Howdo I stop the random music videos and shows Auto playing on the home screen for Samsung smart TVs. I just got the Samsung Q60R and every time I turn the TV on or switch apps I have to hear random music videos play.
To disable, I pressed on the home button on the remote, then arrow-ed over to the Samsung TV app icon, then pressed the down direction, which gave me "remove" and "disable" options. Selecting disable did the trick.
Now it's trying to autoplay the Live TV app, which has nothing hooked up. I'd imagine you could get a similar result to me with some experimentation, landing on an app that doesn't have anything to autoplay, which would at least get the TV to shut up.
After about a year of using our Smart Art TV the best thing we figured against the auto play function is to step out of the channel you had just watched before you turn it off. That way, the TV will turn on the channel you have been on last. If you leave it on Netflix when you turn it off it will turn back on Netflix and so on. This is better than have random TV channels playing with unrated and unwanted content.
I just installed a 43 Inc tv and came across same issue. I simply locked all channels on Samsung plus app. It worked. Now there is just a colour background on home screen. No auto annoying playing videos.
I activated the parental control on every channel installed on the TV by default. Since we usually don't watch 'em, it doesn't really bother us ; and fact is, the TV is now quiet when we turn it on ! No preview, no sound, yay !
Just want to let Samsung know this is still a serious problem. Just set up a new TU7000 65". In a conference room. In a business. For Zoom calls etc. And the first thing that shows up on the screen is Hell's Kitchen with a bunch of angry people yelling at each other, then while I'm trying to configure settings, Vevo Punk Rock hour with some guy walking around wearing a noose.
This is not a welcoming or pleasant experience. It's a world apart from the Apple TV setup. People generally want to watch their own, selected content, and have the start menu be neutral and unobtrusive, not have your free TV channels pushed on us.
I've now got it on "soothing outdoor campfire ", on channel 4011. There are still ads sometimes (I don't know the intervals), but by the time I've selected what I want to watch, I most likely will miss them.
Specifically I'd like to adjust the temperature control dial by 1 degree (or on click on the dial) after x amount of time. The temperature only needs to adjust in 1 degree increments and would allow me to program the ramp I need.
Looking into this subject I have found tutorials on "hacking buttons" in which I've seen solutions that would work if only the hotplate used a simple on/off switch. This hotplate uses what looks like a rotary encoder. This rotary encoder have very light bumps / clicks when you rotate it and will rotate continuously, the rotary encoder also has a switch that tells the program to use the value that the encoder has been set to.
There are 4 leads to the encoder I think, so I guess it's a standard quadrature encoder so it can tell which way the knob is being turned. For example, the two switches might be commoned and connected to ground at one end and the other ends brought out with the ground - so 3 leads. Then the "axial" switch needs another lead, making 4 in all. Then each active lead would have a pullup in the internal controller.
If this interpretation is correct you could simply disconnect the cable from the switch and have a suitable pin header connected to your Arduino where you generate sequences to emulate the switch operation. Lots of details to think about, like are the switches commoned to the positive rail or negative? What's the logic level? And most importantly safety - you are connecting your Arduino to a mains powered system, is it properly isolated?
I realised that there might be a bit more to the way the actual hot plate was programmed as I would get some very strange codes come up when I used different pulse times. The codes looked like test codes possibly used in the factory and definitely not mentioned in the manual at all.
I also have the same problem in each of my 3 apple TV's. I have reset my devices over an over, turn off the wifi, logout, login, etc. nothing works. I am even able to add songs to my playlists and play videos but whenever trying to get access to my playlists the rotating gear in the screen remains there forever and nothing happens. I found this post on the support section at
vevo.com, it says that apparently they are aware of this problem. They say they are working hard to get it solved promptly. I addressed an email to them with my concern. Probably the small number of users they have detected experiencing this problem is not that small.
