Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 2219
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Title: HPR2219: The Musings of a Novice Cable TV Cord Cutter
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2219/hpr2219.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 15:52:21
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,290 entitled, The Musings of an Obvious Cable TV Cord Cutter.
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It is hosted by Ranger and in about 58 minutes long, and Karim a clean flag.
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The summary is my adventures with dealing with my local cable TV provider and my hardware selections.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
|
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello everybody, this is Reg and it's the ramblings of a novice
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cable TV cord cutter.
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I recently became a cable TV cord cutter.
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It wasn't a calculated move.
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It was an impulsive act that was caused by my recent dealings with Cox Cable,
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my cable TV and internet provider.
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In my town, Cox Communications provides the bulk of cable TV and internet services.
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If you don't use Cox as your TV provider, you do have access to Direct TV and Dish Network.
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If you need broadband and don't use Cox, then you have access to AT&T DSL service.
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In my area, AT&T DSL is not a viable option for internet services.
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If you use the various video streaming services like Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon Prime video,
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DSL speeds are just too slow for a reliable 720p and 1080p viewing.
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I've been a Cox Cable customer since 1990 and have been generally satisfied with their service.
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Cox, like many service providers, offers a general get your foot in the door package of cable TV
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internet and telephone for $100.
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With that bundle, you get a various mix of channels, local and cable, and music channels.
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You don't get any services like HBO or Showtime, and a DVR is not included.
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With this package, you also get a certain number of email inboxes and user accounts that you can use.
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I'm not sure how much you can use. I only use about two or three of those extra email accounts.
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As a Cox customer, you also have access to 50 gigabytes of online data that you can use.
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In addition to your TV and internet services, Cox also provides a VOIP telephone service.
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I just throw that in there to complete the bundle. I don't use the VOIP telephone service.
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I found that when it was connected, all I would get were sales calls on that line.
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I eventually kept the electricity plugged into the phone, but I unplugged the data connection to it.
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I'm satisfied with this bundle, and over the years that initial $100 bundle has gone up in price
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to about $127. Remember, if you're looking for one of these initial bundles,
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don't forget to add in the various rate service charges and taxes.
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When you get quoted a price, make sure you ask those additional charges are going to be,
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so you can know the exact price you have to pay every month.
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My main complaint with Cox has been their use of internet data allowances.
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If you do a lot of video streaming like I do or downloading,
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the 350 gigabyte data allowance that Cox has for its customers can go real quick,
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especially almost at the end of the month. You see your data usage always creeping up to that
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350 gigabyte line. I must say that Cox never charged you for any usage, so you could get that
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350 gigabyte data allowance every month. They would send you emails saying you need to watch your usage.
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The times I've gone over it have never been throttled with my data, speeds or anything.
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I've never been charged. I just get an email and said, hey, you might want to check your network
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connections. Make sure you don't have any outside users using your service.
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2016, in October 2016, I should say, Cox scabled notified all of its customers that it was
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increasing the data usage allowances from 350 gigabits up to one terabyte per month for most
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of their users. In my opinion, this was in response to Comcasts upping their data uses to one terabyte
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for some of its customers. I live about 150 miles south of Atlanta, Georgia.
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And in Atlanta, there are Cox scabled, Comcasts, Time Water and Google Fiber.
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No one service has a monopoly. I've seen in some neighborhoods where on one side of the street,
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somebody might have Cox scabled. Next door, somebody might have Time Water. Cross the street,
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somebody might have Comcasts and down around the corner, somebody might have Google Fiber.
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So they have freedom of choice in Atlanta. In one of Robbins, you either have Cox scabled
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for your TV service or you put up in antenna or you use direct TV or dish.
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I believe, in my opinion, that one terabyte data allowance was Cox compensating their customers
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with that increase in data allowance because of Comcasts and Google having one terabyte limits
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for their customers. It's just in my opinion, I don't know.
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In addition to the one terabyte data allowance, Cox instituted a penalty if you exceeded the
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one terabyte limit. The first time you went over, Cox would send you an email warning you
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that you had gone over and that you need to make sure you check your data usage using the Cox
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cable app for Android or iOS or you go online and use your computer to check your data usage.
