CUT-THE-CABLE.COM

June 22, 2010

How to get TV through the Internet

Here’s a nice little article forwarded by Joann…Thanks Joann!  This is a re-print from of all places The Cable News Network. Jonathan Strickland cut ties with his cable company a year ago, yet he continues to watch all his favorite TV shows. He has saved nearly $700 over the last year and, most importantly, he [...]

Here’s a nice little article forwarded by Joann…Thanks Joann!  This is a re-print from of all places The Cable News Network.

Jonathan Strickland cut ties with his cable company a year ago, yet he continues to watch all his favorite TV shows. He has saved nearly $700 over the last year and, most importantly, he tasted the thrill of telling his cable provider to shove it.

“We were having poor service, channels were getting cut back and the prices were going up,” said Strickland, a senior writer for HowStuffWorks. Although cable companies often lure new customers with special rates, he said it seemed “the longer you were staying with them, the more you were getting punished.”

How has Strickland pulled this off? Mostly through a combination of Netflix and Hulu, the Internet TV service he views on his laptop.

And he’s had no regrets.

Hulu.com

An onslaught of new technology is freeing people from cable or satellite TV companies like never before by allowing customers to get shows via broadband and other means.

Some people use sites like Hulu, and don’t mind with waiting a couple days after the show airs on television to watch. Others figure out elaborate set ups to run their HD televisions through their PCs using applications like Windows Media Center.

It’s not mainstream yet and far from a perfect alternative, but little by little a younger generation is starting to take notice and make the switch, technology experts say.

“It’s a niche audience now, but it’s a concern for cable companies because this is the way things are going,” said Lance Ulanoff, editor-in-chief of PCMag.com. “They’re going to have to figure out the revenue model.

“Right now, there’s tension between what people want and what content providers are willing to deliver.”

At a recent visit to Google’s Silicon Valley headquarters, comedian Conan O’Brien told the tech-savvy crowd what it already knew: The landscape is changing fast.

“I don’t know what television is going to be five years from now. There’s a lot of people that think you’re just going to experience it through your server,” said O’Brien, between taking digs at Jay Leno and Google execs.

“People don’t even know how the business is going to change. There might not be network television as we know it.”

The former NBC talk-show host, who is moving to cable channel TBS this fall, then added, “Wouldn’t that be sweeeeet!”

Joking aside, it’s something everyone, from consumers to industry executives, is keeping a close eye on.

The cable and satellite-dish giants already have their share of critics. Facebook pages “I Hate Time Warner Cable,” “I Hate Comcast” and “I Hate DirecTV” [and CUT-THE-CABLE] have sprung up, allowing fans to vent their frustrations.

“I wonder how many more channels on my little line-up they are going to continue removing and want me to keep paying their rising rates,” one person wrote.

Another said, “All the providers for TV services suck ’cause they are all trying to suck you in and then up your rates.”

Yet before consumers pull the plug on cable or satellite TV, people like Strickland say they should be prepared for the change. Internet TV takes getting used to, and there is a loss of picture quality, he said. And if you want a complete home theater set-up, it’s extremely hard to accomplish unless you’re an electronics whiz and know how to make end-arounds.

Web TV also may not be ideal if you’re a major sports fan, experts say. Most pro leagues, most notably the NFL, have exclusive contracts with networks or cable companies.

“This is the hard part about switching to an online-only consumption model,” said Ulanoff of PCMag.com. “There are no guarantees [about what content is available].”

Sites like Major League Baseball and ESPN3 have helped fill some of the void with live streams of games, but their offerings pale in comparison to the many choices on cable. Many World Cup soccer games are available on ESPN3, although some, such as the much-anticipated United States vs. England match, were not.

Blogger Sam Grobart tried going cable-less, but he found himself longing for cable TV for a completely different reason. Quite simply, he missed channel surfing.

“This isn’t a post about technology,” he wrote on the New York Times blog Gadgetwise. “This is a post about behavior.”

Strickland, an admitted “all-around geek,” understands that sentiment. Yet he says the DVR has already helped with that mentality, freeing people of the belief that they need to tune in at a specific time on a specific day of the week.

