As you go to the first receiver your log in to your buddies Slingbox......
I wonder how they are going to deal with the IP "call in's" with users on naked DSL connections?? The DSL connections I know seem to change IP's everytime you look at them.
I can see where that would be an issue... an ip address is not necessarily traceable to a particular customer where a phone number is.
With an ethernet connection one thing they could do, is have all the receivers in your home find each other over ethernet, then they decide somehow which one of them should attempt a connection to report in. The concern is not as much what house they are in but that they are all in the same house. That one receiver would report back the list of all the others it found so the audit team would already know they are all in the same location, i.e. on the same subnet.
A real savvy networking guru type could probably still figure a way to do account stacking with this type of connection but it would be difficult.
I fear we have hijacked this thread as using ethernet ports instead of phone lines has really nothing to do with E* and BEV receivers in the same room.
I know I have a number of Dish 6000, Dish Vip211 and BEV 6000 in the same room. The 6000s allow you to set a different remote control number (1-9) for each box.
As you go to the first receiver your log in to your buddies Slingbox......
I wonder how they are going to deal with the IP "call in's" with users on naked DSL connections?? The DSL connections I know seem to change IP's everytime you look at them.
I know I have a number of Dish 6000, Dish Vip211 and BEV 6000 in the same room. The 6000s allow you to set a different remote control number (1-9) for each box.