The overall concept here is the same, but offers an affordable upgrade to 4K streaming. It supports FHD (Full HD, meaning 1080p), Dolby Audio, and ships with an Android-TV-style remote (with batteries included), 1 HDMI Extender, AC adapter and 1 USB to micro-USB cable. The Walmart streaming stick, which is published under the retailer’s onn electronics brand, falls in line with the specifications you’d expect to find on a low-cost device like this. Google’s entry-level Chromecast, meanwhile, is $29.99, and Amazon’s cheapest Fire TV stick is the Fire TV Stick Lite at $24.99. Otherwise, Roku’s most affordable streaming player is the Roku Express, at $24.99. Roku today makes a product line of Walmart exclusives, where its cheapest player is the Roku Express 4K at $34.99, currently. The entry-level device streaming stick had been leaked earlier this year thanks to its FCC listing, but its online listing caught people’s eye thanks to its almost absurdly low price point of just $24.88 - a figure that rivals or even undercuts other streaming sticks on the market, including some from Walmart’s partner, Roku. Both items are officially arriving next week in stores and online, Walmart told TechCrunch, but it seems the website revealed them a bit earlier than planned. Walmart accidentally scooped itself by publishing product listings for its own, onn-branded, low-cost Android TV streaming stick to the website ahead of its formal launch, where it was soon spotted, alongside an upcoming 4K streaming device.
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