Skip to main content

Slingbox’s Slingplayer adds Airplay, Roku support, and a Windows 8.1 app

slingboxs slingplayer ups anti adds airplay roku support windows 8 1 app for ipad gallery tv edit

The line between live TV and set-top streaming just got blurred even further as Sling Media announced a major overhaul to its SlingPlayer iOS app, added a new Roku channel for iOS and Android devices, and disclosed plans for a Windows 8.1 app slated for release in December.

While subscribers using Slingbox and DishNetwork’s Hopper with Sling already had the ability to access live TV content with their mobile devices from anywhere with a WiFi connection, the upgrade to SlingPlayer 3.0 takes iOS users into new realms of live TV streaming. The latest features are designed to make the iPad “the first screen and second screen at the same time,” making initializing the viewing experience from your iPad even more immersive through better search options and enhanced social media interaction.

Features for the new app include a more intuitive and informative interface to help search for sports, movies, and other programs, social media interaction that allows you to see what friends are watching and even tweet from inside the app, a split-screen mode to allow interaction with stats and programming information on one side of the screen while you watch, and the ability to “cast” content from your iPad to an Airplay-ready streaming device.

A new Android app also allows Android users to join the streaming party, adding compatibility with the new Roku channel alongside iOS users. The upgrades are designed to make any TV with a WiFi connected Roku or Apple TV part of the Slingbox experience, allowing users to watch live content from multiple TVs in the house, or take their programming along anywhere they may roam and stream it on the big screen via the set-top boxes.

Want to watch the big game at a friends house, and all they have is an Apple TV? No problem, just bring your iPad along and you can cast the content live. The same goes for the Roku. As long as your buddy has added the Slingplayer Roku channel, you can call up programming from your Android or iOS device, and boom, you’ve got anything on your DVR or DishNetwork integrated Sling receiver live and ready to rock.

The new Slingplayer 3.0 app requires iOS 7.0 or higher and is available for iOS today, as is the new Android app. The Roku channel is also available for download today for most devices including the Roku 3, Roku 1, Roku LT, the Roku Streaming stick, and various versions of the Roku 2, with availability on other models forthcoming later this month.

With its latest upgrades, Slingbox is an extremely powerful and versatile way to bring live TV into the burgeoning world of second screen devices, and back out again. While cable providers such as Comcast have made recent strides to claw their way into the mobile streaming game on their own, Slingbox and DishNetwork’s Hopper with Sling have a very healthy head start and don’t look to be slowing down anytime soon.

(This article has been updated to differentiate DishNetwork’s Hopper with Sling from regular Slingbox products)

Ryan Waniata
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ryan Waniata is a multi-year veteran of the digital media industry, a lover of all things tech, audio, and TV, and a…
There’s a rare deal on the Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones today
Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones seen in black.

The massively popular Sony WH-1000XM5 wireless headphones rarely appear in headphone deals, so if you've had your eye on them for quite a while, you're in luck because they're currently $51 off on Walmart. From their original price of $400, you'll only have to pay $349, but only if you hurry because we don't expect stocks to last long. You're going to miss out on the offer if you take too long, so don't hesitate -- add the wireless headphones to your cart and check out as fast as you can.

Why you should buy the Sony WH-1000XM5
The best headphones that you can buy right now are the Sony WH-1000XM5 wireless headphones, and it's not even close. At the heart is their outstanding wireless sound, supported by top-quality active noise cancellation that uses two processors and eight microphones to block all unwanted sound, as well as crystal-clear hands-free calling using four beamforming microphones and advanced audio signal processing. The wireless headphones also offer Bluetooth multipoint connection so that you can quickly switch between different devices, touch controls for functions like adjusting volume and calling your digital assistant, and Speak-to-Chat and Quick Attention features to stop your music and let ambient sound in without having to take them off.

Read more
Sony’s premium soundbars will finally get support for VRR, ALLM
Sony HT-A7000 Dolby Atmos soundbar close-up of top panel.

It's been a long time coming, but the wait is almost over. Sony's premium home theater soundbars are set to receive a software update that will add support for variable refresh rate (VRR) and auto low-latency mode (ALLM), two HDMI 2.1 gaming features that have been absent since these products launched.

The soundbars in question are the Sony HT-A5000, HT-A7000, and the multi-wireless speaker HT-A9 system. All three are scheduled to receive the update this fall, but Sony has declined to share specific timing, saying only that there will be more information closer to the rollout date.

Read more
What is Roku? The streaming platform explained
A roku powered TV hanging on a wall running Roku OS 12.

How do you get your Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, or Prime Video fix? Chances are it's through a streaming device or smart TV, and there's a good chance that it's through a Roku device or one running its pioneering streaming operating system. At this point, cord-cutting is old news, and Roku was one of the earliest companies to drive the adoption of web-based streaming with its self-contained, app-driven devices.

Today, watching something "on Roku" is standard parlance and the company's popular platform can be found baked into some of the biggest TV brands in the world as well as in its own lineup of streaming devices sticks, and set-top boxes. Even so, that doesn't mean you totally get what a Roku actually is. What is Roku? How does Roku work? Do you need a subscription to use it? Is it just a device you buy, or is it software?

Read more