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On the second offense, Cox would issue a warning via email, charge you $10
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for every 50 gigabits of data you used over that one terabyte limit.
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That can become very expensive if you have a lot of people in your family and you go over each month.
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So that was the main limit, that one terabyte limit. That one terabyte data usage allowances for
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all customers except those that have subscribed to the Cox Gigablast bundle. With that Cox Gigablast bundle,
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you got two terabytes of data usage and uploading download speeds of one gigabyte.
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So you got one gigabyte up one down.
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The Gigablast bundles are not available in all Cox service areas. I'm not sure it's available
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in my town. The main reason Cox has a Gigablast bundle is an answer to those services in Atlanta,
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Georgia. Like Google Fiber, Cox has to be able to answer those questions that customer says,
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well, how come I can't get one gigabyte up and one gigabyte down speeds.
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In August and September, I believe I read, in Atlanta, Comcast started offering one terabyte data
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allowances. And so Cox had to compete with Google and Comcast. And so they increase their data
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usage. That's why you have the Gigablast and the increased data of allowances.
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That one terabyte data usage allowance was generally welcomed by most customers.
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You know, most people are not going to use one terabyte data every month.
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And so if they were like me, they were happy, especially since previously we only had
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350 gigabytes of data usage. After two months of the increased data allowances,
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Cox dropped the, you don't get nothing for free card with the FYI Bulletin included with
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their December 26 bills. That FYI Bulletin said most Cox customers would receive a rate
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and services fees increase come January 5th, 2017.
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The amount of your fee increases,
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dependent on the services you subscribe to from Cox and would vary from customer to customer.
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As a Cox customer since 1990, I knew about the one and two year price lock contracts that you
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have to agree to receive service. My current price lock was supposedly good until February 2017.
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Every year I went through this dance with Cox Cable around contract renewal time to keep my current
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services without a substantial increase in cost. When I received that notice in December,
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about a possible price increase I called Cox to confirm my price lock.
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The Cox employee I spoke to assured me my price lock was good. I told a service rep that I had past
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documentation concerning all my billing and all my notifications and notices that I received
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and that I had made concerning my price locks. When and where and how to use your price locks.
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I even had in my Google Calendar notifications to email me and issue a pop up on my cell phone
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when I needed to call Cox Cable about my new contracts. On January 3rd, just on a while here,
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I picked up my cell phone, went to the Cox Cable app to check my data usage for the month of
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December 2017. With the Cox Cable app, we can tell you what your current billing information will be.
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You can troubleshoot your cable TV box or your cable modem that's issued to you by Cox.
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You can also read information concerning Cox Cable and you can check your data usage.
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The first screen that pops up is your current billing data. What you're going to owe Cox at the
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end of the month. When I saw that screen, my mouth is dry. I couldn't believe it.
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My monthly bill had increased from $127 per month for December and would go up on January 26th
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to $160 per month. The only changes to my service was that increase I received at the end of
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October 2016 of the increased data allowance. Nothing else changed.
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I knew that I was going to do my yearly dance with Cox about the contract. Like I said,
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I had it marked in my calendar. I just hadn't expected that I was going to have to do it in early
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January. So I got on the phone. I called Cox. They answered you, oh, hello, sir. Thank you for
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being a loyal customer for someone so years. Like I said, I had been a customer since 1990 and they
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they just love it when a long-term customer calls them. Oh, thank you for being a customer for
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26 years. blah, blah, blah. May I help you? What was your problem? And I told them what I've
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just stated about the price going up. Apparently, my price lock was no good anymore.
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Cox didn't want to honor that price lock. It was only good for an additional one month. I know
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that but I wasn't willing to start arguing or negotiating with Cox about an increase in my
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cable services. I spoke to five different Cox cable retention agents that day. That's what they
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call now retention agents about providing a viable price for the current Cox services I was
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receiving. Between those five different retention agents, I've received information that I could
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have a bill as high as $189 for the same services I was currently receiving down to a low $105
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if I got rid of my cable TV channels and just went with the local stations. Still keeping the
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telephone and keeping my current internet services. For whatever reasons, Cox didn't want to
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renegotiate with me that day. Every year I've done it, you basically call Cox tell him,
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hey, my contract will be up in a month or so. What can you offer me? And they try to work with me.
