Do you already have a network Blu-Ray player that you are trying to make wifi, or does your current Blu-Ray player not support network services?
If it is the latter, you can use an access point to make it wireless. Something like this.
Also, if you can hold off until November, you might be able to grab a Black Friday deal on a new Blu-Ray player.
I wish I even knew.
I was trying to research last night AFTER posting because I realized I had no idea if my BluRay player could even be wireless. I assumed it could, but not I am not sure!
I have this Blu Ray player on one of our TVs:
http://www.amazon.com/Sony-BDP-S350...LVYY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1315828542&sr=8-1
It is the only BluRay we have and it came free with the purchase of the TV below.
Now, the TV is a Sony Bravia KDL 52W4100 which I know I can buy an attachment for to make it wifi (found this in my search last night) but the attachment gets very low ratings and is almost the same price as getting another BluRay or Roku box so it doesn't seem to be the wisest choice for me.
We have a 37 inch old tube TV that I am trying to get something hooked up to so the kids can watch Netflix.
My thought was that if I could get the Sony Bravia hooked up through the BluRay or TV that I could move that Roku box to the old tube TV for the kids.
Dawn
The router is on the main floor of the house in the office.
The BluRay player is in our media room in the basement, so no hard wiring there.
We have a cable line coming in to the TV for cable TV.....that isn't what you are talking about though is it?
If I am going to spend $80 I probably should just get a Roku instead as I can get one for that price.
What is the access point? Does that plug into the BluRay somehow?
Can you tell electronics are not my forte?![]()
Thanks for the detail. I did mean networking cable. Would it be cheaper for you to run a cable through the floor in the office down to your basement? Seems to me if that if the tv watching room is in the basement, you and any following homeowners of the future might find it useful to have it hardwired down there.
An access point looks like a router, but it connects wirelessly to your router. On the back of the router is an ethernet port. You would connect a network cable from that port to the network port on the back of the Blu-Ray player. When configured, this would esentially make a non-wireless device wireless.
Another option that I forgot to mention would be a powerline ethernet adapter, such as this one. (just picked the cheapest). This would work the same as an access point, but you would plug one end near your router and the other end near the Blu-Ray player. This would then carry internet traffic over your powerlines. The advantage of this method is that there would be no wireless to configure. I have not used these devices, so I cannot speak to their reliability.
I see.
So, would one work better than the other do you think?
Dawn
The person who suggested using a powerline solution was right. That is your best option. Using wifi you will unlikely be able to stream HD to the blu-ray, and will have occasional buffer and loading waits. Go hard wired, and if you can't run the Ethernet cable directly use Ethernet over power. I use this solution throughout my house and it works great.
Basically you plug an adapter into your wall electrical socket near your router, and plug a connection from the router into this adapter. This now sends the internet throughout your house using your electrical wiring. You connect another adapter at an outlet near where you need the internet and there you go. If you have multiple devices that need the internet they even have mini hubs coming from one electrical socket that will feed 3 devices.
I was unable to stream HD video in real-time from my home computer to a Tivo or PS3 a few rooms away. It was a buffering mess, even with N capable devices. Once I switched the Ethernet over power, I can push HD video with no issue.