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There are drawbacks, but the truth is that there has been nothing made since that is as flexible, customisable or just as nice to have and to use as the Philips Pronto series, particularly the final iterations, the TSU9400, 9600 and 9800. The market for them dried up because of expected competition that never really materialised and because they were properly expensive. The baby model was £650 when I bought one, and the other models noticeably more expensive still. Good points: Well-made, nice to hold and use, good battery life (though some may need new batteries at some point, and these are still available from eBay - it's best to leave them on the charging dock when not in use). They are almost infinitely customisable, so you can have multiple screens for different pieces of kit, with whatever backgrounds you want as well as using the built in graphics gallery in the software package. You can build macros, so that one button will execute a series of commands, or just stack lots of functions on one button, including delays, sound effects etc. You can also buy RF extenders, which work using their own wifi and allow the units to control items in other rooms or hidden away. Nothing else that you can buy does all this as well as a Pronto. Bad points: Read this carefully. A Pronto does very little out of the box. It requires ProntoEdit Professional (PEP) to work, which can be downloaded from a website called Remote Central. This is fairly user-friendly, but still takes some time to learn; if you are not comfortable using a PC, you may find a Pronto is therefore no use to you. PEP works with most versions of Windows, but I believe there are some (fixable) issues with Win10. It takes time to set up a system, and for a simple TV/DVD setup, you might not consider this worthwhile. But for 3/4 items plus, it makes films and music a much more enjoyable experience by allowing it to do all of the faffing about and make a complex system usable by someone who's never seen it before. These are also a good few years old now and many will not be in the best of nick, so a good one is highly desirable. Worn ones show cosmetic damage around the outside edge, may have missing silver 'Philips' lettering from the bottom of the front and look scruffy at the rear. Oh, and it doesn't do Bluetooth, so won't control an Amazon fire TV stick etc. Read full review
Verified purchase: No