Posted on 12/17/2010 12:35:01 PM PST by smokingfrog
See here for where we were just discussing this very thing.
I can’t figure out why anyone would want to watch tv on something that fits in your hand or that is as close as a monitor usually is.??
What I never could figure out is why a computer pull a signal out of the air and display it. I am running wireless right now.
Yes.
The technology is far beyond what the ‘executives’ (including many politicians who try to write laws for ... and judges who try to adjudicate ...).
It is quite easy to attach a laptop to one of the new LCD TVs with either the regular vga monitor cable or HDMI cable.
It is quite easy to watch TV on a pc if one installs a PCTV card.
And, there are websites that actually do ‘broadcast’ live TV events/programs. [Of course, the industry considers them illegal and tries to ... {see politicians and judges in above commentary}.]
I have the original sling box hooked up to old fashioned analog cable without a seperate tuner. The cable company is taking a channel or two from me every year, I expect them to completely shut off analog anytime now.
I watch Netflix via a Roku box which streams the video from my router/cable Internet.
I originally watched some of the Netflix streams via a laptop hooked to a 32” LCD TV.
The quality of the laptop-to-tv stream was cloudly and had some buffering issues. The quality via the Roku box is very comparable to a regular cable TV broadcast. (I have the highspeed cable which is 12-18 Mbps speed.)
Why would you be limited to the computer monitor? My TV will accept HDMI or RGB from a computer. Not only that, I have a streamer hooked up to the TV which lets me stream video from the computer to the TV without using wires if I want to.
Even my Blu Ray player will stream video from my computer, play youtube, Netflix and several pay-per-view services.
The reason they don’t want to release content on the internet is because they know it will be competing on the TV with their major clients, the broadcasters and cable companies.
I have a LG BD570. It will stream video from the computer. Play video files directly. Play Netflix, youtube, Cinema Now, Roky and the free Divx channel.
I pay $10/mo for the Netflix but no other service or cable, I have more TV than I care to watch.
I use IVI (http://www.ivi.tv/) You get all the locals for NY, SEA, LA and a few others. It is worth the $5 trial.
Looks interesting but I’m picking up most of that stuff for free with my antenna in full HD. I’m surprised that they are allowed to carry the network stuff. Is it only live streaming or can you pick up old shows, it may be worth the price if I can watch something when I want instead of setting the recorder.
None. It's all garbage. The teeheevee left my living room in the early 80s. Cable went away a decade later. I did build an antenna when analog went away, but had already quit watching anything regular on broadcast nearly a decade ago. Today it's the occasional football game and nothing else.
I check up on "cable" when traveling (I travel a lot), but always go back to the book(s) I pack for the trip. Even the once-good "History" channel is so boring with its "PawnStars" and "Trucking" programs... forget it.
Teeheevee is so worthless, I don't care to watch it at home, in the hotel, or on my cellphone. Let it die and free up RF spectrum for something useful.
If you look hard enough, there are two great sources for watching live sporting events, including the NFL, NBA, NHL, NCAA Sports, European ‘football’, etc. I watch NFL RedZone on the laptop with the network game on the big screen. ;)
how about a link ???
I like free. If it is free, it is for me.
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