Back to paying for cable
Its been a while since I've written a post about our home media usage. As a quick recap, we ditched DirecTV about 2 years ago and switched to 100% internet based TV. We primarily used Boxee for Windows, HD OTA with Media Center, PlayON, Hulu, Netflix, and NHL GameCenter Live. Sure, that means I'm paying for NHL and Netflix, but the total cost of those is way less than the $100+ I was paying DirecTV for service on 3 TV's. Aside from saving money, the freedom and power of choice has been a great experience -- we can watch about 90-95% of what we want to watch, when and where we want to watch it. At home, on the road, doesn't matter as long as we have internet (3G and WiFi included).
Why we liked it (aside from just saving money)
The kids don't just sit down and watch whatever Disney or Nickelodeon happens to be playing on TV at any given moment. They look for interesting shows which usually are much more intellectually worthwhile than the latest pre-teen shenanigans of twins who's mom is a singer on a cruise ship. They learn about history and science from shows like American Pickers and Mythbusters. They learn about survival skills on Man vs Wild. And they choose what they want to seek out and watch. Sure Bart and Lisa show up on the TV sometimes, along with Jimmy Neutron and others, but as a choice because that's how they want to spend that 20 mins.
So why go back to cable?
Reason #1 -- Boxee for Windows just doesn't work as well as it needs to. It doesn't have Hulu (or HuluPlus) or Netflix (boxee removed Netflix from the latest and final release) and the NHL app in Boxee doesn't work very well either. It also doesn't always play network based shows corectly (History Channel is especially problematic). If you download content to your PC, it works great. Streaming with it just isn't as reliable as it needs to be, so we end up clicking around with the mouse going to different broadcasters websites, Hulu.com, and netflix.com to watch stuff.
Reason #2 -- PlayON and TubeCore (the software that lets PlayON work in Media Center on an XBox) don't play nicely together anymore.
Reason #3 -- My OTA antenna sometimes doesn't work as well as it needs to (yeah, that's lame on my part but I'm just tired of climbing the ladder to attempt readjusting the thing).
Reason #4 -- The biggest limitation has been live sports. Even though we subscribe to NHL GameCenter Live, we can't watch games broadcast on NBC Sports (formerly Versus) or on the NHL Network. Hank (our 6 year old) was at a local Buffalo Wing restaurant recently and (since he was wearing an NHL jersey i suppose) they sat us near a big screen playing the NHL network. He was in awe that there was a channel on TV that was 100% hockey, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Mixed with his awe was a little bit of disbelief -- "how come we don't get this channel"? With the Stanley Cup playoffs coming up, and with the summer Olympics this year, I really want the kids to be able to watch the sports they are interested in watching.
What's this going to cost me?
I wasn't about to spend $100+ per month again just for TV. We gotta' have NBC Sports and NHL network. AT&T U-Verse doesn't have NHL. DirecTV and Dish both require a contract and I'm not convinced I'll stick with paying for TV again for 2 years, so those options are out. This leaves Time Warner Cable as the only way to "try it out" again. Unfortunately, to get the channels we want on all 3 TV's looks like its going to cost $73 plus tax just for TV. Not gonna happen in my house -- just not worth it.
Cable Card to the rescue!
After digging around Time Warner's website and talking to them (and being escalated to supervisors more than once to get better information) I was able to determine that (contrary to a couple of representatives' initial responses), a Cable Card will give us access to all of the channels we want. "But you won't have on-demand" (I don't want on-demand -- I can use Hulu or my own recorded shows). "But you won't have our DVR service" (I don't need your DVR service using Cable Card on my computer). Best of all, a Cable Card costs $2.00 per month instead of $27 per month to rent 3 cable boxes, meaning with my special $7.00 per month intro (6 month) discount, my cable TV will cost me about $40 per month (before taxes) and my internet (15 MB turbo road runner) will cost about $33 per month (instead of the $63 I had been paying for it) with a net increase per month of only about $10.00 -- not bad!
How does Cable Card work?
Cable Card is a technology that gives you an electronic "access card" that you can plug into some TV's, TiVo's, and computers that "descrambles" the channels you subscribe to and pay for. In my case, I just ordered a SiliconDust HDHomeRun Prime (from Amazon.com) for about $200.00 (including shipping). This device has 3 tuners built-in, plugs into the cable service, and plugs into your home network. This effectively creates the equivalent of 3 shared cable boxes on your home network that can be shared by computers running Windows Media Center and XBox 360 consoles linked to a Media Center computer (Media Center is included with Windows Vista and Windows 7 so you probably already have it). Media Center is like a cable-box on steroids -- it can record shows, play local content, has a beautiful user interface, plays your local music, and even lets you play photo slideshows. In our case, we have the main computer attached to the main TV in the living room, plus we have 2 XBoxes attached to 2 other TV's, totaling 3 TV's all with access to the SiliconDust HD HomeRun's 3 tuners. Since the tuners are dynamically allocated, this means we can record 3 different shows, watch 3 different shows, or any combination from any TV at any given time. Pretty slick!
