(Part 2) Best products from r/daydream

We found 4 comments on r/daydream discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 24 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/daydream:

u/aniel300 · 1 pointr/daydream

that is the think, i have tried origianl daydream and 2017 although im using a this, i think it might be because im using a custom rom in my phone idk at this point

u/Teh_ZigLC · 1 pointr/daydream

(be warned, the video contains ramblings of some tech guy)

How to Send Audio to TV when Chromecasting

 

Additional Hardware Needed:

  • 3.5mm audio connection to phone (may need adapter)

  • 3.5mm audio adapter to TV (see step 3)

  • Long aux cable

    Optional:

  • 3.5mm splitter for personal headphones

  • Plant hook for ceiling mount

  • 3.5mm to Bluetooth transmitter

  • Bluetooth receiver to TV adapter of choice

  • Media PC

    (cannot use phone Bluetooth for audio due to controller)

     

    ---Steps---

     

    Low tech way

    Step 1. Connect aux cable to phone.

    Step 2. Connect aux to 3.5mm to TV input adapter (varies by make and model)

    Step 3. In TV settings open the speaker selection menu and set audio input to chosen input line. (note, some makes/models require using a specific HDMI input port for this. Please check your manual)

    Step 4. Start casting.

     

    Tech way

    (less tips in this area because it is entirely dependent on your setup)

    Step 1. Connect aux cable to phone.

    Step 2. Connect aux cable to your audio receiver or media PC

    Step 3. Set audio aux input to output to HDMI

    Step 4. Start casting

     

    My setup:

    We use a Media PC. We don't rely on any expensive laptop or crazy media center. For my wife and I our chromebooks and phones are enough. Since 2008 when it took more work to connect Hulu, HBO, Netflix, Youtube, etc our media PC has just existed. Recently our Roku, Chromecast, and Fire TV do most of the heavy lifting. The media PC is our audio receiver and our house is setup with Sonos. Because Sonos isn't quite there yet with all the streaming options, it was easier to have the computer suit what we needed in our household. Is it the same PC? It's the same case. Parts die or need to be updated, that's not what this post is for.

     

    We use a flower pot mount to run the aux cable from the ceiling to our "VR area" so 360 motion is possible but you'll need to unwind periodically if you can only make right turns. I really didn't want to suggest parts but I'll do so for example. In some cases, your TV may work with an aux, and for a wireless experience a transmitter and receiver may be all you need.
u/zourn · 1 pointr/daydream

I use some cheap Bluetooth headphones that lasted me years. I liked them enough that when my abuse finally killed them after 2.5 years of service, I immediately bought a new pair.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00C7JIBN0/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1478281390&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=P253+bt