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You tell them how much you can spend what you can afford and they'll meet their price most of
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the time. For this time, first time since 1990, they weren't willing to negotiate for my services.
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So I said screw it and canceled my TV and telephone services. It was an impulse out of the blue,
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I just said screw it. So now I was in a bind. I had thought about becoming a court cutter but
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never seriously thought about it. My Cox cable bill went from $127 down to $60 per month. I liked
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that. I was saving some money. I have a Netflix account and an ACORN TV account. I've used Hulu plus
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in the past and Amazon video in the past. I have access to a family members Hulu account
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via their password and so I knew I could watch most of the stuff I wanted to watch on
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TV. I've used HBO now when Game of Thrones airs on HBO and most recently with Westworld. I just
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subscribe to that when those shows are on the air. In the past year when those shows came on,
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I would cancel my Netflix account for the time Game of Thrones or Westworld would be on.
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I'm a very frugal guy. I don't believe in duplicating a lot of services and so what the heck you know
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the main thing with using online streaming services is you don't get locked in for long periods of
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time. You get billed month to month if you don't want to use a service for this month or the next
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month you don't pay. You go back, you sign back in, reactivate your account and they charge you
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for the next month. They keep your data online and in their databases, supposedly for six additional
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months after you first sign out. So you could play the swap game like I do. Use Hulu plus one
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one month then switch over to Acorn and other month or Netflix and other month in HBO now and
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other month. So I had no main problems with using my video streaming. My main concern
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was that I wasn't going to be able to watch live sports and mostly that was going to be on ESPN
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or view the weather channel. Each morning I have a set routine. I get up about 5.30 a.m.
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Turn on the TV. I flipped the ESPN checkout sports center. Flip over to ESPN2 and watch Mike and
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Mike or I flip over to the weather channel and watch the personalities there till about 9 o'clock at
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a morning. After you've been doing that for a few years you just get into a routine and it's
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kind of hard to change. I could get around ESPN. I've got the tune in app on my Android cell phone
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and you just open up the tune in and search ESPN and there's a thousand ESPN radio affiliates
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on ESPN and a lot of those play what is happening on the ESPN TV show. They just play the video feed.
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So I wasn't too worried about ESPN. My main concern for the ESPN was I wanted to see the college
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football games that we can for the college football playoffs championships and the upcoming NFL
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football wild cards. In the past it wasn't too bad with ESPN. The broadcast channels like
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Fox Network, CBS and NBC and ABC all had the contracts for big live sporting events but in the
|
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last few years ESPN has been offering billions and billions of dollars to the sports networks
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for exclusive or extended access to what was then the pro owned by the broadcast networks.
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Now ESPN has those contracts and you can't watch those on the broadcast networks anymore.
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So the NFL championship playoffs was my main concern or the college football playoffs championships
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but like I said I got around that using the tune in radio app. For those of you that don't know
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what tune in is, go into Google Play Store or the iOS store. tune in offers music services,
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radio sports services and different access to audio. It's free or you can pay for premium.
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I don't know how much premium is with the free version of the app. You get commercials
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but the commercials aren't intrusive. You just go ahead and click it and search for what you want.
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You can set up favorites or not but I basically just use it to listen to certain ESPN radio stations.
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On my cell phone I also have an FM transmitter or receiver and my local tell has a ESPN FM radio station.
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So all the stuff that you see on ESPN I can listen to on my Android phone for free.
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So like I said I wasn't worried about ESPN.
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I've used my TV which is a 32 inch Panasonic 2006 TV with a Roku LT box since early 2012.
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I've had access to a lot of streaming services because I was a cost cable TV commercial customer.
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By being a cable TV customer you have access to a lot of cable streaming apps that you can view
|
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with the Roku box or Fire TV or your Apple TV or whatever.