What about the Apple stuff in the house?
There are a few ways to get TV onto the apple computer and iOS devices. Two ways come straight from Time Warner -- the TWC TV app works on iPods, iPhones, iPads (and some Android devices) and allows you to watch about 200 of the channels directly to your device while you're in your home. Time Warner also provides a web page for computers allowing the same cahnnels (http://video.timewarnercable.com). The other option is EyeTV for the mac. Its a third-party software package that can used the SiliconDust HDHomeRun network tuners. I may also dust-off my old "Orb Live" software that I tried ages ago which allows you to stream Media Center content from your PC to an iOS device. More on that once I get everything installed and working.
So here's to a new adventure in our house -- wish us luck, and as always, I can guarantee you that I won't be bored (either making all this stuff work how I want it or being entertained with all of the new viewing options we will have)!
Tech Home Blog
Tech Home Blog is your reliable resource for experience based information and advice about technology in your home.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Friday, October 21, 2011
Super VPN Service
Every wish you had a more secure way to use wifi networks when you travel? Ever need to access servers or watch MBL or NHL games that are blacked out because you're traveling and your hotel's internet address looks like its coming from another city? There's a simple, affordable, and secure solution for all of your devices (iPhone, iPod Touch, mac OSX, Windows, Linux, etc).
Super VPN Service at www.supervpn.net may the the solution you need. With plans as low as $4.00 per month YOU choose where in the world it looks like your computer is, and only YOU know what you're surfing.
Give it a try and post your results below in the comment section!
Super VPN Service at www.supervpn.net may the the solution you need. With plans as low as $4.00 per month YOU choose where in the world it looks like your computer is, and only YOU know what you're surfing.
Give it a try and post your results below in the comment section!
Friday, February 18, 2011
Boxee and PlayOn working MUCH better after my CPU upgrade
I've posted before about PlayOn being the source of video for my kids around the house on their iPod touch devices working "OK" as long as they stream MP4's (but transcoding got choppy), and many folks have commented about Boxee's NHL Gamecenter Live video stuttering.
Those issues are now a thing of the past at my house.
I upgraded my PC running Boxee and PlayOn for $169 to a much faster setup and its paying off.
I chose the AMD Athalon II X3 445 Rana 3.1 GHz processor because it has the best price to performance ratio I could find. I then paired it with a low-end overclock and core unlock board from ASRock (the N68C-S UCC board) and 4 Gig of Geil DDR3-1066 RAM.
Unfortunately for me, I couldn't unlock the 4th core (but I haven't given up yet), but I did successfully overclock it by 20%.
Streaming and transcoding via PlayON are much smoother now, as is the NHL GameCenterLive (in Boxee and in the browser).
Those issues are now a thing of the past at my house.
I upgraded my PC running Boxee and PlayOn for $169 to a much faster setup and its paying off.
I chose the AMD Athalon II X3 445 Rana 3.1 GHz processor because it has the best price to performance ratio I could find. I then paired it with a low-end overclock and core unlock board from ASRock (the N68C-S UCC board) and 4 Gig of Geil DDR3-1066 RAM.
Unfortunately for me, I couldn't unlock the 4th core (but I haven't given up yet), but I did successfully overclock it by 20%.
Streaming and transcoding via PlayON are much smoother now, as is the NHL GameCenterLive (in Boxee and in the browser).
Friday, November 26, 2010
Boxee Hulu Hack
A magician over on the boxee forums has posted a simple and easy way to get Hulu shows working on Boxee again!
All you need to to is:
1) Download the file from the post (or click here)
2) Rename it to hulu.js
3) Put in the following folder:
mac: /Applications/Boxee.app/Contents/Resources/Boxee/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
linux: [Boxeepath]/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
windows: c:\program files\boxee\system\players\flashplayer\hulu.js
Its working great on my Windows 7 computer running the latest Boxee beta.
