Harmony One Universal Remote
-
The HT Guys
- Podcast
- Posts: 174
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2006 11:38 am
Harmony One Universal Remote
This week we finally get to the review a lot of listeners have been asking for, the Harmony One Advanced Universal Remote by Logitech. We reviewed the Harmony 880 almost three years ago, and although Ara questioned the price premium, it eventually became our standard universal remote recommendation. Now with the release of the One, we were eager to see if it would replace the 880 in our hearts and minds. It won the 'Best of Innovations' award in the Home Theater Accessories category at CES 2008. You can find it in retail stores and online for an MSRP of...
[url=http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/reviews/2008/03/harmony_one_universal_remote.php]Read the Full Article[/url]
[url=http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/reviews/2008/03/harmony_one_universal_remote.php]Read the Full Article[/url]
-
dturkheimer
- Member
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Wed Sep 08, 2004 5:26 pm
Harmony remote
The Harmony remote has an insurmountable problem with some TV's which prevents it from doing what many people -- myself included -- get if for: to enable one's spouse to watch TV!
Here's the issue:
In order to change input sources on my TV, you have to press the Channel Up button cycling through each input source until you get to the one you want. Then you press the Select button and you're good.
In order to automate this, the Harmony remote will try to count the input key pushes needed to get where you need to go.
But how does it know where to start? If startup always brought the cursor to the top of the screen -- to the first input -- then the Harmony remote could momentarily turn off the TV to force the cursor to the first choice.
But my TV does not force the cursor to the first one. Wherever it is at the time of the TV's shutting off is where it is when you turn it on again. Since the position of the cursor is indeterminate, the Harmony cannot gracefully change the input source in an automated fashion.
So in the case of my TV, the Harmony cannot do what most people buy it for.
I assume that TV's now do a better job of source switching, so in those cases the Harmony will work fine.
For me, it was disappointing and I had to return it to Best Buy.
Here's the issue:
In order to change input sources on my TV, you have to press the Channel Up button cycling through each input source until you get to the one you want. Then you press the Select button and you're good.
In order to automate this, the Harmony remote will try to count the input key pushes needed to get where you need to go.
But how does it know where to start? If startup always brought the cursor to the top of the screen -- to the first input -- then the Harmony remote could momentarily turn off the TV to force the cursor to the first choice.
But my TV does not force the cursor to the first one. Wherever it is at the time of the TV's shutting off is where it is when you turn it on again. Since the position of the cursor is indeterminate, the Harmony cannot gracefully change the input source in an automated fashion.
So in the case of my TV, the Harmony cannot do what most people buy it for.
I assume that TV's now do a better job of source switching, so in those cases the Harmony will work fine.
For me, it was disappointing and I had to return it to Best Buy.
-
regman
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 104
- Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2002 11:16 am
- Location: San Francisco
It's really a matter of how the video input is selected on the HDTV monitor. On my older CRT Panasonic you had to advance through the different inputs to select the right one. I bought a receiver that switches video and eliminated ever having to change the input on the monitor. It can be done though and the 880 has a "help" function to guide you to getting the setup you want. My wife can operate the older HDTV, but not with the old A/V receiver. I have a Harmony 1000 with my new home theater and it even dims and turns up the light at the appropriate times. One button operation. Logitech has really done their homework on these products. They're just a phone call away and will help you tweak it if need be. HDMI has made it even simpler.
Last edited by regman on Tue Mar 18, 2008 11:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Early Adopter. Stand alone home theater. Panasonic TH-58PZ700U Plasma, Denon AVR 4306, SpeakerCraft MT3 L/RF, MT2 L/RR, AIM LCR6 center channel, flush mount wall speakers, JBL sub. DTV H20-100S DVR. Sony BDP-300S. Logitech Harmony 1000.
-
spartanstew
- Member
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Mon Mar 10, 2008 10:46 am
Re: Harmony remote
That's not a problem with the Harmony, that's a problem with your TV. Even with the TV remote, you have to cycle through the inputs, so if your wife can do that, why can't she cycle through the inputs with the Harmony? You could even label a key for input if it's easier for her, you don't have to use the channel button. Not sure why you would program the channel button to do that anyway. Sounds like you just needed to program it more efficiently.dturkheimer wrote:The Harmony remote has an insurmountable problem with some TV's which prevents it from doing what many people -- myself included -- get if for: to enable one's spouse to watch TV!
Here's the issue:
In order to change input sources on my TV, you have to press the Channel Up button cycling through each input source until you get to the one you want. Then you press the Select button and you're good.
Most TV's sold now have direct input functionality, so that's not an issue. Apparently your doesn't. You'd need to get a receiver that does or get a different TV. If you don't, you'll always have that problem no matter what remote you use (universal or otherwise).
-
akirby
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 819
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 2:52 pm
If the TV always stays on the last selected input OR it always starts at the same input in the list then the Harmony is DESIGNED to handle this properly with it's smart state technology. It will REMEMBER where it was in the list and DYNAMICALLY figure out how to get to the requested input.
e.g. If you have 4 inputs that cycle and input 1 is DVD and input 2 is DirecTV:
If you're in the Watch DVD activity and press Watch TV it will send one input command (plus the commands to bring up the menu and select the option if necessary). If you then press Watch DVD it will send 3 input commands to get back to DVD.