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The main thing that is a problem is that the TV networks started a few years ago,
|
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a one authentication thing where if you wanted to view ESPN let's say or another channel
|
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that you normally watched with cable TV like USA Network or TNT or TBS on your Roku box or your
|
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Apple TV you had to authenticate with your password that you use for cost cable they would check it
|
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and then say yes or no if you were a costable customer the password would go through and they
|
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would authenticate and you could stream whatever show as you wanted. By not being a cost cable TV
|
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customer anymore I couldn't use those apps anymore so I had to delete those apps on my Roku box.
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Just didn't work I was out of luck. If you do use a Roku a lot of the TV apps are most
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of them are free. Some of the broadcast apps like CBS and ABC and the CW Network don't require
|
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authentication. Your usage may vary you have to check which ones you have and which ones you use
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but I know that a lot of those cable TV apps that I add on my Roku are no longer viable because
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it would not authenticate me with my cost cable TV subscription which I did not have anymore.
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Also around the time when I received news that I was getting an increase in my data usage allowance
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I was contemplating upgrading to a new Roku model if anybody knows about the Roku LT
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it was introduced in 2011 by Roku it's the $50 model it was the cheek model but it streamed at
|
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720p had Wi-Fi connection didn't have any ethernet ports had the old RCA connections on the back
|
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and HDMI connector. I used the HDMI connector with my old Panasonic LCD TV and I had a nice 720p
|
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pitch all the time. The only thing I didn't like about the Roku LT recently is that the interface
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usage is very very slow like when you get to that interface usage and you're clicking left and
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writing up and down through your Roku apps you can see how slow it can get.
|
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So I was thinking about getting one of the new Roku boxes you know they have them starting at
|
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$50-$60 going up to $99-$120 or to get one of the Roku sticks for $39-$40.
|
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Even at this last CES that was in January this year Roku introduced a whole new line of Roku boxes
|
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so you know each year they come out with a new line of boxes with faster chips
|
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just like the computer industry does. So I was interested in getting another Roku box moving
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my Panasonic TV back out into the den where it was used before and maybe getting a new TV to go
|
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along with the Roku. But beginning of November I remember seeing something on the Amazon website
|
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that they had or would have for the Thanksgiving holiday a TV called a TCL Tangle Charlie Lima Roku
|
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TV. TCL is a Chinese or Korean company and they entered a contract a couple of years ago with
|
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Roku to put a Roku interface a Roku user interface on their TVs. So basically you have a TCL TV
|
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with the Roku interface. This makes it a smart TV. My model is the TCL 32-inch 720p Roku TV
|
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and over Thanksgiving Amazon was advertising this TV for $139-$140.
|
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I almost bought that TV back Thanksgiving but I'd never pulled the tree. I put it in my wish list
|
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and continued to think about it. Then after this my dealings with Cox I said you know what
|
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I do want a Roku box but if I spend a hundred bucks on one of the new Roku's
|
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and why not just get that Roku TV. So I said the heck with it. It's a 2015 model
|
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and I ordered a Roku TV with one of those amplified TV antennas that you can get for Amazon for $20
|
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This was a Friday night. I ordered it. They told me it was arrived the next Thursday
|
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and lo and behold both items showed up early. I got Tuesday morning and there they were.
|
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So I got my Roku TV and my amplified TV antenna for $180-$180.
|
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So I said okay I'm good to go. I'm good to go. So I got the amplified TV antenna and that's
|
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going to give me all my local stations. In my town, all the local broadcast stations,
|
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there's about a total of 21. You get ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, CW and PBS. In addition you got
|
||||
common TV which shows science fiction, old science fiction. Sometimes you get some new science fiction.
|
||||
Various iterations about TV, me TV, my TV, a couple of religious stations,
|
||||
both Spanish and English, for a total of 21. So I was covered. I knew I was covered. I could
|
||||
watch all the live broadcasts I wanted to. I was still worried about my ESPN and my weather
|
||||
channel. So I took the Panasonic, took it back out into the den, took the Roku, my old Roku
|
||||
up to it and it works fine. The only thing is I don't spend any time in the rest of the house.
