TCTTS said:
Exactly. I think we're discovering that cord cutting won't be cheaper, and that it might even cost more in the end. But what it *does* give you - for now - is the freedom to "cheat" the system, so to speak. Because you're not locked into a cable contract, you can subscribe one month out of the year as mentioned above, or use your parents' logins, neither of which cable allows. That said, the more prominent these steaming platforms become, the more rules they're likely going to put in place. I can see it reaching a point where the big dog platforms eventually force year-long contracts and restrict accounts to one household, etc. So we're more than likely going to be right back where we started, only we're watching TV over WiFi instead of a cable box/satellite, have more on-demand-options, and aren't bound by air times. Otherwise, the price will be relatively the same, all things considered.
I really am a near Complete Idiot on this topic, so apologies for any dumb things I say in advance. I'm just happily plugging along paying probably near $200 a month all in for Direct TV with HBO with DVR/equipment for four different TV locations, plus have Amazon Prime and my wife has some Hulu sub and I also keep seeing "amazon digital download" payments she's responsible for. I may be over $200 a month if I would stop and pay attention to it. That $200 does NOT include my monthly internet payment either.
I see an "all-in" above of under $120 a month, so other than some reduced user experience (just my opinion, don't like jumping around between apps and surfing those apps vs a channel guide seems more cumbersome) I should immediately save money if I got off DirecTV and assembled a bunch of streaming options. I'd also think LONG TERM it should still be cheaper if Specturm, DirecTV etc no longer have to come to my house and install/maintain equipment. DOn't have to pay technicians, buy and maintain service vans, etc. They just piggyback on internet and then all your devices on your end are your own and service from apple, roku, smart tv vendor, etc.
As you said maybe this changes in the future and we'll need proprietary equipment, or it will cost extra per device you log in to, etc. Very interesting to see how it evolves and we seem to be very much in an interim state right now.
Personally, I mainly just need live Aggie sport access (espn + I guess?) and netflix. I think I'd be happy with just that to be honest. I keep everything because it's a habit and something I'm used to.
Oh wait, I just remember an ad I saw for "Dog TV". That's a game changer.