If this isn't working then either your inter-device delay is too small for the TV and it's missing commands or you don't have the inputs set up correctly. There are options for how the TV behaves when cycling through inputs - just redo the Adjust Inputs setup for the TV and answer the questions correctly.
The only time the Harmony won't work is if the TV doesn't always start at the same input or start at the previous input. If the behavior is consistent than it will work.
e.g. If you have 4 inputs that cycle and input 1 is DVD and input 2 is DirecTV:
If you're in the Watch DVD activity and press Watch TV it will send one input command (plus the commands to bring up the menu and select the option if necessary). If you then press Watch DVD it will send 3 input commands to get back to DVD.
If this isn't working then either your inter-device delay is too small for the TV and it's missing commands or you don't have the inputs set up correctly. There are options for how the TV behaves when cycling through inputs - just redo the Adjust Inputs setup for the TV and answer the questions correctly.
The only time the Harmony won't work is if the TV doesn't always start at the same input or start at the previous input. If the behavior is consistent than it will work.
-
stevekaden
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 241
- Joined: Thu Nov 30, 2006 3:20 pm
Never had that problem
My Sony TV's have no direct selection for input (not on their remote anyway) and I have never had this issue. I can't believe Harmony has not worked this out. Have you tried it? At the least, on some systems the system can change the channel, which triggers the tv to regular rf input, then select the input from there.
I'd try it out, it is a great remote. And yes, even a lawyer can turn on a complex system.
I'd try it out, it is a great remote. And yes, even a lawyer can turn on a complex system.
-
jordanm
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 163
- Joined: Wed Sep 01, 2004 9:17 pm
- Location: Arizona
I have had a Harmony 688 remote since before Logitech bought Harmony, and I bought it from Harmony at a CES show several years back. With "scrolling" TV inputs, you call them, and they work you through it, or they send you the setup through your account-I know, as I did this with a 2001 Hitachi RP HDTV I had, years ago.
Now, with a direct input TV that has Home Gallery functions, an AVR that plays internet music and upscales 480i inputs to 1080p, DVD carousels that hold 600 DVDs, an LD player, and even a phono turntable, the 688 does it all, seamlessly (except it can't turn on the turntable-it has no remote). Even the wife and kids use it. In fact, the other day I rec'd a complaint it that it did not consistently turn on the TV; its batteries were low, I changed them. All is OK, now.
BTW, the review did not discuss how great Logitech Harmony support was. If they can't help you setup the remote when you call them, they will send the setup to you, right to your account, so when you log-in, you connect your remote, and it's all there to download. What a pleasure the remote is.
Now, with a direct input TV that has Home Gallery functions, an AVR that plays internet music and upscales 480i inputs to 1080p, DVD carousels that hold 600 DVDs, an LD player, and even a phono turntable, the 688 does it all, seamlessly (except it can't turn on the turntable-it has no remote). Even the wife and kids use it. In fact, the other day I rec'd a complaint it that it did not consistently turn on the TV; its batteries were low, I changed them. All is OK, now.
BTW, the review did not discuss how great Logitech Harmony support was. If they can't help you setup the remote when you call them, they will send the setup to you, right to your account, so when you log-in, you connect your remote, and it's all there to download. What a pleasure the remote is.
-
rheendgmail
- New Member
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Thu Mar 13, 2008 10:43 am
Harmony Remote / input switching
I have the lower-end Harmony Remote, the 550, and it handles this situation just fine. My old TV did not allow me to directly select inputs, and the remote was able to find the right one almost every time. The only exception, of course, was if the input had been selected manually on the TV, for example, to fire up the game console.
To make this set-up work, it's critical you have all of your inputs assigned correctly and that these assignments match in the Harmony software. It's well-done and easy, but does take some detail work for everything to be perfect.
To make this set-up work, it's critical you have all of your inputs assigned correctly and that these assignments match in the Harmony software. It's well-done and easy, but does take some detail work for everything to be perfect.
-
dturkheimer
- Member
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Wed Sep 08, 2004 5:26 pm
Harmony remote input switching
The Help button on the low-end remote when I tried it had to be pressed a number of times; it was no better than pushing the UP arrow (Channel UP button) the number of times needed.
I did not use the phone help, but I did use the online help. It was not able to resolve the problem.
I did not use the phone help, but I did use the online help. It was not able to resolve the problem.
-
akirby
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 819
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 2:52 pm
Re: Harmony remote input switching
Your inputs were not setup properly for your TV. Sometimes the out of the box defaults for a device aren't correct and have to be adjusted. If you had called the help line or posted in the harmony forum on remotecentral it probably could have been fixed quickly and easily.dturkheimer wrote:The Help button on the low-end remote when I tried it had to be pressed a number of times; it was no better than pushing the UP arrow (Channel UP button) the number of times needed.
I did not use the phone help, but I did use the online help. It was not able to resolve the problem.