|
||||
I spend all my time in my office. I put the new TV back here on my desk and it sits alongside
|
||||
my 21 inch computer monitor and keyboard. I got a couple of hard drives sitting next to my
|
||||
Cox cable modem and my ASUS router and I have a Lenovo laptop also on this desk with a USB hub
|
||||
with 5 USB ports plugged in and the TV is connected to the computer via HDMI and the monitor is
|
||||
connected to another port. So I'm good to go. I can use my TV for streaming videos. I can
|
||||
view downloaded videos that I have on my computer and the best thing about it, I don't have three
|
||||
remote controls like I had with my other TV and the Roku and HDMI switcher box that I used to
|
||||
switch between the different inputs. Everything in the Roku is built in. So you've got one TV
|
||||
comes with four, three or four HDMI ports, USB ports and you go from there.
|
||||
Many of you probably have used Cody, formerly known as XBMC. I've used it with varying degrees
|
||||
of success and the last couple of years XBMC became Cody. Cody uses various plugins. You can
|
||||
install it on computer, Windows, not sure if it Mac as a version and Linux and it allows you
|
||||
to stream and download various content. Like I said, I've had various success with Cody and XBMC.
|
||||
I didn't need another box to manage or more stuff to worry about with my current Linux boxes.
|
||||
So that's why I've always opted for a Roku box. Roku is just a dumb box with embedded Linux and you
|
||||
can just sign into it, upload and download and Roku checks, make sure it's updated every day or
|
||||
every week or whatever. So you don't have to manage it. Now back to ESPN. My dilemma is still big
|
||||
one. You know, a lot of sports is a big thing for a lot of people and you become accustomed to
|
||||
certain things. Eventually you realize you don't need all those channels.
|
||||
And so like I said, I got around the ESPN live sports thing using the Tunian radio app.
|
||||
That was fine. I hooked up my TCL Roku that I ordered. Like I said, it's a base model.
|
||||
It's a 32-inch 720p 2015 model. That's why the price was so cheap. It has a much lower profile
|
||||
than my old Panasonic TV. It's lower profile, slimmer, thinner, lighter and weight and very thin
|
||||
bezels. No more of them big, one and a half inch, two-inch bezels like them. Oh, early 2000 LCDs
|
||||
had. It works for me. One thing I realized, everybody doesn't need a 55-inch 4K TV.
|
||||
I can't even find a place to put a 55-inch 4K TV in my office. So I don't need that.
|
||||
Maybe if I had a family or wife and kids, I would put it out in my den. Yeah, that'd be fine. But
|
||||
for me, nice little 32-inch TV is fine. 720p is fine. I don't need 1080p or 4K.
|
||||
TCL is a Chinese or Korean company. I'm not sure. I didn't bother to look it up.
|
||||
And they make smart TVs. A couple years ago, they decided to join in a contract with Roku
|
||||
and use the Roku UI for their smart TVs. When you first turn on the TCL Roku TV, you see the
|
||||
standard Roku interface. Except you look at it and see where all your apps are on the right-hand
|
||||
center part of the screen over to the right-hand side of the screen. But the first
|
||||
app you see is the HDMI port that is available on the back of your Roku TV. Next to it is the
|
||||
antenna. These appear just like the apps do on the Roku TV. So you don't have to deal with multiple
|
||||
remotes like I was talking about before. Looking for what input controls what device. I remember
|
||||
with my Panasonic, I had Chromecast hooked up, I had the Roku hooked up, I had the TV itself plugged
|
||||
into the streaming switcher, which was then plugged into my laptop computer. And every time I wanted
|
||||
to switch inputs, I would always have to find which remote to use. And then if I was watching
|
||||
cable TV, I would have to use the Cox cable issue remote, you know, one of the big old 12-13-inch
|
||||
remotes with 100 buttons. So you always had to have your remotes around. Well with the Roku TV,
|
||||
you get the regular standard Roku app. And that's it. You don't have to worry about anything else.
