I’ve been writing a lot about the Apple ecosystem lately, and the new Apple TV 4K (2022) is the icing on the cake.
It’s unnecessary, but if you want the crème de la crème of the smart TV experience, it’s difficult to beat it. The software is well-designed, and ad-free, while the hardware is top-notch, with a remote that feels incredible.
If you have an Android phone, there are a few more streaming options, but if you’re an iPhone user, it’s hard not to want the Apple TV 4K.
Finding TV bliss?
This new functionality is enabled through Apple’s ‘Live Activities’ framework. Because of this, Roku and other streaming devices with an iPhone app can likely take advantage of similar lock screen-based controls via an update.
If you have AirPods, the ease of connecting them to your Apple TV to listen to content silently is also a useful feature.
Compared to other smart TV operating systems, one of the key upgrades is that the Apple TV menu actually looks good. It’s not great, but it’s clean, high-resolution and easy to navigate. Google’s and Amazon’s home screens push content to watch, often regardless of whether you’re subscribed to the service hosting that content. Roku is a little better, but it still looks outdated and usually has one giant tacky ad on the right-hand side.
Once you jump inside the Apple TV app, things get a little messier regarding content you don’t subscribe to, but at the very least, the home screen is clean.
The new Apple TV 4K (2022) also packs the Apple A15 Bionic chipset, which gives it more than enough power to play modern content for the foreseeable future. This might sound like a small thing, but over time lag on a cheap smart TV box can get annoying, so knowing that you can not only play games but likely won’t have to worry about audio/video sync issues, is a welcome piece of mind.
A great remote can never be perfect
On the flip side, it’s nice Apple updated the Menu button to become a Back button last year, but hiding the Siri button on the side of the remote feels strange to me. The old Siri remote and most other smart TVs have their voice control button on the front, and I found that to be easier to work with.
None of this is to say it’s a bad remote. By contrast, the matte aluminum body feels incredible in your hand. It offers excellent balance, clicky buttons and even a USB-C port for charging now. You can also use it as a universal remote with most TVs. Compared to Chromecast’s lacklustre buttons and the dull Fire TV remote, the Apple TV remote is head and shoulders above the rest, but in an effort to streamline the remote, Apple has made it slightly more complicated than it needed to be.
For Apple lovers only?
I’m really enjoying using this set-top box for apps like Apple Fitness+ and Apple Arcade, so I can play Lego Star Wars Castaways on my TV while at home. This speaks to me since I’m already fairly immersed in the Apple ecosystem. If you’re not, a lot of the perks I enjoyed might not apply to you as much.
All of this is to say that the new Apple TV is great, but unless you care about design or the Apple ecosystem, it’s not going to play content significantly better than the competition.
You can buy the standard Wi-Fi model with 64GB of storage for $179, and the ethernet/Thread model with extra storage costs $199.
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