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Thread: Internet TV - where to start?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
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    NE Ohio
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    7,036

    Internet TV - where to start?

    Title says it all.
    I want to see what I can get on the internet as opposed to cable, sat and/or U-verse.

    Our U-verse contract expired and it jumped from $99 a month to $180 a month.
    I was happy with the service and the selection - - still am, but, not the price.

    I want to look into getting a smart TV and hooking it to the internet. Where do I start looking?

    My U-verse connection is 21Mb down/2Mb up.
    I seldom have issues with videos freezing when it's just my wife and I using the web. OTOH - when my grandson comes over our connection slows to a crawl.
    "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." - John Lennon

  2. #2
    I am trying to cut the cord too. Google that term.

    Bottom line is there are devices like chrome stick, roku, Apple TV which make your regular tv a smart tv. They also have apps that make them easier to navigate than many smart tvs.

    For network tv you can get an air antenna and a dvr for it.

    For subscription internet tv, you can get most things except live sports. That's the big show stopper for a lot of people. Also you may have to cobble together a few services like Amazon prime, Netflix and Hulu to get good program options. At the end of the day, you have to be prepared to change what you watch.

    I am still trying to convince my wife to do it...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Monroe, MI
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    11,896
    First try to negotiate that down. My dad successfully got AT&T to lower his internet bill for years.

    And consider what your internet-only plan goes up to. The pricing I've seen really favors bundling.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    N.E, Ohio
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    AT&T won't negotiate your price down? I have TWC with digital cable, 50 mps internet, DVR, and phone (don't use the phone because of the home security system) for $163/ mo. I know a lot of people complain about TWC but I have no real complaints. My biggest beef is that when there is an issue they try to tell you that it is in your house and my other complaint is the service techs. One time when then came out they disconnected two of my cable runs because I was not currently using them. They said it was to eliminate the splitter which would eliminate the booster transformer. When I insisted they leave the booster transformer they said they would have to replace it with a new two way booster to improve the internet. I said do it and it did not cost me anything to change it and no cost per month. They still left the cable runs disconnected. I reconnected them.

    I agree with Matt, bundling reduces cost that is why I took the phone. My bill with the phone was less than the same service without the phone.
    George

    Making sawdust regularly, occasionally a project is completed.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Doylestown, PA
    Posts
    7,576
    We have a Roku with Hulu. Picture quality is similar to HD assuming content is HD. I was concerned about connecting via WiFi having heard horror stories about buffering, we have a pedestrian wifi network. It hasn't been an issue. A certain 'channel' may buffer but others don't so I suspect the source, not the device or wifi network. Using a Roku - or I guess other streaming devices does change TV viewing habits. A certain show is not broadcast at a certain time. Instead, a certain number of episodes are available for a period of time. You can watch them whenever you want. OTOH, I don't know if any streaming devices permit recording, at least in HD. The Roku 1 does have a composite (? white-red-yellow jacks) out that I assume could be hooked up to a recorder, never tried it. I think any content recorded using that output would be SD, not HD no matter if the source was HD.
    Last edited by Curt Harms; 10-29-2015 at 7:37 AM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Hayes, Virginia
    Posts
    14,776
    If you are going to consider Apple TV you should wait a week or so for the new model 4 which is by far superior to the current model 3. The V4 has Siri built in and a mouse pad that makes it so much easier to use and offers any more features. The Apple TV model 4 starts at $149.00 for the 32 Gig model when they go on the shelves next week.

  7. #7
    We just got a Roku for the downstairs TV and picture quality seems fine to me. My wife is all aboard the "cut the cord" train. She's talking about an Apple TV for our bedroom TV, next. I don't have enough loyalty to TV to have an opinion except to say that the technology seems to work fine for us.

    Erik
    Ex-SCM and Felder rep

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
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    USA
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    5,582
    We've got Roku and are happy with it, but, nothing good is free - you will want to get a service provider such as Netflix or Amazon Prime or HBO or maybe more than one of these. Also, forget about sports - there really isn't any, unless of course you want to pay the NFL, or MLB, etc to watch live.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
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    Lake Gaston, Henrico, NC
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    9,091
    Amazon Fire Stick here. TV is not a Smart TV. Still paying Directv though, so haven't done much with the Firestick but get Netflix and Hulu.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Wayland, MA
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    Like the new Roku device, especially their phone app that searches all their available provides for a given movie or show-- what requires payment on one service is often free on another. We probably use Netflix 80% of the time and Amazon Prime 19% and the other hundred services rarely.

    Sports are better on radio in any event.

  11. #11
    Join Date
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    I use a Roku at one location. A small PC with a wireless keyboard and mouse and a decent video card is most efficient iIMHO. Apple TV, Roku and the stiks are all a bit sluggish and entering text for searches using a remote is a pain.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    New York, NY
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    2,203
    Use the Remote app on your iPhone to control Apple TV: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/remote/id284417350?mt=8

    Speeds things up considerably when searching for content.

  13. #13
    I've had Roku for about 3 years now. The pay channels can be worth it if you pick and choose. Most offer a free period to try them out. Where I'm at I can't get ANY local channels with an antenna, so I opted to pay for CBS. I pay for Netflix and Hulu too. I don't count Amazon Prime as a 'pay' since that's just a bonus because I use their free shipping. Oh, and there is a app called PlayOn that does have a recording feature if I remember correctly.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Belleville, IL
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    174
    Nobody has mentioned it yet, but when I cut the cable, I bought a Tivo DVR to allow me to continue to time-shift my viewing. Besides what you would normally get from a DVR, the Tivo I have will access Amazon (& Prime), Hulu, and Netflix. It has some of the new Apple TV capabilities in that you can search for a program or movie and it will search all OTA and streams for availability. The Tivo service cost $15 a month, but there is a one time option as well. I have Apple TV too, which manages my movies, and lets me purchase cable only programs that I might be interested watching. If I didn't already have Apple TV, I could purchase or rent the same from Amazon through the Tivo.

    Dave

  15. #15
    We cut the cord after we realized most of the TV time was watching Netflix and the cable channels we did watch on occasion were generally ones broadcast over the air for free in HD.

    We spent $40 on a small indoor antenna which gets us about 40 channels over the air for free (including the big NBC, ABC, FOX, etc. plus some public channels and a few shopping channels) and use a Chromecast ($35) to cast movies from Netflix ($8/month), videos on youTube, etc. There are some DVR type devices for over the air TV if you miss pausing and recording, but that's not that important to us. At the end of the day we're saving $500+ a year (we only had basic cable before) and that's a pretty good feeling.

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