|
||||
The remote is very simple. You got a on-off button at the top, a back button, a home button,
|
||||
a left-right up, down, okay combo, tight pad. You got a rewind button, a star button for
|
||||
options, a plague, reverse, a forward button combo, and then down it towards the bottom of the
|
||||
remote. You have four additional big buttons that are labeled Netflix, Amazon, CBS, News, and Sling.
|
||||
Press one of those four buttons and it takes you directly to that service that you pressed.
|
||||
I have seen other Roku remotes that have their four buttons labeled differently with other services.
|
||||
I have not found a way or I don't know if you can program these buttons. I know now that press
|
||||
Netflix with this remote. It takes me directly into my Netflix. If I press Amazon,
|
||||
since I don't have Amazon Prime anymore, it'll take me to the Amazon app which I can install.
|
||||
The third button is CBS News. It does the same thing with that and the fourth one is Sling TV.
|
||||
So very simple remote. On the right hand side of the remote, you have a volume increase button
|
||||
and a volume down button and a mute button. One thing I don't like about this remote is it
|
||||
doesn't have a headphone jack. If you look at some of the newer Roku remotes, they have a
|
||||
head jack port, headphone jack port. So you can just plug in your headphones and listen to your
|
||||
TV through your remote. That went a big problem with me.
|
||||
But you know what? Later that week after I had the TV set up,
|
||||
I got a notification on my Android phone that my Android Roku app needed updating and when
|
||||
I updated it to the new Roku 4 app, Roku that done a great upgrade to their Android app.
|
||||
With that app, you can view all your channels you have installed. You can view the Roku channel store.
|
||||
You can set up your TV via the app. You can fix the picture settings with your app.
|
||||
You can use the keypad keyboard on your phone to enter passwords and authenticate
|
||||
without having to use the on-screen keyboard on your Roku box or your Roku TV.
|
||||
That's especially nice if you got last pass like I do. You're doing a new setup and you have
|
||||
to authenticate your Netflix account. All you do is hit your last pass app and it pops open and
|
||||
asks you do you want to use this for Roku or Netflix. You click whichever one you want and it fills in
|
||||
whatever after you've put in your four number code or whatever and it fills it in automatically.
|
||||
No more using your remote control with the on-screen keyboard that Roku provides. It's very nice.
|
||||
It's a very nice app. Also with the new app, you can stream video, music, audio from your phone
|
||||
to your Roku devices with the phone. Sort of like a Chromecast. Chromecast I should say.
|
||||
This TV can't be built in with the Roku media player so you can play videos and pictures and
|
||||
music or whatever via your cell phone. This is a nice little handy object. So I like it a whole
|
||||
lot. And then to top it all off, you can use your cell phone and the app and plug in the
|
||||
headphone and listen to your Roku TV via your cell phone. That's just gravy for me. I like that.
|
||||
So that new updated app was pretty good. So Roku has come through for me.
|
||||
I stated that I ordered a TV antenna. I have to buy a TV antenna. It's a little flat black
|
||||
mat with a 10-12-foot cord that you connect to your antenna outboard of your TV. Find a nice
|
||||
place in your house. I'd say go as high as you can go towards the ceiling to pick up
|
||||
all your channels. I could say that in my location we have 21 broadcast channels and I get everyone
|
||||
up very good. All the big broadcast networks come in the 1080i and a lot of those
|
||||
other channels like comment and bounce TV and me TV. They're like 4 ADP. They don't broadcast
|
||||
in 1080p or 720. They're very low broadcast and that's why I don't worry about them too much.
|
||||
Once you fire up your Roku, it asks for your network access credentials. That's the first
|
||||
thing you input. With the new Roku phone app, it's easy to do. Otherwise you have to use their
|
||||
remote control to use the on-screen keyboard on a Roku TV to input your credentials. Easy peasy.
|
||||
Nothing. No big problems. Everybody has done it if you got a Roku.
