Curious how many millennials cutting the cord are overburdened with college or other debt since necessity is the mother of invention. Or in this case frugality and living within your means in post-recession America.
Curious how many millennials cutting the cord are overburdened with college or other debt since necessity is the mother of invention. Or in this case frugality and living within your means in post-recession America.
Ok so i cut direct TVFirst option is to screw the coaxial into the back of your tv, set the tv to cable rather than antenna, then run a channel scan. You should still have all your main channels available (espn, espn 2, tbs, amc etc etc) even despite canceling. They can't cut your cable access if you have internet still. Without their box, you just lose access to the channel guide, hd channels, premium channels (hbo), but not basic and mid tier channels such as AMC, TBS, ESPN, ESPN2, etc etc. This is assuming you cut cable tv such as TWC, not satellite.
Ok so i cut direct TV
This is what I do. For an extra $5 you can get the SEC Network and some other sports channels added also.You can get free 7 day trial with SlingTV that will include ESPN and ESPN2 [and other sports network]: (it will involve a credit card but prepaid debit card works great).
If you like sling, you will probably need to buy a ROKU {or other} device to get the sports streaming results you will find acceptable and depends on your puter. (now the word puter is old talk, lol)
https://www.sling.com/ $20
If you don't like sling cancel in 6 days and there will be no charges.
I used it last season but cancelled during the off months but plan to be back as soon as football season starts up.
This will be the last I post in this thread, but you're completely wrong. Kodi is great for everyone when set up right. My wife has all her tv shows and it shows her where she left off. I can watch live sports. We can both watch movies on demand."
It does take a little bit of a learning curve to set it up. (less than an hour) Once doing so, you'll just laugh at cable, subscription services.
I will say to each there own. Some can afford the 150+ bill. Some can't. Either way, we'll still gather around the water cooler talking about last nights shows. How we get there is up to the person watching.
Watching tv>streaming
[roll]Its super easy! First get a PC motherboard with the NVIDIA 345 grafix card that will need to upgrade the firing rate to 560 MG of RAM that will allow you to run ROKU through your firestick in order to maximize the potential of KODI which will need to be downloaded through the firmware server in order to optimize. Its a snap! Afterwards I like to use a biaxial co-cable split, this allow me to watch it on more than one tv, simply purchase and upgrade a new modem with biaxial splitting capabilities and run a S-Video drive. Now you might have to have a signal uprgrading router in order to see it on more than one floor if you have a multiple story house, but once you optimize and install the modware to make your modem recognize both your streaming source as well as output signal you can then set that up to your cloud system. What your now optimized cloud system (assuming you are going through either a proprietary port cloud and not a shared cloud of course!) will allow you to do is save shows as if you have a DVR, just like that!
But you need to make sure you don't have the system running through the co-axial cable split at the same time, make sure you have the motherboard optimized for splitting manually - not automatically! After you have it set to your manual settings you can get HULU and Netflix for recorded shows, but then the streaming services for sports can be easily set up on the Reddit subforum links or through your digitized KODI.
Its amazing and I can't believe those idiots still use cable! For instance I used to have DISH satellite with all movie channels and DVR and all that jazz on 3 tvs as well as ATT internet for 90 bucks a month, but now with my new setup I can easily access over 30 channels for only 70 bucks a month and the easy maintenance I described above! My wife especially finds it easy to navigate as well as my 3 year old!
Just watch the shows from the previous day, won't matter that way.Okay cord cutters, honest question, if a show comes on tv at 9 pm, what time do you have to start getting setup so you don't miss the beginning...8:45...8:50, I'm curious
[eyeroll] at ****ing "cord cutters"... you bunch of poors.
Depends. If its a show on Network TV theres no delay. If its a show on SlingTV or HBO theres no delay. I just turn on my Xbox in either case. If its on a network not on SlingTV or Network TV then I likely don't care.Okay cord cutters, honest question, if a show comes on tv at 9 pm, what time do you have to start getting setup so you don't miss the beginning...8:45...8:50, I'm curious
looks like you just don't know how to watch tv.
I don't watch much tv myself, use it mostly as background noise when I'm youtube surfing, but the wife wouldn't give up cable under any circumstances. She records and watches too many shows and when college basketball season rolls around I'd kill myself if I couldn't watch whatever game I wanted.
