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  3. Cutting the cable

Cutting the cable

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  • L littleGreenDude

    Does Roku get any of the following ESPN/Football, AMC, LMN, Food Network, Disney, teen nick?

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    Ron Nicholson
    wrote on last edited by
    #35

    I did find a WatchESPN channel. I doubt that it shows games in whole, but it does claim to let you watch sports. There was also an A&E channel but it too required a subscription.

    Jack of all trades, master of none, though often times better than master of one.

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    • L littleGreenDude

      :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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      Chris Maunder
      wrote on last edited by
      #36

      We dropped cable a couple of years ago. Netflix, Apple TV and plenty of news channels give us everything we want, when we want it. way, WAY cheaper. I can't imagine ever signing up for cable again.

      cheers Chris Maunder

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      • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

        This in one reason I use FlashBlock - sadly it doesn't work on HTML5 - but I understand that a little careful Googling will find you a number of "YouTube downloaders" which while probably violating YouTube T&C's and thus nothing I would recommend you look for at all, but which would probably enable the discerning viewer to skip the damn "your video will start in 1 minute" advert completely. And you would get to find out what the product it was advertising was and make sure you never buy it. But I wouldn't do that, and I'm sure you wouldn't either...

        Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

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        kb5000
        wrote on last edited by
        #37

        Going OT: Adblock Plus blocks those youtube ads (and pretty much everything else), but it's only for chrome and firefox. Looked a few times for an IE equivalent, but gave up on that after a few days.

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        • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

          This in one reason I use FlashBlock - sadly it doesn't work on HTML5 - but I understand that a little careful Googling will find you a number of "YouTube downloaders" which while probably violating YouTube T&C's and thus nothing I would recommend you look for at all, but which would probably enable the discerning viewer to skip the damn "your video will start in 1 minute" advert completely. And you would get to find out what the product it was advertising was and make sure you never buy it. But I wouldn't do that, and I'm sure you wouldn't either...

          Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952) Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)

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          Simon ORiordan from UK
          wrote on last edited by
          #38

          I have a WDC - World Domination Centre - consisting of a 40" tv plugged into a dual Xeon box as a monitor. It's Linux-based (14.04) and I use a USB dongle to play free-to-air channels over Kaffeine. Nice thing is, I can record TV programmes I like, such as Sherlock and Montalbano, or watch DVD's; obviously the whole thing is ported into 5.1 sound as well, and I have about 80GB of music on the drive also. I don't watch much tv though. ;)

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          • A Andy Brummer

            I've got to agree with you. I got rid of my TV because I have young children, and I've really never looked back.

            Curvature of the Mind now with 3D

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            Gaston Verelst
            wrote on last edited by
            #39

            Normally it is the other way around: I've got young children because I got rid of my TV...

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            • G Gaston Verelst

              Normally it is the other way around: I've got young children because I got rid of my TV...

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              Andy Brummer
              wrote on last edited by
              #40

              Good one.

              Curvature of the Mind now with 3D

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              • R Ron Nicholson

                I did find a WatchESPN channel. I doubt that it shows games in whole, but it does claim to let you watch sports. There was also an A&E channel but it too required a subscription.

                Jack of all trades, master of none, though often times better than master of one.

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                littleGreenDude
                wrote on last edited by
                #41

                Thank you for the follow up.:thumbsup:

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                • L littleGreenDude

                  :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                  Jeremy Hutchinson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #42

                  We pay for Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu, so figure us for <$30 a month. We also bought a nice digital antena that sits in our attic and gets us the local broadcast channels which I only watch sports on. The only downside is you can't watch shows as they come out, so while the internet was going crazy talking about how awesome the end of Breaking Bad was I had to put my fingers in my ears and hum, then wait 6 months to see it. On the plus side I get to watch TV on my schedule and without commercials*. *Hulu has commercials and it pisses me off so much that I generally avoid watching anything on it unless my wife forces me. She doesn't seem to mind the commercials. I'd be happy to pay more for a no commercial package if they offered it.

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                  • L littleGreenDude

                    :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                    Rowdy Raider
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #43

                    I cut the cable almost 3 years ago (of course I retained my internet and Netflix like many here have said). The value I perceive from most TV programming has dropped off a cliff in recent years. With a handful of exceptions the writing of most shows is atrocious - my sister who happens to be a writer told me this is because a lot of the talented writers are transitioning to the gaming industry... so there is a rational explanation for my perception. FWIW I love football and other sports - but I am not going to watch 3 hours of commercials for 1 hour of football. So the whole "you need cable for sports" thing does not carry weight with me. You will find you have more time to do useful things like build an app for your phone/tablet/pc, and never miss cable tv. P.S. The whole point of paying for cable was supposed to be to pay for the content I thought? Then they fill the content with ads...

