ssawka
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2007
- Messages
- 3,430
Here is what we did.
We dropped pay TV (direct tv) and went to three ways to watch TV.
1. We hooked the cable line directly into the TV and even though we do not subscribe to TWC for anything but cable modem internet, we found that they did not scramble about 25 channels.
2. We put up an antenna and get Crystal clear local channels.
3. We bought Roku boxes and hooked them up to the TVs and subscribed to HuluPlus ($8) and Netflix ($8 for streaming only option).
So, for $16/month we get all we need to watch TV.
Dawn
Dropped U-Verse when we bought a house last June (didn't provide service in the area) and haven't missed it at all. 15 months cable-free!
I built an HTPC and have an HD HomeRun dual-tuner device hooked up to an antenna in the attic so we get all the locals (plus some Tampa channels off the back of the antenna) and it offers DVR functionality integrated with Windows Media Center. Can record one show and watch another (or record two shows).
Plus Netflix $7.99 streaming (haven't splurged for the Hulu Plus...yet).
Can't be beat!![]()
We just went back to cable. I have an HTPC that I built a few years ago and were primarily using Netflix and free Hulu. When Netflix raised their prices, I decided to look back into cable. We had Fios for Internet that I was paying $63 a month for. Well, Verizon was having their Double Play for $75 a month for the first year. Well, I didn't want to pay $20 a month for a DVR, so I bought an internal tuner for my HTPC for $300 that takes a CableCard. The CableCard rental is $4 a month. I am also getting a $100 Visa card for signing up, so in the end it is costing me $32 a month to add TV for a year, but after that year, if I keep it, it will run me about $25 a month. That price I can live with. And to top it off, I can now record up to 4 shows at a time and can have unlimited amounts of storage ( right now I have 6 TeraBytes).