As I've said before, the Findersons are moving. Yesterday I called Comcast to change our cable service to the new residence. Originally I agreed to a 2-year contract that would bundle cable and internet for one reasonable price. Minutes after I finished the call, I talked with Faith about the fact that everything that we watch, with the exception of HBO content, is legally streamed for FREE over the internet. So we are going to experiment with cutting the cord and switching to all-internet-based television.
This thread is designed to contain useful information for people who want to cut Cable out of their lives, and switch to all-internet-based television. If people have useful information about online services for watching television, this would be the place to post about that. Please include the following information about the online television services you describe
Location: (example) www.hulu.com
Service: (example) Paid and non-paid ad-supported television programming including some basic cable (Comedy Central), as well as most major networks (CBS excluded).
Legality: (example) 100% legit. Programming is ad-supported with several options for ad-viewing (one long ad at the beginning, or several ads throughout).
Notes: (example) hulu currently offers some HD content, though only up to 720p. They are expanding their services to include a paid option, that will cost $10/month and will not eliminate advertising, but will offer a deeper catalog of on-demand programing. The DVR is dead!
This thread is designed to contain useful information for people who want to cut Cable out of their lives, and switch to all-internet-based television. If people have useful information about online services for watching television, this would be the place to post about that. Please include the following information about the online television services you describe
Location: (example) www.hulu.com
Service: (example) Paid and non-paid ad-supported television programming including some basic cable (Comedy Central), as well as most major networks (CBS excluded).
Legality: (example) 100% legit. Programming is ad-supported with several options for ad-viewing (one long ad at the beginning, or several ads throughout).
Notes: (example) hulu currently offers some HD content, though only up to 720p. They are expanding their services to include a paid option, that will cost $10/month and will not eliminate advertising, but will offer a deeper catalog of on-demand programing. The DVR is dead!
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