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                    • L littleGreenDude

                      :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                      Josh Bula
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #44

                      I have an old laptop connected to my HDTV via HDMI with a wireless keyboard/trackpad combo to control it from the couch. I watch a lot of content through websites of the networks that provide full episodes right from their website. This is also a good way to get HULU since you don't need a Hulu Plus subscription to watch a lot of content on their website.

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                      • L littleGreenDude

                        :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                        Gary Huck
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #45

                        $40/month - internet access only. I/we get more "tv-like" stuff than we can possibly watch. Raised two kids on saturday-morning-only cartoons ... they are now in their 20s and thank us for that.

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                        • A Andy Brummer

                          I've got to agree with you. I got rid of my TV because I have young children, and I've really never looked back.

                          Curvature of the Mind now with 3D

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                          Jacek M Glen
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #46

                          Same here. My wife and I decided to get rid of this time-consuming and brain-flattening device of mass control years ago. Now, if only there was a way to cut down on sleeping, I would have some spare time at last.

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                          • L littleGreenDude

                            :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                            KLPounds
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #47

                            We have recently kicked our cable addiction. We kept the internet and phone though. Net savings of about $62 a month. My 10yr daughter took it the hardest.. So hard that explaining to her that we wanted to cut cable to save on money somehow twisted in her mind that we were suddenly poor and selling off all our possessions.. (kids have no concept of budget so are funny like that) Basically, we took a look at what do we watch, what shows do we really care about.. What we found is nearly all of them can be found in streaming format.. Fortunately we tend to DVR the important shows and with our busy schedule would take a single day or 2 and just go on a marathon to catch up.. With the likes of Hulu, Netflix, Amazon Prime, etc. New episodes took a while to become available.. So why not just wait until the season is over, all episodes eventually are available, and we just go on a marathon. Additionally, I pointed out to my daughter that other than those property hunter reality shows o n HGTV, she only watches Disney and Nick shows.. Often then same 5 episodes over and over and over again no less.. We setup a profile for her on Netflix, and all of her shows were there. Problem solved. The kick in the pants is, our regional cable provider knows this is exactly the trend.. So as long as you have their full internet/phone/tv bundle they give you high speed for cheap but have a 250-300GB per month data cap.. Cut the TV service, internet goes up like $9 and your cap is lowered to 200GB. I have a dedicated home theatre PC that I built from old parts and ebay bits. Was a respectable media machine ala 2008 but it still does the job. So far the data cap hasn't been an issue, but we'll see what the summer brings. Depending on what your looking for, an Xbox, Roku, Amazon TV, Chromecast, etc.. all viable solutions if you want to commit to internet streaming. Even for keeping up on sports, the internet packages can still bring you savings long term. I'm considering a tuner card for DVR recording over-the-air tv.

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                            • L littleGreenDude

                              :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                              Rally2xs
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #48

                              Hey, don't think anything of it. I pay $280. Of course I have all the premium channels, phone service, high(er) speed internet service, and I'm out in the boonies with the best cable company I've ever seen, Metrocast. Anything goes wrong, and you get a tech at the door practically before you hang up the phone. I agree that the commercials are too much, so I don't watch entertainment programming other than my premium movie channels. Otherwise, I put on a 24 hour news program while interacting with my computer really entertains me. If there's 6 minutes of commercials on my new channel, what do I care? I'm not hanging on what happens next like I am with an entertainment program. I've got a project going now to create a movie library. You can get video capture hardware that, although it doesn't do HD, it is very, very good anyway, and better than recording with VHS. I'm up to about 200 movies in my collection now, and am heading for 1000. If I want to see "The Shining" or "The Sting" or maybe the original, 3hr+ "Spartacus" with Kirk Douglas (If you saw the recent movie of Mr. Peabody & Sherman, did you catch that the Spartacus character looked exactly like Kirk Douglas?) I can do it whenever I like. I have an entertainment center in my car that does DVD, and having 1000 movies along on vacation or any time I expect to have extra time parked and waiting, I can pass it a whole lot better than sitting in the car and doing Sudoku. I'm scheduled to record about 46 more movies in the next 2 weeks, all movies I've seen and enjoyed, and this I think is the "long suit" of cable. It enables movies at $0.50 each for a blank double-sided DVD instead of $2.50 (used) to $20 or more for a retail acquisition. OK, those are HD, but that's not something I'm going to be able to discern on a portable player or my 7" Kenwood DNX9140. Cable's "worth it" depending on how you use it. I also know tons and tons of current events that I don't think I could keep up on any other way than to let the 24 hour news channel blather in the background.