All you need to to is:
1) Download the file from the post (or click here)
2) Rename it to hulu.js
3) Put in the following folder:
mac: /Applications/Boxee.app/Contents/Resources/Boxee/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
linux: [Boxeepath]/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
windows: c:\program files\boxee\system\players\flashplayer\hulu.js
Its working great on my Windows 7 computer running the latest Boxee beta.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Open letter to Hulu re:Boxee
Dear Hulu,
I have been a loyal Hulu user on my Windows PC running Boxee for 3 months. I love the ad supported model - especially when "the following program is brought to you on Hulu with limited commercial interruptions" Thanks to Chase slate card (triplets?!) and the campy StateFarm insurance guy who decides he's tired and ready to die.
That is until today.
Why would you block Hulu on a windows computer just because I use Boxee as my browser instead of Firefox or Chrome?
Are your advertisers asking you to reduce viewership?
Do you really think this move on your part makes users want to pay for a Hulu plus subscription?
I want to watch shows on Hulu with advertising. I want to do it on my Windows computer running Boxee.
Please tell me this was a mistake and Hulu is going to allow Boxee users to view Hulu content and optionally subscribe to Hulu plus for additional content and fewer ads for those who desire those features.
For those of us who are willing to watch ads so that you are compensated for the content and advertisers capture our consumer dollars, let us watch Hulu content and your advertisers' content on our computers that run Boxee.
I'm posting this email on my Blog and will gladly post your reply as well. Http://techhomeblog.blogspot.com
Thank you,
Craig L. Davis
I have been a loyal Hulu user on my Windows PC running Boxee for 3 months. I love the ad supported model - especially when "the following program is brought to you on Hulu with limited commercial interruptions" Thanks to Chase slate card (triplets?!) and the campy StateFarm insurance guy who decides he's tired and ready to die.
That is until today.
Why would you block Hulu on a windows computer just because I use Boxee as my browser instead of Firefox or Chrome?
Are your advertisers asking you to reduce viewership?
Do you really think this move on your part makes users want to pay for a Hulu plus subscription?
I want to watch shows on Hulu with advertising. I want to do it on my Windows computer running Boxee.
Please tell me this was a mistake and Hulu is going to allow Boxee users to view Hulu content and optionally subscribe to Hulu plus for additional content and fewer ads for those who desire those features.
For those of us who are willing to watch ads so that you are compensated for the content and advertisers capture our consumer dollars, let us watch Hulu content and your advertisers' content on our computers that run Boxee.
I'm posting this email on my Blog and will gladly post your reply as well. Http://techhomeblog.blogspot.com
Thank you,
Craig L. Davis
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
BoxeeBox will have Netflix!
The good folks at Boxee held quite a launch event tonight in NYC for the new BoxeeBox
Major announcements at the event:
A very nicely revised user interface which looks great and has an AMAZING new search function to find just about any video, show, or movie "on the interwebs" (to quote Avner Ronon).
Currently only available on the BoxeeBox but coming soon for Windows, Mac, etc.
in HD!
Hulu Plus will also be on the BoxeeBox (no date announced)
Other cool content sources on BoxeeBox:
NHL GameCenter Live (Up to 40 out of market games per week)
Vudu's 9,000+ titles in HD (starting at $2.00 for 2 nights)
I kept saying I was waiting until NetFlix is on it, but I may just get one anyway now that its officially announced that NetFlix will be available on the BoxeeBox! I need a content source on a second TV (we fired DirecTV about 3 months ago and refuse to pay $100 per month for cable or satelitte). BoxeeBox will work perfectly for the second TV.
I doubt that I'll be ditching the HTPC I'm running Boxee on in the living room, though. That's working great, and as soon as the 1.0 software is available, it will actually have more than the boxee box (except the cool remote) since the computer version will run NetFlix today. Plus, its the computer that has all of our DVD's, Music, and Pictures on it anyway so it may as well also be the Boxee computer for the living room while its at it.
Congratulations Avner and team!
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Vudu HD Movies come to Boxee!
Thats right, Boxee does it again! Today, the Boxee Blog announced that they are adding Vudu's huge collection of on-demand, new release movie titles to Boxee users on Mac, PC, and the forthcoming Boxee Box
(amazon.com
preorders set to ship Nov 10th
)
New Vudu users who signup via Boxee will even get a free movie to try it out. Count me in.
New Vudu users who signup via Boxee will even get a free movie to try it out. Count me in.
Movies are $2.00 each for a 2 night rental. Combine this with the huge library of free content already available, and NetFlix streaming titles at $9.00 per month and you've got better-than-cable choices for a fraction of the cost.
Users of the free Boxee software on PC and Mac will only get SD, but with the Boxee Box
, users can get up to 1080p in Dolby Digital 5.1 (depending on your bandwidth):
- SD (480p) requires 1 Mbps
- HD (720p) requires 2.25 Mbps
- HDX (1080p) requires 4.5 Mbps
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