What is the cheapest way to have multi receivers I signed up for 2 tvs but I would like to get 4 tv going. Is there single fee that will cover all recivers instead of 7 a month fee per receiver
receiver, or clients are the some cost of $7/month
get a receiver, not a client
is there any services that does not charge per receiver anymore?
Except for OTT Services like You Tube TV, the only one is Comcast, they allow you to access their services via a Roku with no box charge.
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comcast is free now, while in beta
rumor s it will be charged upon full release
receiver, or clients are the some cost of $7/month
get a receiver, not a client
is there any services that does not charge per receiver anymore?
AT&T TV, the new service that will become the company's flagship cable TV offering, includes simultaneous service to any 3 screens in or out of home, at least as it's currently configured in the pilot test markets. Doesn't cost extra to watch on 3 TVs vs. 1. However, the service only comes with a single dedicated box and remote, which is yours to keep. If you want to watch on additional screens, you can either use the AT&T TV app at no additional cost (on your own Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, iPhone, Android phone, etc.) or you can purchase additional AT&T TV boxes for $120 each.
Will be interesting to see if they stick with that set-up when the service launches nationwide next year. I know some homes will want the ability to watch on more than 3 screens simultaneously and I expect that they'll have to eventually offer that, even if it costs extra.
AT&T TV, the new service that will become the company's flagship cable TV offering, includes simultaneous service to any 3 screens in or out of home, at least as it's currently configured in the pilot test markets. Doesn't cost extra to watch on 3 TVs vs. 1. However, the service only comes with a single dedicated box and remote, which is yours to keep. If you want to watch on additional screens, you can either use the AT&T TV app at no additional cost (on your own Roku, Apple TV, Fire TV, iPhone, Android phone, etc.) or you can purchase additional AT&T TV boxes for $120 each.
Will be interesting to see if they stick with that set-up when the service launches nationwide next year. I know some homes will want the ability to watch on more than 3 screens simultaneously and I expect that they'll have to eventually offer that, even if it costs extra.
its not a cable service, its a streaming service
AT&T TV: Requires high-speed internet. Recommend minimum Internet 25 plan (min 8 Mbps per stream for optimal viewing). Limit 3 concurrent AT&T streams
It's a service that offers a package of live linear cable TV channels (i.e. an MVPD), therefore, yeah, it's as much of a "cable" service as is DirecTV, which, to get technical, isn't delivered via coaxial cable either but rather by DBS satellite.
Also, how do you classify Comcast Xfinity TV when it's delivered as streaming IPTV over the company's own broadband network? Is that a cable service? Or is it streaming? (Or is that an increasingly meaningless distinction that no one really cares about?)