Considering Jumping

Short answer - yes. IF Dish is headed for the iceberg, and in my opinion that's a big if, what's your hurry? Ignore all the nay sayers on the forum, they've been wrong about Charlie all along the way. He just fleeced DTV and used that ploy as leverage to get the financing he needed to keep going so rather than admit they were wrong they immediately changed their story to "Well what's he going to do next time?" etc, etc. If it's going to hit the iceberg wait until it happens it's not like options won't be available at the time. Just my $.02.
Charlie's full of surprises 😮 lol
 
  • Like
Reactions: charlesrshell
Well, I’m glad you’ve had your fun. Do you remember much about your Internet access from 30ish years ago?

I remember I had to install a device on the copper lines in house to separate out the DSL and voice functions to improve the signal. I don’t remember the name of the Internet provider I used back then. But I remember they, and the company I went to after them, going under. Famous name, too. They dropped like flies.

And yes, there was some provided equipment to utilize the service.

I don’t think the term “streaming service” was even in use back then. So my use of the term may be inaccurate.
 
Well, I’m glad you’ve had your fun. Do you remember much about your Internet access from 30ish years ago?

I remember I had to install a device on the copper lines in house to separate out the DSL and voice functions to improve the signal. I don’t remember the name of the Internet provider I used back then. But I remember they, and the company I went to after them, going under. Famous name, too. They dropped like flies.

And yes, there was some provided equipment to utilize the service.

I don’t think the term “streaming service” was even in use back then. So my use of the term may be inaccurate.


I recall that some encrypted OTA services like SuperTV and Wometco Home Theater used proprietary boxes. I do not recall that with internet delivered content but I was not looking.
 
Short answer - yes. IF Dish is headed for the iceberg, and in my opinion that's a big if, what's your hurry? Ignore all the nay sayers on the forum, they've been wrong about Charlie all along the way. He just fleeced DTV and used that ploy as leverage to get the financing he needed to keep going so rather than admit they were wrong they immediately changed their story to "Well what's he going to do next time?" etc, etc. If it's going to hit the iceberg wait until it happens it's not like options won't be available at the time. Just my $.02.First of all I am in no hurry but i wan to have some idea of where i might go

if you are happy with the service and price you are paying, stay with the service. I would not base my decision to leave on their business environment. It's not as if the instability of Dish would leave you exposed financially or facing irreparable harm - it's a tv service, not something more critical like say a bank or your alarm system. If they go belly up tomorrow, you can switch to any service in minutes without missing a beat.

Now if it's price/options/something else, then the conversation is different entirely. Personally, I would not leave one traditional provider for another, but that's just me.
It is all abourt being prepared when and if the end comes or service degrades to the point I am no longer interested.
 
  • Like
Reactions: charlesrshell
It is all abourt being prepared when and if the end comes or service degrades to the point I am no longer interested.
Alot of companies will becoming to an end cable is dated since more and more fibers are being deployed and 5g. I consider pricing to make me loose interest in a service. Most providers charge rates i don't consider acceptable for single families!!!!
 
back in the day i could see owning it. but not in todays world. they won't drop the fee's makes no sense to own it. also leasing covers things like natural disasters and power surges. one would have to buy new hardware out of pocket in one of those events.
The fees are access fees, not lease fees. Leasing is basically them letting you borrow equipment at zero charge as long as a sign an initial two year agreement guaranteeing income.

Also purchased receivers get replaced for free as well. The benefit to purchased equipment is you can turn them on and off as you please, can mix purchased vip with hopper, and can sell it if no longer needed.
 
I left Dish 2 years ago after both Spectrum and Armstrong strung fiber in my rural area. Before that Dish was my only option as we are too far out in the boonies for OTA as well. We stream YouTube TV (YTTV) mainly for locals. We also use ESPN+ with a VPN that works great for watching our local sports teams.

We find the cloud DVR to be fine using YTTV and probably wouldn’t even subscribe to it if we had better OTA coverage. Frankly, between the commercial supported streaming services (TUBI, Samsung TV, Pluto TV, etc.) and YouTube there is plenty to choose from that come without monthly subscripton fees.
 
Top