I don't record ****. My wife does because she watches about 15 different ****ing shows or whatever and they come on at the same time. It's this fancy newfangled invention I heard people talking about called DVR. Hell if I know.
Cable is money well spent. I'd buy two subscriptions if I could.
Why would you 'record shows'? Why can't you just watch your games? I do. Someone, somewhere always has my games. Searching is your friend. Recording shows is twenty years ago. Do you use VHS tape? Nearly every TV website out there from Abilene to Zanzibar streams 'shows' minutes after the show is broadcast. Hundreds more archive them. Even the networks broadcast the last 5 episodes of their shows free.
Looks like you don't know how to watch TV and like to throw away money.[/QUOTE
Sounds interesting. If I was more tech savvy, I might attempt to cut cable, but as a famous man once said "you got to know your limitations". I may try the deal to watch the first run movies though. Thanks for the info, very informative.
You have it backwards. We're not poors because we cut the cord.[eyeroll] at ****ing "cord cutters"... you bunch of poors.
this is not true, if you cancel cable and keep internet, they will send someone out to block tv, if they don't it's an errorFirst option is to screw the coaxial into the back of your tv, set the tv to cable rather than antenna, then run a channel scan. You should still have all your main channels available (espn, espn 2, tbs, amc etc etc) even despite canceling. They can't cut your cable access if you have internet still. Without their box, you just lose access to the channel guide, hd channels, premium channels (hbo), but not basic and mid tier channels such as AMC, TBS, ESPN, ESPN2, etc etc. This is assuming you cut cable tv such as TWC, not satellite.
this is not true, if you cancel cable and keep internet, they will send someone out to block tv, if they don't it's an error
The majority of those TV websites (assuming you are talking the network channels) require logging in with your TV provider to watch most, if not all, of their shows. Like I have Dish, I can't go on the AMC or FX website to watch shows because Dish hasn't reached an agreement with them. AMC does have some stuff up there where you don't have to login, but mostly everything is behind the login wall.Why would you 'record shows'? Why can't you just watch your games? I do. Someone, somewhere always has my games. Searching is your friend. Recording shows is twenty years ago. Do you use VHS tape? Nearly every TV website out there from Abilene to Zanzibar streams 'shows' minutes after the show is broadcast. Hundreds more archive them. Even the networks broadcast the last 5 episodes of their shows free.
Looks like you don't know how to watch TV and like to throw away money.
The majority of those TV websites (assuming you are talking the network channels) require logging in with your TV provider to watch most, if not all, of their shows. Like I have Dish, I can't go on the AMC or FX website to watch shows because Dish hasn't reached an agreement with them. AMC does have some stuff up there where you don't have to login, but mostly everything is behind the login wall.
Broadcast channels are NBC, CBS, ABC and PBS and have no 'log in' requirements for the last 5 episodes. Y
I have never been asked to login for recent episodes. ABC used to pride itself being all free online. Not been there for awhile so it must have changed. I just clicked onto ABC and pulled up Modern Family episode22, season 7, and they want me to login. Hell with that. I will get it off network on Ezstreem then. My be it's because I just watch the ABC shows on digital broadcast. Maybe it's regional?This isn't true. I tried to watch an ABC.com show recently and was forced to sign in and rejected because I have no TWC tv account. So I just went to IRC and downloaded the episode I missed instead.
There's a lot more TV out there than just the broadcast network channels dude. Most of the stuff on ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox is terrible. And nearly all of the broadcast networks require you to login if you want to watch next day. If you don't have a login, have to wait a few days.Uh, no. Most do NOT. Broadcast channels are NBC, CBS, ABC and PBS and have no 'log in' requirements for the last 5 episodes. You are thinking of HBO and the other pay channels that are on cable. Every AMC movie is available free all over the world and FX isn't a broadcast channel, so you just go to someplace like http://ezstreem.com, or a hundred like it. Chose show. Watch. Easy-peasy.
We don't need no stinkin' agreements!
There's a lot more TV out there than just the broadcast network channels dude. Most of the stuff on ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox is terrible. And nearly all of the broadcast networks require you to login if you want to watch next day. If you don't have a login, have to wait a few days.