1. I am giving it 2 stars rather than 1 star simply because it does show your stations and their relative signal strength based on your location, so if you know what direction north is, you can still point your antenna.
2. product i had a amplified am/fm antenna which i got in 2001 and had it not gotten thrown away in 2016 im sure it be working had to buy a thin square black n white uhf/vhf powered tv anteenaI tell this app to use my location and it tells me my location is not in the U.S. What? I put my address in and it tells me it's not in the U.S. I give 1 star so I can tell others not to bother.
3. No channels are HD, only a few normal channels, the rest are either in Spanish or shows from the 60s.All it does it show you which direction the towers are.
4. It's been 10 minutes and my phone is 3 ft from my modem and routerToo hard to use, doesn't show antennas in any easy way of figuring out which way to point antenna.
5. All it does is use your location and points you towards the broadcast towers in you area.
6. I downloaded the app, had it use my current location, and it showed me the direction of the towers.
7. Wants your information and doesnt do anything except show where signal towers are.
8. As someone who bought a 65 mile range antennae due to being outside of the major city, I alrwady know the towers are in the city and I already know where the city is.I can't even get the app to work.
9. Regardless of which direction my phone points, (N, S, E or W) the app always shows the arrow as if my phone was pointing to the West/Southwest.
10. Didn't even seem to be accurately picking up antenna directions.Very similar to the RCA app by the same developer, but it uses less storage.
11. That is the direction you want to place the antenna.