Anonymous wrote:The only way is Kodi (aka XBMC) but it's not completely legitimate.
Anonymous wrote:one of the previous PP who cut the cord. We finally started using the YouTube app with our TiVo and it turns out you can pair your TiVo youtube app to your YouTube account and then use your phone/laptop/tablet as a remote to control the YouTube content on the TV screen. It's great!
We watched some videos for DS last night and then some movie trailers and music videos. Whatever I wanted to find on youtube I just pulled it up on the youtube app on my iphone and it displayed on the TV.
We are more than fine not having cable. I still watch Redskins on network TV which I get with my digital antenna. I watch Saturday college games, watched the World Cup, etc.
Between Hulu, Netflix, and Amazon Instant there's very little I can't get. YouTube adds another fun component.
Anyone can "cut the cord" in 3 steps.
1) Ensure you have a high-speed internet connection if you're going to be using Netflix/Hulu/Amazon Instant video
2) Buy/install digital antenna AND a streaming device (Roku, TiVo, Apple TV, Chromecast, Amazon Fire, etc) or have a smart TV with app connectivity built in
3) Connect streaming device to TV and antenna; set up connection to internet, set up apps/connections to streaming devices
Enjoy watching TV!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have Fios and cut cable back in December. Saving $100 a month and it's been great. Recently we dropped $200 for the NFL Network so we can see any game for the entire season.
HBO is going to release sometime in spring of 2015 a subscription based service. Most likely would be through the HBO GO app.
We have a Roku with every TV, and connect my laptop for iTunes since the apple tv broke. I don't think there's much we miss at this point. It's been a rather easy adjustment. We allow ourselves $20/month for TV shows that are not on Hulu (like the walking dead).
PP fios poster here - what was your fios cable package before because I do not see a 100 a month difference between cable+internet and internet only.
NFL network does not show every game - it shows the thursday night game (which is simulcast on cbs).
Sunday Ticket would show every game but that's not on FIOS - that's only through directv.
Anonymous wrote:We have fios -- can anyone confirm the point made by an earlier poster that it's not worth it to drop the TV part of fios but keep it for internet and phone?
Also, another poster mentioned a new HBO streaming-only option -- does anybody know more about this?
Anonymous wrote:We have Fios and cut cable back in December. Saving $100 a month and it's been great. Recently we dropped $200 for the NFL Network so we can see any game for the entire season.
HBO is going to release sometime in spring of 2015 a subscription based service. Most likely would be through the HBO GO app.
We have a Roku with every TV, and connect my laptop for iTunes since the apple tv broke. I don't think there's much we miss at this point. It's been a rather easy adjustment. We allow ourselves $20/month for TV shows that are not on Hulu (like the walking dead).