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    Home»How-To Guides»I ignored my smart TV’s interface and plugged in a $30 streaming stick — I should have done it years ago
    How-To Guides

    I ignored my smart TV’s interface and plugged in a $30 streaming stick — I should have done it years ago

    kirklandc008@gmail.comBy kirklandc008@gmail.comJune 15, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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    I ignored my smart TV's interface and plugged in a $30 streaming stick — I should have done it years ago
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    Most people assume a slow TV is just a slow TV, and that buying a better one is the only fix for the yearly slow down. The reality is more frustrating than that. The hardware inside your smart TV was already underpowered the day it shipped, and the operating system has been quietly making things worse ever since.

    Everything behind that panel is an afterthought, but there’s a thirty-dollar fix that does what a brand-new television can’t guarantee.

    Related

    6 Reasons I Skipped a Smart TV and Bought a Streaming Stick Instead

    It took me a while to come around, but a streaming stick is so much better than a smart TV.

    Television operating systems come with bloat

    Your TV is rotting from the inside, and it started the day you unboxed it

    Jorge Aguilar / MakeUseOf

    When you first unbox a smart TV, it’s worth knowing that the internal storage is often way smaller than you’d expect. Most entry-level and mid-range TVs ship with somewhere between 2GB and 4GB total before you add any more. You can expect that space to get carved up immediately between the OS, pre-installed apps, and system partitions.

    By the time you’re actually using the thing, there’s barely any room left. It gets worse from there. Firmware updates trickle in over time, streaming apps accumulate temporary files and cached thumbnails meant to speed up load times, and the TV’s software rarely does much housekeeping.

    Old patches, leftover data chunks, junk files just sit there. Slowly, that clutter chokes whatever little storage there was to begin with, and a TV that felt fast on day one starts freezing up and lagging through basic menus.

    That slowdown is more than just annoying; it’s a big clue to what is happening at the hardware level. Smart TVs use small storage chips soldered directly onto the motherboard, and like any storage, they need free space to manage themselves properly.

    As apps and cache fill things up, the chip has less room to do that background work, and performance falls off a cliff. You end up with stuttering, long load times, and a system that feels like it’s working against you. The screen itself might be built to last ten years, but the storage and processor were built to a price point, and they show it.

    The software side doesn’t help either. Smart TVs aren’t using the lightweight apps that they used to run. Running those on a cheap processor with 1.5 to 2GB of RAM means the TV is constantly straining just to render the home screen. Animations stutter, thumbnails take forever to load, and the whole interface can lock up while the system tries to clear memory.

    So treat your TV as a TV, and give it a break with everything else.

    Bypass internal processors with a streaming device

    A streaming stick is one of the best performance upgrades you can make

    Plugging a streaming stick into an open HDMI port is about as simple as it gets, and the difference is so noticeable that you’ll know it was worth the price. I have both a 4K Fire TV Stick and a Roku 4K stick for my TVs that already come with streaming services built in.

    I bought my 4K Roku remote on sale for about $30, but if you don’t want to wait, an HD stick works well too.

    Your TV’s built-in processor was never really designed for this stuff. When you treat the TV as just a TV and buy a streaming stick to help, the difference is immediate. The streaming stick takes all that work off the TV’s plate entirely.

    These devices run on chips made by companies like Amlogic or MediaTek that are actually built for streaming. They handle video decoding and app switching without breaking a sweat. The TV gets knocked down to just showing the picture, which is honestly all it needs to do. Everything else, like menus, loading times, and buffering, is the stick’s problem now. Surprisingly, it handles it much better.

    You might assume this means living with two remotes, but that’s not really how it works anymore. Most streaming sticks use HDMI-CEC, which lets your devices talk to each other through the HDMI cable itself. When you set up the stick, it introduces itself to your TV and, once you’ve turned CEC on in the settings, it can send commands directly to the display.

    TV makers love giving it a unique name, so look for Anynet+ on Samsung, SimpLink on LG, or Bravia Sync on Sony. Fire TV and Roku don’t use those names, though. Look for HDMI CEC Device Control or 1-Touch Play once in their menus instead. Enabling this means you never have to touch the TV’s home screen again.

    The short lifespan of smart TV support

    A $30 streaming stick keeps your expensive TV useful for years

    Jorge Aguilar / MakeUseOf

    A lot of people see external streaming players as a waste of money. It’s easy to assume you’re just wasting an extra thirty dollars when your expensive TV already has apps built in. Besides the reasons already mentioned, there are more.

    Most brands actively update their smart TV software for about two years after release with new features, OS upgrades, and the works. After that, you might get the occasional security patch, but by year five, the TV is officially on its own. The apps keep evolving, but the TV doesn’t.

    Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon are constantly updating their apps with new codecs, new security requirements, and new interfaces. At some point, those apps need something your TV’s aging software can’t provide, and the developers just drop support for your model. One day it works fine, the next you can’t log in, or the app disappears entirely.

    It gets worse if the manufacturer actually tries to help. Pushing a newer, heavier operating system onto old hardware just creates a different problem. You can’t always put new software into old, weak processors with limited memory. You’re going to get an interface that crawls, crashes, and stutters through basic menu navigation.

    This is exactly why a cheap streaming stick is such a smart fix. You don’t need to worry about your TV handling anything. Just plug in a Roku, Fire Stick, or Apple TV, and you’ve got dedicated hardware built specifically for streaming, with regular software updates and support that actually keeps pace with the apps. Your screen stays the same; everything driving it gets a clean start.

    You won’t regret the Roku Streaming Stick

    None of this is the TV industry’s best-kept secret, but it rarely gets explained plainly to people who are just trying to watch something without waiting for a menu to load. The honest trade-off is that adding an external stick means one more device to plug in. With this cheap device, you can let your display panel outlive the software limitations manufacturers baked into it at the factory.

    Connective Technology

    HDMI

    Brand

    Roku

    The Roku Streaming Stick HD is a super handy way to transform any HDMI-enabled TV into your next entertainment hub, providing near instant access to more than 500 free TV channels in Full HD (1080p). The package also includes a handy remote you can use to control the Roku Streaming Stick, along with voice remote functionality.

    interface plugged smart Stick Streaming TVs Years
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    Nintendo’s Switch 2 price is increasing to AU$769.95 come Sep 1 — which makes this AU$629 deal for EOFY all the more tempting

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