So B, do the websties you list have HD programming? You get cable or Netflix-like quality?
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I've finally abandoned Cable TV
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Iv'e been pretty amazed at my options of on line content. I can literally watch every single thing that is on cable. I can even record live streams just like a dvr with vlc player, it records it onto your computer harddrive.
The only thing is that you have to find the content all over the web. That's the downside. It's not all listed in an easy guide like it would be on a cable or sat service. I have a million bookmarks and stream sites saved. Once you get the hang of it I can watch everything from pay channels to live sports to HD movies that are currently in theaters but there is a learning curve for sure.
I think it's worth it though. I pay $25 a month for 25mb/sec internet service and that gives me unlimited access to everything that you'd pay over $100 a month for cable or Sat. The only thing you dont get is the easy guide that pulls is all together and makes it simple.
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not a few extra bucks. youd have to pay $100 more at least and you still wouldnt get the same content. i can watch movies currently in theaters in HD. watched Jurasic World the other day.Originally posted by rado View PostOr I'll pay few extras bucks a month and just hit the power button and boom! I can watch wtf ever I want and no downloads:P
i get it though. if you have the money and want to keep it simple, then cable or sat is better.
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Pay for the channels you want. No more paying cable or Sat for all the channels you never watch.
https://www.sling.com/package
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That's what they claim. I asked them 3 times and they said that they do their speed benchmarking in Megabytes/sec. Since I am an electrical engineer by training, they can't bamboozle me that easily ! :) We'll see. It is still cheaper than Comcast. I'll run speedtest once they install and see what I get.
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You have to remember you're talking to people that have to read a script to sell their products. They don't know the difference between a bit and byte. Anything over 150 mbps requires authorization from Tier 2 because of bandwidth allocation on the PON card in OLT in the central office.
I've been involved in almost every aspect of their network infrastructure build out and implementation over the last 10 years.
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