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Audioholic Slumlord

Logitech is dropping support for its oldest Harmony remotes
You won’t be able to reprogram your first-generation Harmony universal remote once Logitech cuts support for the devices.

THis wasn't planned, COVID killed Harmony because let's face it, consumers who try to program their own remotes are gonna need a lot of tech support and once COVID was causing people to stay at home, they wanted to be able to see & hear friends & family, so Logitech's video conferencing stuff was outselling Harmony remotes 10:1, with basicaly zero need for support. That came from the manager of Logitech's Digital Products Group. I was one of the Beta testers for the Elite, Companion and Pro2400- he called us he called to give us the real story, rather than have us hear and see it from someone who wasn't involved. Harmony existed for almost 20 years and they were really giving URC a run for their money- when I would go to URC training, they would poke fun at Harmony because of the activity-based function, the Help button and other things but then, URC suddenly had a help button, called macros 'activities' and tried to make a real hard sell- they were feeling the pinch. Also, I had serious problems with some of the URC tech support people. One time, I wasn't able to upload the program to an MX-780, so I talked to the guy and asked if he wanted me to send the program file to him so he could check it. His response was "I don't know what good that would do". I was freaking speechless because what I wanted to do was done before by other tech support people and it's EXACTLY what he should have told me to do. I told the national trainer about this and thought his head was going to explode. Others were incredibly rude, others didn't seem to care and a couple didn't really know how to do what was needed . A few, OTOH, were great and knew URC programming backward and forward.I've had a Logitech Harmony 890 universal remote. I could deal with less-than-ideal software programming. I could deal with the "spicy pillow" user-replaceable battery. What I couldn't live with is that shortly after 1st year (coincides with the end of the warranty), the most frequently used buttons become unusable, a common problem on this model of remote since Logictech used the cheapest possible switches.
From that point on, for me, it's URC or nothing.
As for article, Nothing surprises me any more - another planned obsolescence to sell you more disposable crap.
Sure buddy. For the remote released in 2006 and it sucked due to poor a$$ design, yes - it was definitely the COVID that killed it. You're right as usual.THis wasn't planned, COVID killed Harmony because let's face it, consumers who try to program their own remotes are gonna need a lot of tech support and once COVID was causing people to stay at home, they wanted to be able to see & hear friends & family, so Logitech's video conferencing stuff was outselling Harmony remotes 10:1, with basicaly zero need for support.
Highfigh is right. Logitech even mentioned that in their announcement when they dropped Harmony support. Its apparent to me that you have a grudge against Logitech that you can't let go. Sounds like a "you" problem.Sure buddy. For the remote released in 2006 and it sucked due to poor a$$ design, yes - it was definitely the COVID that killed it. You're right as usual.
Again, reading comprehension isn't strong isn't it? Let me ELI5 it for you:Highfigh is right. Logitech even mentioned that in their announcement when they dropped Harmony support. Its apparent to me that you have a grudge against Logitech that you can't let go. Sounds like a "you" problem.
Much stronger than yours apparently. I was addressing the point that Highfigh was right and had nothing to do with your experience. Once again you demonstrated another "you' problem.Again, reading comprehension isn't strong isn't it? Let me TL;DR it for you:
I said the Harmony remote I've bought in 2006 was bad. I moved on to other brand. COVID had nothing to do with my decision or bad quality of that particular remote.
My point -> hereMuch stronger than yours apparently. I was addressing the point that Highfigh was right and had nothing to do with your experience. Once again you demonstrated another "you' problem.
To dumb this down so that you can even understand this....My point -> here
VAST SPACE in Between
Your understanding -> here
HF points broken down:
COVID brought bad high profits for Logitech. Harmony wasn't terrible.URC tech support was spotty.
The Buttons on harmony supposedly failed due to "dirt", or not. Some Batteries are bad.
HF went over many subjects, some relevant to my post, most aren't.
The buttons on 890 failed specifically not due to outside "conductive material" but bad design, cleaning the contacts with alcohol DID NOT resolve the issue. The remote never got dirty or spilled any liquids on. Again, it was bad hardware design as HF admitted it due to reducing product cost. Same goes for batteries. They were bottom of the barrel.
These issues with that particular model are VERY WELL documented and were a VERY widespread issue which occurred nearly always after the first year of usage, which Logitech/Harmony did nothing to fix. These issues happened LONG BEFORE COVID, so it's 100% irrelevant.
So, yeah - It sounds like YOU problem very much so. while you accuse me of incompetence, do look in the mirror sometimes, buddy.
The product line, not that one model. Buddy. I'm not sure the 890 was available after about 2010, anyway.Sure buddy. For the remote released in 2006 and it sucked due to poor a$$ design, yes - it was definitely the COVID that killed it. You're right as usual.
They had better models at the time- you could have picked one of those......Again, reading comprehension isn't strong isn't it? Let me ELI5 it for you:
I said the Harmony remote I've bought in 2006 was bad. I moved on to other brand. COVID had nothing to do with my decision or bad quality of that particular remote.
Jeez, why didn't I think about such a great idea? I liked the 890 remote just fine for the first year, until it started having serious issues. It wasn't a budget product/series. It had a color screen. Its list price was $399, but sure - I wish I had hindsight 20/20 vision and bought a "better" model.They had better models at the time- you could have picked one of those......
I'm not happy about it because I have several customers with Harmony remotes. Have they been prefect? No, but none of the brands I have dealt with were.Jeez, why didn't I think about such a great idea? I liked the 890 remote just fine for the first year, until it started having serious issues. It wasn't a budget product/series. It had a color screen. Its list price was $399, but sure - I wish I had hindsight 20/20 vision and bought a "better" model.
The bottom line, before I exit this thread, is that, YES, I have an axe to grind with the Harmony based on the single remote I owned. Some people who bought "better" remotes may have had entirely different experiences.
I got burned one time on a terribly designed product, and yes, in my anecdotal survey of 1 out of 1 Harmony remotes, they failed and failed badly. "Fool me once" was enough for me.
As for the Harmony series, you could probably see why I can't feel too bad about them being discontinued.
I have a customer who didn't like the Harmony 1100 remote I had set up for his wife before they were married, so he threw it onto the Oak floor. They have an Elite, now. The 1100 wirked fine, he just couldn't use it, even with the cheat sheet. He had problems with the, 650 remote, too- she texted me to say that she had to talk him off of the ledge that weekend because he couldn't get the speakers to work in the Master Bathroom. If I had been there both times, I wouLd have shouted "USE THE HELP BUTTON!"- the second time, he started pushing buttons and really worked some magic on it. I find that pressing the master power button on amplifiers with Auto Sense prevents it turning on. He also messed with the stereo receiver's sspeaker selector buttons, even though there was no reason to. He couldn't understand that once the system has been turned off (and the switches set incorrectly were made right), the remote sends discrete commands, so it all goes as planned and if not, the help button can be used to fix it. I have many Harmony remotes out there for 15 years or more and although dropping on hardwood floors isn't great for them, they're not unique in being damaged by the sudden stop. I drop my Companion on carpet frequently, but it's padded and the remote is lightweight.@highfigh URC RFS200. Paid $80 for in back in 2010. While not entirely indestructable and has crappy programming (no pc here) - it's build quality is head and shoulders about 890 and it starting having button failures only recently. 15 years lifespan for a remote = I call it a win. Buttons still kinda work, but need to be pressed harder.