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                              • E Ennis Ray Lynch Jr

                                Couldn't be happier. I still go to the movies and stream the occasional Netflix but my life is so much better. Just ditch it. My decision wasn't entirely altruistic, however, I was just too tired of all the GD commercials. A few ads are fine but television has become one constant commercial interruption. Sadly, discovery is almost the worst, in the before the before they might make an anthology show with 4 things occurring in 30 minutes not they stretch that one thing into an hour. Literally, watch something on the discovery, after every commercial break it is a 2 to 3 minute recap of what happened before the break. Maybe, 10 minutes of content for the hour! (but 22 minutes of commercials or more)

                                Need custom software developed? I do custom programming based primarily on MS tools with an emphasis on C# development and consulting. "And they, since they Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs" -- Robert Frost "All users always want Excel" --Ennis Lynch

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                                sasadler
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #49

                                Commercials are easy to avoid, just don't watch anything 'live'. I've got home built DVRs on our TVs so anything the wifey is watching was recorded. She almost never watches live TV. I don't watch TV except for the talking heads on Sunday morning (This Week with George Stepanopoulos).

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                                • L littleGreenDude

                                  :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                                  codefabricator
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #50

                                  I went through exactly the same thing (and back - sort of). Ditched the cable completely (except for internet of course). That was great for about 5 years, watching the occasional Netflix or Amazon Prime movie, but really found myself missing sports and local news. So when I recently moved into my new place I made the tough decision to get TV again, but only the most basic channel package they offered. Now I can watch football and news on the major networks (FOX, CBS, etc but no ESPN for me). The great thing about being away from it for so long is that I have absolutely NO desire to watch all the other crap shows anymore. Kinda like quitting drinking for a long time and then reverting back to only having the occasional glass of wine with dinner. It's a good balance :)

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                                  • L littleGreenDude

                                    :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                                    Lost User
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #51

                                    I just trimmed my package back to basic - was tired of paying for commercials and propaganda. Funny thing is - the only thing I miss is HBO and may look at getting that with HBO Go via internet. I'm still paying 40 for basic and 40 for 2 set top boxes ... in other words still paying about 90 with taxes every month and let's face it - there really isn't much value still. Always found it odd that we have to pay to watch commercials ... The age of pushing content is coming to an end, we've been spoiled by the internet where we can pull what we want (for now.....)

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                                    • L littleGreenDude

                                      :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                                      snowman53
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #52

                                      I live just south of the border in Mx & rely on over the air broadcasts from the US and the internet for my TV (limited) watching. Digital broadcast TV is actually higher resolution than cable these days, but I rarely watch anything except the occasional news or sports event. I primarily rely on RSS feeds for the nightly news and bittorrents for any TV shows I can't live without. Instead of Roku or similar I use an $80 Android TV box [^]. You can find similar on eBay or Amazon, but at a higher price. The advantage of the Android box is that it is basically a tablet that uses your TV as the screen. You can use any Android app, Netflix, Hulu, Pandora, torrent & podcast clients, Skype, etc. You can use an app on your Android phone as a remote control or a wireless mouse/keyboard. I use a combination of RSS feeds[^] and podcast subscriptions to automate the downloading of my selection of audio and video entertainment. Almost painless once the feeds are setup!

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                                      • Z ZurdoDev

                                        The best TV is no TV. :)

                                        There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

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                                        voodooduu
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #53

                                        I just cancelled my DirecTV about a couple weeks ago. I was paying over $100 per month. After analyzing the shows I watch, I figured I can get by with Hulu Plus and Netflix on my XBox; a comibed total of about $16 per month.

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                                        • L littleGreenDude

                                          :java:Just wanted to get the input of others... I feel like I'm getting raked over the coals by my cable provider. I'm paying close to $100 per month, between the channel packages, remote rentals, cable box rentals, tax charges, etc. When I grew up, tv was free, granted we only got 3 channels. Unless I could convince my little brother to stand behind the set and hold up some foil then we would get FOX as a 4th channel. :rolleyes: Ah good times... but I digress. I would really like to get rid of cable, but my son gets a look of fear on his face like I'm about to cut off his arm. :wtf: We have an Xbox ONE and a 360, so we can stream Netflix to all tv's in the house. I feel the xbox is under utilized and we could access more media through it. I'm turning this in to a book and I didn't mean to, so in the interest of brevity. Please share if you have an option other than cable? And do you still use the cable provider for internet connectivity. Are there any boxes/devices you recommend for internet tv? Any ideas are welcome? :)

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                                          crazedDotNetDev
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #54

                                          I ditched cable 14 years ago & still loving it. I’ve used Hulu & Netflix forever; more recently started purchasing movies & tv on Xbox video. I’ve gotten into the habit of getting into a show on Netflix then purchasing the season on Xbox. Don’t forget about Crackle also! Cable is dead and they know it. Providers just don’t want to give it up. The latest stupid trend is to allow streaming IF you already have a cable subscription. (checkout HBO Go) A probable game changer is Aereo . They’re current fighting “the broadcasters” in Supreme Court. Their setup is the install antennas in all major cities, then DVR/stream whatever you ask them to. They’ve got my $$$ if they can get a setup local to me.

                                          - great coders make code look easy - When humans are doing things computers could be doing instead, the computers get together late at night and laugh at us. - ¿Neal Ford?

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