"Turn Down for What" is a song by French DJ and record producer DJ Snake and American rapper Lil Jon. It was released on 18 December 2013 as DJ Snake's debut single. The song and its viral music video popularized the use of the phrase.[2][3] The song was particularly successful in North America, where it has earned eight platinum certifications in the United States. In late 2020, seven years after it was released, the video passed 1 billion views on YouTube.[4]
When I hit up the big homie Jon and asked him if he wanted to be on the track, this song is a pretty balling song. He heard the beat and was instantly down with the vision. What he sent me back, though, absolutely blew my mind. I knew Jon was one of the best, but he absolutely killed it on this joint.[6]
DJ Snake sent me the track with a sample and he wanted me to redo it with my voice. When I heard the song I was like this beat is too crazy for that sample. I wanted to make it hip and current, and the first thing that came to mind was the phrase 'Turn Down for What!'[6]
"Turn Down for What" contains the lyrics of Lil Jon rapping "Fire up that loud, another round of shots" and "Turn down for what" throughout the song. It also contains bass and trap music elements that are original to Atlanta, GA, Lil Jon's hometown. "Turn Down for What" is written in the E Phrygian mode and is set in common time at a moderate tempo of 100 beats per minute.
"Turn Down for What" entered the top 10 on Billboard's Dance/Electronic chart during the last week of December.[8] In January 2014, the single entered the top 5 on the Dance/Electronic chart and debuted at No. 38 on the Billboard Hot 100.[9] It peaked at number 4 on the chart, becoming DJ Snake's first and Lil Jon's ninth top ten, and was certified gold in February 2014.[10][11] It reached its first million copies sold in the U.S. in March 2014.[12] The song reached its 3 million sales mark in July 2014.[13] It became the seventh best-selling song of 2014 in the US with 3,449,000 copies sold for the year.[14]
"Turn Down for What" received generally positive reviews from music critics and publications. Rolling Stone voted "Turn Down for What" as the second best song of the year 2014, saying, "The year's nutsiest party jam was also the perfect protest banger for a generation fed up with everything. DJ Snake brings the synapse-rattling EDM and Southern trap music; Lil Jon brings the dragon-fire holler for a hilarious, glorious, glowstick-punk fuck you."[15] In January 2015, "Turn Down for What" was ranked at No. 9, tied with Beyonc's "Flawless", on The Village Voice's annual year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll.
Jason Newman of Rolling Stone described the video as "perfect insanity" and added, "It's hard to pinpoint specifically what makes the video for DJ Snake and Lil Jon's 'Turn Down for What' so compelling and ripe for repeat viewings."[17] Edwin Ortiz of Complex called it "incredibly absurd and awesome" and wrote, "The hard-hitting EDM record delivers an undeniable vibe that listeners can't help but mosh out to, and that's clearly evident in the accompanying music video."[18] Writing for Idolator, Robbie Daw said the video "takes things to a whole new level of WTF-ness not quite seen before."[19]
On 26 April 2014, an official remix featuring Juicy J, 2 Chainz, and French Montana was released. A second official remix, the "Dancehall Remix", followed on 28 April 2014, featuring Chi Ching Ching, Assassin, and Konshens. A third remix was released on 7 May 2014, titled "Turn Down for What (Lil Jon Remix)", featuring Pitbull and Ludacris.[20][21][22]
The music video won Best Direction at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs) held in Inglewood. It also received 3 additional nominations for MTV Clubland Award, Best Visual Effects and Best Art Direction.[24]
The song won a Billboard Music Award for Top Dance/Electronic Song at the 2015 Billboard Music Awards held in Vegas and the music video won the Clio Bronze in Film and Music at the 2015 Clio Awards.[27]
"Turn Down for What" has been featured in various films, commercials and television programs. Uses include a TV commercial for Sol Republic, to introduce a wireless speaker, which aired in October 2013.[28] The song was used in the films 22 Jump Street, Furious 7 and The Angry Birds Movie 2, and in the trailers for Horrible Bosses 2[29] and Brick Mansions. The song was also used in a TV spot for the 2019 film, Pokmon Detective Pikachu. In May 2014, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Rogen and Zac Efron danced dressed as girls to the song during an episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[30] In July 2014, Robin Wright also danced to the song during an appearance on The Tonight Show.[31]
In October 2014, Lil Jon and various other celebrities appeared in an online video that featured a remix of the song, renamed to "Turn Out for What", that was organized by Rock the Vote and intended to encourage young people to vote in the upcoming elections.[32]
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