Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: mbailey on November 17, 2014, 04:18:02 PM
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I currently have cable but am not all that happy with the company we have. Unfortunately they are the only game in town and am stuck with them. I've been reading up on Dish and Direct tv and was wondering if anyone has them and has any feedback. It would just be for TV as I'd keep the cable provider for their internet service only.
Soooo any feedback. Not sure if it matters but I have 8 TVs in the house.
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I have had DiSH for over 20 years, and would recommend them. DirecTV is trying to be bought by AT&T, which would keep me away from them.
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I have directv. Its pricy but has good service. The recorders have about a 2-3 year life. Bad weather south of you and service goes down. Picture quality is good. Recording options are good.
If you have a comcast like recorder you will like directv better.
Make sure you don't get screwed by local stations.
The dish is not too pretty to look at.
Overall i can't say directv will be better than cable. It just may have better options.
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I have had dish and directv at one time or another. only difference I see is that directv will give you more info on the shows that you have. price is about the same but with dish if you have a friend ask for a referal and get 50 dollars off. if you dont have a friend that has dish send me a pm I'll give you one :).
semp
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What about running multiple tvs? Like I said I have a mess of them t/o the house and would have to be able to watch 4 or 5 at the same time. Is that possible with satalite?
Thanks Semp may take you up on that
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We cut the cable cord at our house.
Have a Smart Samsung TV, Roku and an HDTV antenna for local air stations (in HD).
Love Roku. [pay for Netflix, hulu+, Amazon prime. may get HBO once it decouples from carriers.) Fav Roko channels: Nowhere TV and TED and Retro Tech Time Machine. Sure there are more I would like but have not tried them yet. (BTW: TED on Samsung is better)
Samsung ok, but would probably not buy a Samsung for its "smart" features again. Would for picture quality though.
Friends who have tried Apple TV or Chrome TV have not been impressed with either.
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not sure exactly how much the pricing is for 8 tv's. but how the tv's are connected now are a bit different than a couple of years ago. before you needed one box and that mean 1 extra charge per tv. I only own 2 tv's and pay the same. up to how many I am not sure. just be aware of one thing. the price they give you, you can actually ask for a lower price and if they dont, hang up and call back. they all do it, you just have to talk to the right person.
semp
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Baily how do you do your Internet connection?
I do a kludge with ATT and Comcast because I'm lazy and the wife likes the shopping channels and sports. And I don't trust Comcast for internet. But, I've been running a Sony Blueray\Internet feed box like Roku. I watch a lot of YouTube anime movies over my ATT VDSL. Cable TV with hundreds of channels is kind of boring unless you pay through the nose for very specific channels that I can find their movies on the internet for free. Heck I might look into Dish if it's got the same feeds as Comcast for a better price.
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My Internet will stay the same Thru my cable provider, but I'm dropping the TV end of it. The internet service is great but the tv line up not so much. They aren't like a big provider (ie verizon or comcast) but are a small regional service. They are moving to a different format and are going to require me to get a box for every TV in the house to the tune of 16.99 per box plus the service for just basic cable....now my cable is run to a central splitter with a cable signal booster and all the rooms with TVs have a cable jack in the room ...at that price per box and only basic cable I don't think I'll be giving them another dollar for their cable tell you the truth. Typing this on my iphone so I apologize for the lousy sentences
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DirecTv > Dish Network No contest.
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I mostly cut the cord, but I have cable internet with COX so they didn't unplug my house from the wire. That means I get basic cable not much different from using a TV antenna for "free". For everything else I use my smart BD player which plays most of the online services including amazon prime, Netflix, hulu, etc. That's enough for me.
I like Mike Rowe's new show on CNN but apparently DISH cut CNN over a contract dispute. You'll get that kind of nonsense sooner or later with any of the service providers.
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DTV = 1080P, already started 4K on demand movies, will do some 4k transmissions in early 2015.
Dish = 720P
Cable = 720p. keep the internet for sure.
I'll ask a rep I know for costs on 8 tv's tomorrow.
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As a Dish Network installer, I would recommend Dish. from all the horror stories I hear day to day about Direct TV, and right now top 120 for 44.95 a month. I do not suggest the wireless Joeys they are not up to par. Do not get the Hopper if you want get the hopper with sling. DO NOT get the 922,301,311. If you do a lot of recordings go with Hopper with sling, 722 is far best being a dual tuner and DVR.
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with 8 TV you can get 3 receiver's at $7 for each one, anything over 3 you will have to buy after that. So you can get 3 dual tuner receiver's and that will run 6 TV. The 222 is also a dual tuner but no DVR but that woul be the cheapest to purchase
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DTV = 1080P, already started 4K on demand movies, will do some 4k transmissions in early 2015.
Dish = 720P
Cable = 720p. keep the internet for sure.
I'll ask a rep I know for costs on 8 tv's tomorrow.
You might want to double check your source when it comes to your posting on who provides 1080 to 720, what you posted is false.
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DTV = 1080P, already started 4K on demand movies, will do some 4k transmissions in early 2015.
Dish = 720P
Cable = 720p. keep the internet for sure.
I'll ask a rep I know for costs on 8 tv's tomorrow.
I get 1080 with dish.
semp
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You might want to double check your source when it comes to your posting on who provides 1080 to 720, what you posted is false.