|
||||
Next, after you have put in your network credentials, you have to put in your Roku account
|
||||
information. Basically you just sign into your Roku account via that online keyboard and
|
||||
all your Roku apps that you used on another device start populating your current
|
||||
Roku device. So you don't have to go in and download all new Roku apps every time you get a
|
||||
new device. It just automatically populates. Sort of like the backup function on Android or iOS
|
||||
device. Once you sign in with your credentials, all your apps and information come populating
|
||||
to your new device. One of the things you have to remember is that if you have a Netflix account or
|
||||
a Hulu account, you will have to sign into those accounts. The app is downloaded, but you have to
|
||||
sign in with your credentials. But you're only going to do that once. Now all you have to do is
|
||||
select what you want to watch. So you're sitting there at the Roku menu. HDMI port is up there
|
||||
antenna is up there and all your apps are up there. What do I want to watch? You just click each
|
||||
one and it'll take you. I can watch videos from my computer via the HDMI port. I can watch
|
||||
live broadcast channels via my antenna or I can watch streaming networks via my Roku apps.
|
||||
It's a very nice all-in-one place. If you don't want to watch TV but you want to set up the picture,
|
||||
settings, picture settings are no problem. You're not going to get
|
||||
extreme picture settings like you get with one of those 55-inch Roku TVs.
|
||||
The picture settings for the 32-inch TCR Roku TV I have are just like regular old
|
||||
settings for current TVs. You get a decent picture out of the box, but don't expect to be able
|
||||
to extremely fine tune what you want. You know some guys buy a disk and compare it to their
|
||||
computer screen and go through this video and compare the the blacks and the whites and the
|
||||
reds and the blues and all. Don't expect to do all that. You got a $160 TV just be happy you got a
|
||||
TV desk working. You can access TV brightness, picture mode, picture size, audio effect, sleep timer,
|
||||
captioning, SAP and accessibility settings. And then at the bottom of the screen in the picture
|
||||
settings you have advanced picture settings and that concerns backlight, brightness, contrast,
|
||||
sharpness, color, tint and color temperature. There's also a reset TV settings option available.
|
||||
You screw things up so bad and you got to get back to bare metal. That's what you hit.
|
||||
I played around with the settings. I got a decent picture, but I really didn't like what I was
|
||||
looking at. I thought I could do a lot better. So I did a Google search and found a few settings
|
||||
on the Roku forums and read it. These are just some settings that people have used that
|
||||
owned this 32 inch Roku TV and they found these perfect settings for them and they just submitted
|
||||
them to these forums. I suggest if you have a Roku TV do a search like I did. Grab a copy of some of
|
||||
these settings and just fine tune your settings like I did. Eventually you'll come up with something
|
||||
but you have a good base to start at with some of these user-supplied
|
||||
TV settings. Make yourself a hard copy, put it in your desk and you're good to go.
|
||||
Set it and forget it. All in all I'm happy with my cable cutting. It was about time. Like I said,
|
||||
Cox got to me that day and I was tired of messing with him and so I just said screw it.
|
||||
I'm currently subscribed to Netflix. I have access to Hulu Plus and I have access and use
|
||||
Acorn TV. Hulu Plus is $7.99 a month for the basic option I think and you can get the no advertisement
|
||||
option up to $12.11.99 or something like that. Netflix calls $9.99 a month for the standard option.
|
||||
Acorn TV, I don't know if anybody knows about Acorn TV. Acorn TV offers BBC, ITV,
|
||||
Channel 4-type programs. All the stuff you used to watch on prime time PBS,
|
||||
Masterpiece Theater type stuff. I like Acorn TV because I'm a crime TV addict. I love watching
|
||||
me some crime TV, especially BBC type crime TV. Back in the 90s I was a big prime suspect fan with
|
||||
Ellen Marin. I recently realized that I hadn't seen prime suspect in a long time. NBC tried to reboot
|
||||
a couple of years back and it was awful. But I wanted the original prime suspect with Ellen Marin.
|
||||
Netflix didn't care who Lulu didn't have it. Amazon had it but I didn't have access to Amazon
|
||||
Prime. But as I did at Google search I found that Acorn TV had Amazon Prime had all the episodes.
