Remotes like these are a godsend. Every single time I visit my grandmother, I am forced to explain how the TV, VCR, and DVD player work..as well as 500 other things. When a company creates a swiss-army-esque remote like this one, I breathe a sigh of relief and a tear of joy rolls down my cheek. The Harmony 880 is balls to the wall on features with it's bright LCD screen. You can use it with X10, stereo recievers, televisions, Xbox, hell, anything with RF it seems. It works like a lot of other hardcore remotes by hooking it up to your PC or Mac via a USB cable and you can download different profiles for your gear. It also comes with "do it all for me" buttons like "Watch TV" or "Watch a Movie". Perfect. My grandmother is getting one right away.
Things we love: the Harmony 880 remote [PVR Blog]













Comments
by "RF", did you mean "IR"? seems like you did, maybe.
The forhtcoming Harmony 890 Pro and Harmony 895 remotes will offer RF -> IR relay capability but presumably no direct RF control of RF-controllable components. I have one of the Harmony 880's and after mucking around for years with various models of Philips Pronto, I find the ease of setup with the Harmony was worth the lack of customization that you can get with a Pronto. Things I used to have to write insane macros to do are done automatically with the Harmony and better yet, when the macros screw up the thing will automatically help you fix the problem with simple Yes/No questions. Ironically my grandparents seem to enjoy the tedium of being mired among four or five remote controls though. Now that they "have it down," changing anything, even to a simler alternative, is unacceptable. My mother, however, would love it.
You must have a wonderful grandmother to spend $250 on her. I am not certain I can justify it. I took the $80 monochrome Sony do-it-all-remote plunge right before these things hit the market, but I live in fear of a day the battery dies and I lose all of the programming. I have a couple buddies with these, and they swear they are worth every penny.. Hmmm.. Not hearing from family anymore with device controlling questions.. I suppose it might be worth it after all.
There is a full FirstLook and FirstUse review here: http://www.rainydaymagazine.com/RDM2005/GearNGadgets/August2005/RDMGG_Harmony880FirstLook.htm http://www.rainydaymagazine.com/RDM2005/GearNGadgets/August2005/RDMGG_Harmony880FirstUse.htm We found it to be one AMAZINGLY easy to program remote...and the only one capable of incorporating ALL the button we needed in one unit.
I found the 676 model to be more to my liking as the buttons were easier to 'feel' without looking at the remote. Also, be aware you absolutely NEED internet access to configure the remotes with their GUI... the application to configure the settings & transfer them to the remote is web based (which can be annoying if you have slow access.) If they made a 676 with RF -> IR, I'd be in heaven.
Another first look review: http://www.supergeekblog.com/?p=9
I currently use one of their 8-in-1 models and it works pretty well (for me only). Even with it, my wife fusses and fumes about the "remote hell" of our coffee table (no less than 7-9 remotes lay about). Why, my Sony home theater receiver (it's still a Sony!) is not fully supported, so all volume duty requires using a second remote. Hey did I mention that my 5-disc dvd player isn't fully supported either? Then of course, there are the Tivo, the xBox (I have the original dvd remote as well as a MCE extender remote for that alone!) and the Omnifi(!?!?). The Universal Remote? I gave up this particular Holy Grail a while ago. Better that all such AV (and basically all household) devices have insteon/zigbee/x10/etc or serial interfaces for "real" custom programming and control! Particularly with something like that Nokia 770...
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