Walmart’s onn. full HD streaming device: Still not thick, just don’t call it a stick

Inconsistent generational naming only leads to confusion, and then there’s that seemingly unconventional DRAM capacity… The post Walmart’s onn. full HD streaming device: Still not thick, just don’t call it a stick appeared first on EDN.

Walmart’s onn. full HD streaming device: Still not thick, just don’t call it a stick






A month back, I tore down Walmart’s onn. 4K Streaming Box, the Google TV-based successor to the company’s initial Android TV-based UHD Streaming Device that I’d dissected mid-last year. And as promised in last month’s coverage, this time I’ll be taking a look at the guts of its “stick” form factor sibling, the Google TV-based Full HD Streaming Device, the successor to the Android TV-based FHD streaming stick predecessor that went “under the knife” last December.

Device, stick, or box?

Read through those previous two sentences again and you might catch the meaning behind the “just don’t call it a stick” bit in this writeup’s title; similarly, you might get why last month I wrote:

Also, it’s now called a “box”, versus a “device”. Hold that latter thought until next month…

The word “device” seems to have inconsistent form factor association within Walmart. In the first-generation onn. product line, it referred to the “box”, with the rectangular form factor explicitly called a “stick”. This time around, the “stick” is the “device”, with the square form factor referred to as a “box” instead. Then again, as I mentioned last month, the first generation “box’s” UHD maximum output resolution is now instead referred to as “4K”, and similarly, the “stick” form factor has transitioned from “2K FHD” to “Full HD” in the product name, so…                                                            <div class= Read Original