|
||||
From the 1990s all the way up to 2006-2008. Thanksgiving was a wonderful weekend.
|
||||
Because I watched nothing but Acorn TV that weekend. So that's how I learned about Acorn TV.
|
||||
And the thing is it cost $4.99.
|
||||
When Game of Thrones and Westworld roll around again I'll grab my HBO now account and reactivate it.
|
||||
That's $15. But when I do reactivate HBO now account I'll probably drop Netflix or Lulu Plus.
|
||||
Duplication of services for a lot of these streaming services including Amazon TV. That's why I don't
|
||||
use Amazon. So say some money. The best thing with these services is you just subscribe month
|
||||
a month and aren't obligated to a one or two year contract like you are with cable TV.
|
||||
You don't have to be a slave to cable TV industry anymore.
|
||||
My last piece of advice and I seriously offered this to anybody contemplating
|
||||
cord cutting is to do some research. Don't just go off like I did. Spare the moment
|
||||
and cancel your service. Do some research first. If you do some research you talk to your family
|
||||
members or other family members and your friends and ask them questions. If they've tried it
|
||||
do you think you can try it. Maybe use your family as a guinea pig and try it for a weekend
|
||||
without using cable services. Buy a cheap antenna. You can get these in amplified antennas for
|
||||
$10 to $50. Just get a cheap one and see how well your local stations work.
|
||||
I also found a good source of information from the Cord Cutter News website.
|
||||
You can book market. I subscribe to it with my RSS newsreader. I get wonderful information
|
||||
every day from them. One of the big things I found out from Cord Cutter News, we all know about
|
||||
Sling TV and their options. If you don't want to go with just cable TV or standard streaming apps
|
||||
but you want to see your cable TV shows like AMC, USA, whatever. Right now you can use Sling TV. They've
|
||||
got different bundles for prices going from $20 to $50 I believe. Direct TV has a streaming service
|
||||
with two or three bundles. Prices range from $30 to $50. Sort of like Sling TV.
|
||||
And then there's PlayStation View which has the same. All these are about the same price.
|
||||
Offer about the same services. Different bundles offer different things. If you get the most
|
||||
expensive bundle you get most of the channels. So if mom likes ESPN and dad likes watching
|
||||
Walking Dead you have ESPN and AMC. The kiddies want to see the Disney Channel. They can watch
|
||||
Disney Channel. So you have those options. Even some of them have the weather channel I find out.
|
||||
But remember if you cancel your cable TV and you subscribe to Netflix and Hulu and Acorn and HBO
|
||||
in addition to what your internet service cost you each month. And then you throw in Sling TV
|
||||
or the Direct TV streaming service or the PlayStation View streaming services.
|
||||
You're going to come very close to the amount you were paying each month with your cable TV.
|
||||
So think about what you're doing. And one last thing. As I was reading some of the reports out
|
||||
of CES last week and a week before Hulu announced their own live version of live TV. So sometime
|
||||
this year if you don't use Sling or PlayStation View or Direct TV streaming you will be able to
|
||||
use your Hulu Plus account pay maybe $40 a month and watch ESPN and the weather channel and AMC
|
||||
and TBS and all those other channels. So everybody's getting into the game. That's the thing now.
|
||||
That's the hot thing. Right now is a good time to be a cable cord cutter.
|
||||
A few years ago it wasn't such a good time. You just sit there and you could see whatever your TV
|
||||
could allow you to watch. Now if you got favorite shows on your favorite channels then go for it.
|
||||
But remember subscribing to all these different bundles and
|
||||
streaming services, the price will add up. That's all the ramblings I have for now. Sorry if it
|
||||
was a lot a little long. I know it was close to going an hour. This is Reg from Central Georgia
|
||||
in the United States of America. Y'all have good one. Bye.
|
||||
You've been listening to HECA Public Radio at HECA Public Radio dot org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing,
|
||||
to find out how easy it really is. HECA Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound
|
||||
and the infonomicon computer club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
|
||||
or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the
|
||||
creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user