Besides the thrill of ditching his cable bill, convenience has been the other biggest benefit, he says. “I’m going to watch a show when I want to watch it.”

Strickland uses Hulu and Netflix’s streaming capabilities for most of his shows and movies. He watches about half of the material on his television and the other half on his laptop.

He has used a Roku box for his TV, a cost of about $100, to help stream movies. But since he bought the device, gaming consoles such as Nintendo’s Wii and Microsoft’s Xbox have begun offering Netflix’s streaming service, making his Roku less necessary.

In the end, Strickland says he’s saved at least $55 a month. Perhaps more importantly, he says he has a new level of freedom.

“I realized how much time I was spending watching television, and now I’m doing other things,” he said.

“He will deliver his soul from going into the pit, and his life shall see the light.” -Job 33:28

July 14, 2009

Comcast to Launch the ISRAEL NEWS NETWORK

Picked up from the Broward-Palm Beach New Times and re-printed here in it”s entirety. Beginning Sunday, August 30, at 7 a.m., Comcast will air a half-hour TV program devoted to news about the Middle East. The show, run by the so-called Israel News Network (INN), will be unabashedly pro-Israel and makes no secret of its [...]

Picked up from the Broward-Palm Beach New Times and re-printed here in it”s entirety.

Beginning Sunday, August 30, at 7 a.m., Comcast will air a half-hour TV program devoted to news about the Middle East. The show, run by the so-called Israel News Network (INN), will be unabashedly pro-Israel and makes no secret of its aim: to counter the growing influence of Al Jazeera, which began as a TV station in Qatar (it was essentially the Arab world’s CNN) and has morphed into a worldwide news network.

A news release states, “Each INN program would feature a segment that is related to the Al Jazeera report of the week that INN will expand upon. For example, if Al Jazeera reports that Israeli checkpoints don’t allow Palestinians to get proper medical care, INN would run a feature about IDF medics who work in the West Bank and treat EVERYONE who needs help, even injured terrorists.”

Little information is available about INN, but the show is “supported by” Freedom Watch, a conservative nonprofit organization founded by Miami- and Boca Raton-based lawyer Larry Klayman, who, in his efforts to fight corruption and “preserve freedom,” has sued the Clintons, Dick Cheney, and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Freedom Watch’s missions include abolishing the United Nations (“a bastion for terrorist nations”); stopping the “Obama-Clinton crowd” from “turning the United States into a Euro-style socialist state”; and forcing the government to open its files about extraterrestrials  (“It is important for our citizens to know the truth so we can prepare for the day when [an extraterrestrial visit] openly occurs, to prevent worldwide panic.”)

Thomas J. Madden, a spokesperson for INN, did not immediately return a call for comment.

Other related press releases indicate that TRANSMEDIA has been retained by INN to publicize their debut on Comcast.  TransMedia’s publicity will explain that INN is supported by the public interest watchdog group, Freedom Watch, which is a joint venture partner with INN.   Founded by pro-Israel attorney Larry Klayman, Freedom Watch has offices in Washington, DC, Beverly Hills and now Boca Raton, Madden said.

I just want to know one thing…WHO’S PAYING WHO?  I have a feeling that there are going to be quite a few Comcast subscribers out there that will take exception to effectively SUBSIDIZING this programming with their monthly fees.

SHALOM (-;

March 23, 2009

Comcast pulls MSNBC from Portland basic

Filed under: Rants — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:44 pm
Read it all at blueoregon.com “Comcast was vague about the criteria used to decide which news channel had to move.”  Vague????  How about terms like EVASIVE, NON-RESPONSIVE, PATRONIZING.  Don’t forget mister, what’s good for Comcast is good for the USA.

Read it all at blueoregon.com

“Comcast was vague about the criteria used to decide which news channel had to move.”  Vague????  How about terms like EVASIVE, NON-RESPONSIVE, PATRONIZING.  Don’t forget mister, what’s good for Comcast is good for the USA.

Powered by WordPress