I have discovered that the various mainline streams (like Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and AppleTV and others) are offering enough decent content that I find myself watching those more frequently than the Cable TV channels. I rarely watch first run episodes when they are initially broadcast, instead watching what my DVR captured.
So I'm considering cutting the cord, and keeping my Frontier FiOS (formerly Verizon FiOS) for home internet only.
My questions: I know many on PoA have cut the cable cord. For those folk,
- Can you provide some information on how much you are saving?
- Are you purchasing seasons of favorite programs/shows to watch?
- What is your before/after spending on TV entertainment?
- Do you miss having cable TV service or regret your choice of sending them packing?
I cut it and then un-cut it when the cable provider pointed out that I was paying more to
not have TV than it would cost me to have the basic package, due to an additional line fee for accounts that don't have the TV service. So really, I didn't save anything compared to basic cable. I suppose I saved about $70.00 / month compared to a more all-inclusive package.
I also found that with a TV that has a QAM tuner directly hooked up to the service (without a "box"), I get a few more channels than what are advertised for the basic service. Nothing to write home about, mind you, but there are a few Easter eggs.
I'm really not a TV watcher. Never have been. I watch the news and some sporting events, but not much else. So no, I don't miss it because I never really cared for it anyway. I also canceled my Netflix subscription because I got tired of the price going up while the catalog keeps shrinking. If I want to watch the next season of some Netflix-original series, I'll reactivate it for a month, watch the whole season, and cancel it again.
I do have Amazon Prime, whose movie catalog tends to be more along the lines of my personal tastes. Prime would be worth it for me even without the video service because of the free shipping, so it's like a bonus. But I do prefer their choice of movies over those of Netflix, and some of their original stuff isn't horrid.
One warning about Amazon Video: It consume
huge amounts of bandwidth, even if the connected TV isn't capable of making use of the quality being sent. I use DD-WRT to throttle them down to about 3 M/s with no noticeable (to me, at least) loss of quality on either my 1080p or 720p televisions. Without the throttling, it uses crazy bandwidth. Apparently everyone gets UHD / 4K whether they can make use of it or not.
Either Gargoyle Router (for which device support is getting rather thin), or DD-WRT (whose device support is slightly better), enable bandwidth capping by device. I think LEDE does as well, but haven't tried it. Tomato I'm not sure about. I'm currently using DD-WRT on a TP-LINK Archer C7 to throttle the Roku box by its MAC, and so far it seems to be working.
Rich