex to cast my PC's Chrome browser screen to the CC I just hooked up with the ethernet in the OP.
But it won't stream any video. Just hangs there as loading.
My preliminary research shows turning on UPnP - ugh!
Yeah ... Plex for me is a last resort only option. I've had too many WTF moments with it.
I'd still recommend trying Kodi, with DLNA or a windows/samba share. It's completely free. Once you've added your library to Kodi and set it up to your liking, it's hard to use anything else. I really wish the PS4 had Kodi.
I have it on an Android box in bedroom, PC in lounge, mobile phone and tablet. Because you don't need a server to use Kodi, the episode info unfortunately is stored locally. To counter this all my Kodi instances are connected to trakt.tv and the watched episodes are synced across all devices.
Kodi is controller and remote friendly but not so much keyboard and mouse. Highly recommend connecting some kind of BT gamepad, like the PS4 controller.
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Hah, no worries. Yeah that's why right at the start I suggested testing with multiple devices/clients, it helps isolate the problem to the server or the network.Well looks like it was a Firewall configuration issue in my Antivirus software.
Setup a specific rule in the firewall to open up a port for Plex & specific IP address for the TV & the casting to Chromecast works!
May try to unhook the CC & hook the ethernet back into the TV & see if I can get DNLA to work.
I'm surprised I never thought about the Firewall LOL! Thanks for all the suggestions!
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