Nope it isn't
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I get 1080 with dish.
semp
As requested I did some more reading into it and it seems both make the 1080p claim but more often they are in 1080i. Mainly the "on demand" movie channels being in 1080p and the regular channels in either 1080i or 720p.
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I've had them all,, Dish is the easiest to use and I think, the best for TV,,
that said, I have cable ,,,,for Internet and TV as well as land line phone,, ( have to have a land line),
no need to have two service providers that I can see,
, I've been hearing a lot of stuff about online digital service that I like, sat TV and cable feed TV are going to be obsolete soon enough and those big contracts suck, no matter who you use,, cable is a bit high but monthly, I can quit at anytime!
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Quite frankly, video resolution is not as big an issue as one might think. It all depends on the quality of the video compression, and the source content as well. I have seen 1080p content that looked like crap, when compared to 720p content. I saw some recent 1080p content over a cable network that looked horrible.
1080p certainly has the capability to look better than anything less, but it can also look worse.
When I built my new home, I had it wired with Cat 6, throughout. Given we DVR everything, I went with the Hopper+Sling anda Joey in the bedroom, and one in the garage. Been very happy with the setup. We can access our recorded stuff from any TV. The Joey's do not have a hard drive to fail, which is a plus and minus. When the Hopper drive fails, it will take all our content down with it.
I wish DiSH would design their units with user replaceable hard drives.
The reason I went with DiSh, to start with, was the local cable provider was abysmal. I am with them today, because my only other option is AT&T, and I refuse to give AT&T one penny of my money.
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Currently have Vios (Verizon) TV, Internet and phone. While it has been good service it's not your cheapest option.
Was with DTV for 8 years or better and service was as good Except when weather was an issue. The early dishes were worse with the picture going out during severe thunder storms or the heavy snow some have up north. The newer dishes were better but if snow sticks to it or covers it you have to clear it.
Hit my neighbors house a few times throwing snow balls at it. :D I wanted to get a supersoaker filled with winter windshield washer fluid. :rock
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I've had Directv for about 10 years now. I have to say that not once have I had a billing issue or other problem that was not a hardware failure and I've only had one of those. Considering that my system is in my RV and we travel constantly I think that's pretty darn good reliability. About 9 out of 10 RVers that I've seen are direct customers because of the reliablity of the service, billing and friendliness to the RV community. I do know that Dish is busy courting RVers now with a very heavily discounted sat receiver / auto seek antenna bundle. To me that wasn't worth changing. Prior to my current sat antenna I had to point the dish every time we moved. Now I just plop the unit down outside, hook up one coax, push a couple buttons and it does it for me in less than 5 minutes. Used it from AZ, to WA, to MA, to Carolinas, to the gulf coast and back to AZ. No problems getting signals.
Weather will be an issue with both sat systems. Block the antenna with enough rain and the signal will cut out period end of story. If you live in snow country that will also play hobb with the antenna.
We currently have the lower resolution signal but may move up to higher resolution soon since we now have a far newer TV. FWIW I'm just not in a hurry as the picture is just fine the way it is. I'm more interested in the recording featuer of the reciever.
Direct had the better chanel line up for us with our favorites. We love Walking Dead and at least for a while it wasn't available on Dish. I don't know about now.
Up to 2013 we used Hughesnet for internet. Using the same dish with a small adapter I was able to get TV and internet since my internet bird was within 2 degrees of Direct's main bird. (99 &101) I dropped hughesnet since they were never friendly to RVers (I was an installer) and they are changing their system to spot beaming so you can't travel and use it as time goes on. My modem was over 7 years old and there were no more new replacements for it that were not spot beam systems. We now use our cell phones and tablets for internet with Verizon. I have 15 gigs of data and that's plenty for me. I can get by with 8 and did so for a year but competition has been good for customers. :) I just tether my table top computer to the phone and go. Simple painless and it works great with the coverage they have. Most RVers use Verizon if they travel extensively. Verizon has been extremely RV friendly.
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Be wary of any promotions for the first year. After that year is up, watch your bill jump by a lot
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Be wary of any promotions for the first year. After that year is up, watch your bill jump by a lot
like right now top 120 for $44.95 a month for the first year then the second year goes to $66,99 a month I believe, stil cheaper then cable.
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Quite frankly, video resolution is not as big an issue as one might think. It all depends on the quality of the video compression, and the source content as well. I have seen 1080p content that looked like crap, when compared to 720p content. I saw some recent 1080p content over a cable network that looked horrible.
1080p certainly has the capability to look better than anything less, but it can also look worse.
When I built my new home, I had it wired with Cat 6, throughout. Given we DVR everything, I went with the Hopper+Sling anda Joey in the bedroom, and one in the garage. Been very happy with the setup. We can access our recorded stuff from any TV. The Joey's do not have a hard drive to fail, which is a plus and minus. When the Hopper drive fails, it will take all our content down with it.
I wish DiSH would design their units with user replaceable hard drives.
The reason I went with DiSh, to start with, was the local cable provider was abysmal. I am with them today, because my only other option is AT&T, and I refuse to give AT&T one penny of my money.
I spoke with other techs and they say if you buy a external hard drive and not have used it on any other device and plug into the Hopper Sling you can transfer all your recordings.
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i have had both and Directv is way better imho and if you are a sports fan hands down Directv