I'm paying $40.99 with WOW! for 300/20 (although I am getting closer to 40 down). 123.net is now in my town offering fiber. $59 for 250/250, $69 for (I think) 600/600 and $79 for 1 gig/1 gig. My wife won't approve a switch because of the price increase. WOW! has been very stable for me since...
They collapsed with a terrible stretch in March. They kinda didn't deserve to make the playoffs after that. But they did get 6 points in the last four games (all OT games). Damn, just one more point from either out of the two loses and they would have been in.
I just watched the Pistons for the novelty of watching BSN Detroit via ota. They did win one of the two games I watched. And the Wings were in the playoff hunt. They did win their last two games against Montreal. Those games were pretty exciting. The Wings came from behind to go to OT in both games.
Cable is going away because it won't let you pick and choose smaller packages to bundle. Very few cord-cutters use the internet cable replacements and instead pay for various VOD services. My wife and I go through what we watch every year and drop or add these services. When I dropped cable six...
The loss of channels that are merely duplicates of other channels or devoid of new programming would actually benefit consumers. Most channels only broadcast three or four new series in a week filling most of the time with reruns. Combining three or four channels worth of new programming into...
The money I saved in the last 6 years has more than paid for the tv I bought since I cut the cord. I'm currently saving $100/month compared to what I paid in 2018. Although I have only saved about $70/month in some years (we always evaluate what we watch every year). Thanks to Black Friday...
I'm thinking it will probably start at $40 and go up in price by $5 every year.
I might be able to afford this since I'm only paying $25/month for Philo. I'll be retiring at the end of the year, so I will have more time to watch 3 hour games. My work hours just don't allow me to start watching a...
Do you really think that it would have been that much higher on a Saturday night? I think maybe 10% higher, but 23 million is pretty impressive no matter where it was televised.
If you have any doubts about how effective HDR is, watch the Harry Potter movies (especially the last two) on 4k discs. The shadows in the Blu-Rays were far too dark. You can actually see the details on the 4K discs.
Hulu isn't a global service due to Disney not wanting to make it more valuable and then paying Comcast more money. If they entirely owned it, nothing would have stopped them in making it global.