M
micky
Guest
Regarding remote controls that can learn, many say \"can ONLY learn from
IR original remote which is working well, please make sure that your
original remote is an IR remote control and it is working well before
place an order.\"
Of course it has to be IR and of course it would help a lot if it worked
all the time, but why does it have to be an original remote, and not a
universal?
They learn by shining the output of the first remote into the new
remote.
In one case, I have a universal remote that has been assigned to my
model device. It works fine. How could it be so different from the
original remote that a learning remote could not learn from it?
Plainly it uses the same frequency or encoding or it woudln\'t work.
I know they have \"regions\" for DVD\'s so by electonic/programming means
you cannot play a DVD in the wrong region, so they could if they wanted
have an accompanying code that differentiates an original remote from a
universal remote, but why would they go to such trouble?
And who would implement it? Do the makers of original remotes accept
that there are universal remotes** but want to make them slightly less
valuable by not letting a learning remote learn from them?
Or would the makers of universal remotes or learning remotes put some
limitation on them? Why? I don\'t see how it could increase sales.
And aren\'t they all made by the same companies anyhow?
**Don\'t they provide the codes so that universal remotes know the
frequencies for all the various commands?
IR original remote which is working well, please make sure that your
original remote is an IR remote control and it is working well before
place an order.\"
Of course it has to be IR and of course it would help a lot if it worked
all the time, but why does it have to be an original remote, and not a
universal?
They learn by shining the output of the first remote into the new
remote.
In one case, I have a universal remote that has been assigned to my
model device. It works fine. How could it be so different from the
original remote that a learning remote could not learn from it?
Plainly it uses the same frequency or encoding or it woudln\'t work.
I know they have \"regions\" for DVD\'s so by electonic/programming means
you cannot play a DVD in the wrong region, so they could if they wanted
have an accompanying code that differentiates an original remote from a
universal remote, but why would they go to such trouble?
And who would implement it? Do the makers of original remotes accept
that there are universal remotes** but want to make them slightly less
valuable by not letting a learning remote learn from them?
Or would the makers of universal remotes or learning remotes put some
limitation on them? Why? I don\'t see how it could increase sales.
And aren\'t they all made by the same companies anyhow?
**Don\'t they provide the codes so that universal remotes know the
frequencies for all the various commands?