bobawesome
Member
Finally! Now for that useless button...
What. This was like, the best part of the Gamepad.
Finally! Now for that useless button...
Dat icon hate, you know you can stuff it in a folder with all the other useless crap and toss it on the furthermost screen...
What. This was like, the best part of the Gamepad.
Too bad... the fact they were going down this Avenue really excited me at launch but they dropped the ball so hard. The service was terrible, you couldn't control your home theatre with the wii mote and the loading times made it virtually unusable.
Just meant the red TVii one, not the physical button. That one is pretty rad (assuming you don't have a receiver. If you have a receiver it is slightly less rad).
That said, the actual concept of the service is good but the implementation was off. I wouldn't mind having a unified place to search/watch all content from Hulu, Amazon Prime video, Netflix, and other video sites but TVii wasn't it. It would even fail to search for content that I knew was available and when it wasn't failing it was chugging along at a miserable pace.
I'm actually happy about this. The useless TVii icon on the HOME Menu will finally be gone.
Now, about that button on the gamepad...
I still miss Everybody Votes.
God, I really was into Everybody Votes channel way harder than I ever expected to be back in the day.
based on this thread, I love how consumer confusion about the Wii U goes as deep as the TV remote functions
I just got a notification on the Wii U mentioning the icon will be removed with a firmware update in August.
What did this actually do?
This was as interesting idea, hampered by the execution. It was slow to boot, slow to use, and data was incomplete.
Still, kudos for the try, even if it felt like an Alpha level product.
The service was built heavily upon third party functionality (see the TV tag feature, live sports, etc)
It could very well be that the company that provided this functionality is shutting down essentially forcing Nintendo's hand (similar to how Gamespy shutting down forced Nintendo WiFi Connection to end).
The reliance on a third party is also the same reason it never launched in many places - there was simply no equivalent service to use in many countries.
Upon a little further investigation, my theory may be correct.
i.TV, the company that provided the functionality, announced they were ending TVtag functionality and shut down their iOS, Android, and Amazon apps earlier this year.
https://gigaom.com/2014/12/19/getglue-successor-tvtag-is-shutting-down/
https://imgur.com/gallery/FsLkhMB
If you go to their website (http://i.tv/) which hasn't been updated, links to the apps either bring you to a not found page or to a page full of reviews the service no longer works.
I'm surprised that Nintendo Video is still up.
Found this wonderful comment over at Ars Technica:
Sounds like something that wasn't under Nintendo's control, then.
Repurpose the physical button for a screenshot button. Nintendo, do it.
Now, about that button on the gamepad...
You know Nintendo screwed this up when people get the Nintendo TVii software confused with a physical button on their controller.So do we get a new WiiU gamepad with the useless button removed?
Will they give us the ability to disable the button on the controller that keeps you from turning on the console for 10 seconds every time you hit it by accident? I don't even know how many times I've blindly gone to turn on the console only to hit it.
Will they give us the ability to disable the button on the controller that keeps you from turning on the console for 10 seconds every time you hit it by accident? I don't even know how many times I've blindly gone to turn on the console only to hit it.
So, you're mad about he button that turns on the console as you're attempting to turn on the console?
Wait, so people don't have an idea what the tv button on the gamepad does?
Anecdote: I don't even know where my tv's original remote is nowadays. All thanks to that button.
When these services shut down, one at a time, it feels like Nintendo winding down the party. Turn on a Wii and see how many of the apps still work. It's like a ghost town.
I know, TiiVIi or however they format it never worked particularly well, but I don't like the idea of there being *one less* proprietary app on the device, especially one that has a dedicated button. It feels like the first domino.
You know Nintendo screwed this up when people get the Nintendo TVii software confused with a physical button on their controller.
But some of them root for its removal in this very thread, no?I think it's more that people don't care what the TV button does on the gamepad.
But some of them root for its removal in this very thread, no?
When these services shut down, one at a time, it feels like Nintendo winding down the party. Turn on a Wii and see how many of the apps still work. It's like a ghost town.
I know, TiiVIi or however they format it never worked particularly well, but I don't like the idea of there being *one less* proprietary app on the device, especially one that has a dedicated button. It feels like the first domino.
I forgot this was a thing. I'm in Mexico so Im not even sure it was available for me in the first place so yeah, never used it even once.
Won't be missed.