| ▲ | llimllib 12 hours ago | |
Yes I think the device itself is fine, but the Apple TV apps are mostly terrible and often very laggy/poorly written. The way developers use the UI toolkit that the Apple TV provides also seems to tend towards apps where it's very difficult to figure out what's the active selection, which is of course _the_ critical challenge. | ||
| ▲ | Reason077 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
The issue here is that the app developers design & test for the latest Apple TV 4K models, which have about 10X the performance (and 2-4X the RAM) compared to the old HD models. Apple left a large generational gap because they kept selling the HD for many years (until 2022) as an entry-level device alongside much more capable 4K models. > ”it's very difficult to figure out what's the active selection” Yes, based on my observation this seems to be one of the biggest challenges people face with the AppleTV interface, along with accidentally changing the selection when they try to select it (because of the sensitive touch controls on the remote). | ||
| ▲ | al_borland 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> it's very difficult to figure out what's the active selection I don't think is the fault of the 3rd party devs, Apple seemed to start this and other devs followed their example. I tend to make a small circle with my thumb in the center of the select button, or just slightly move it back and forth, to see what thing on the screen starts moving with me. | ||