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Author Topic: Limiting your Apple Remote  (Read 421 times)
HCK
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« on: October 29, 2012, 07:05:38 pm »

Limiting your Apple Remote
   




   
Every so often my coworkers, in the course of other business correspondence, slip in an Apple-related question of their own. For example, Coworker A tagged on this little gem to a recent communique:



We used to have an issue where we’d be using the Apple Remote to run Apple TV and then, all of a sudden, iTunes on my wife’s MacBook would start playing. Any sort of fix?



I can recommend a couple of fixes. The first is to simply not use the Apple Remote with your Apple TV. I happen to know that you have at least one iOS device in your possession and because you do, you can put Apple’s free Remote app to good use. As long as your iOS device and Apple TV are on the same network, that iOS device is all you need to control Apple’s set top box. Plus, it has the added advantage that it will interact only with the Apple TV—your other Apple devices will remain blissfully ignorant of its presence.

If you have an iOS device, the Remote app is a great way to control your Apple TV

With this app you can choose content directly from your iTunes library without all the pointing and clicking you have to do with Apple’s hardware remote. And if you prefer to use the Apple TV’s interface as it was intended, the Remote app has a touch mode where you can swipe to move around the interface and tap when you want to activate a highlighted item—launch one of the apps on the home screen or play a selected bit of media.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
      

http://www.macworld.com/article/2013165/limiting-your-apple-remote.html
   
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