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-   -   Direct TV? CANNOT take Metrocast any longer... (https://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/showthread.php?t=21863)

Lmurphy 04-10-2017 12:58 PM

Direct TV? CANNOT take Metrocast any longer...
 
Does anyone have Direct TV? Is it okay in the area. ANY OTHER options than Metrocast?

joey2665 04-11-2017 09:02 AM

I have it in Laconia and love it. I have been a customer since 1998.


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jetskier 04-11-2017 09:14 AM

Love it
 
Hi Lmurphy,

I have had DirecTV for pretty much 30 years as well. I would agree with Joey2665 that it is very good:
  • The picture quality is quite good and they are starting to add 4K channels
  • Reliability is good...the only real dropouts are during heavy thunderstorms.
  • They have nice options with DVR and wireless connections to multiple receivers.

Another option is Dish Network...I have not used it and I have heard that their customer service is not particularly good.

Regards,
Jetskier:cool:

bigdog 04-11-2017 11:19 AM

I cut the cable (MetroCast) years ago for lake house.

I use Roku, for movies, news (CBS, Fox, WMUR replay, etc), and I don't miss MetroCast at all.

News however with the exception of CBS is not real-time.

fatlazyless 04-11-2017 11:20 AM

.....what's the Skinny?
 
Suggest you look at Dish Network and their Skiinny program ....... so, what's the Skinny with Dish?

radar4401 04-11-2017 12:31 PM

Directv
 
I likewise have had DIRECTV for 30+ years. Almost never have any problems and the few I had, all you had to do is call and they will walk you thru trouble shooting and resolve the problem. Never any hassles and very few outages. I would compare the programming to see what works best for you. I would also google reviews for both and look for bad reviews as that might tell you something too! Only one major outage on DIRECTV in 30+ years and it lasted less than 12 hours.

bclaker 04-11-2017 02:45 PM

Metrocast?
 
We have 4 digital TV's and 1 old TV along with Internet, telephone, rental of 5 adapters and monthly service charge. The bill comes to $190.99/month. We don't have cell phones. Is there a better solution for less money.

upthesaukee 04-11-2017 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lmurphy (Post 276923)
Does anyone have Direct TV? Is it okay in the area. ANY OTHER options than Metrocast?

You don't say where you live. If you are in Alton / Alton Bay, TDS is a viable option in most areas of the town. Signal carried over fiber optics. Very good quality picture, fast Internet speed, and phone is available.
Good luck in your search.

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bruinsfan 04-11-2017 07:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bclaker (Post 276978)
We have 4 digital TV's and 1 old TV along with Internet, telephone, rental of 5 adapters and monthly service charge. The bill comes to $190.99/month. We don't have cell phones. Is there a better solution for less money.

I agree. We've had Metrocast for many years now; 3 HD TV's, Internet with WiFi, and a phone line. We pay about $190 or so a month as well.

We love it and have 160+ channels and the popular ones (including local) are HD.

Our service may go out once in a while, but not anymore than DirecTv does.

Acutally, we switched from DirecTv because of the weather/clouds/rain/snow causing service interruptions.

...to each their own

bigdog 04-11-2017 08:19 PM

Just another suggestion as an option, as I don't believe anyone mentioned 'Sling TV' !

Sling TV, takes the location where you have a subscription service (MetroCast, Comcast, Charter, etc), and 'slings' the signal to your second location using the Internet.

All you have to purchase is the 'Sling TV' device. About $100 on Amazon for M2 player model.

Watch and control 100% of the TV you already pay for on a tablet, phone, PC, or Mac with unlimited free apps

Also watch on a second TV anywhere via Apple TV, Chromecast, Fire TV, or Roku.

BroadHopper 04-12-2017 07:16 AM

My experience
 
I live in an association. In the beginning satellites and antennas were not allowed. The FCC made it illegal for associations to ban satellites so we are allowed one satellite disk per unit out of sight from the main road. Unfortunately, my unit is facing South and the receiver can only be on the other side of the unit. #2, there are trees and I was told the receiver should have a clear sight of the satellites.
An antenna in the attic space was great until the waves went digital, now I have no reception. According to an FCC website, I will be required to have a 60 feet antennae just to get one channel! So this is out of the question!
Since the analog to digital, I was force to cable, Metrocast. At first it was great and when they started adding digital frequencies, they had to rewire the unit to a better coax, add a new junction box at the end of the street, etc. But this only happens after multiple calls to customer service. Now there is a 'war' going on that the coax cable buried in the association area has to be replaced and the association is responsible. Association believes Metrocast is responsible. The end result is no service after a severe rain storm or snow melt and not getting the advertised mbps on internet speed. I also experience buffering when I do 'heavy' streaming.
Today I rely on my Roku stick for cable, but the buffering gets me.
My daughter allow me to 'sling' her Comcast account for local news.
When internet is down I used my cell phone account for email and text access.
I was told by Fairpoint that they will 'soon' be having high speed internet in the association if there is enough 'demand' for it.
Fairpoint will soon be bought out by an internet company. I understand the new company will be concentrating on high speed internet.
I'm not going to hold my breath.

webmaster 04-12-2017 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigdog (Post 277000)
Just another suggestion as an option, as I don't believe anyone mentioned 'Sling TV' !

Sling TV, takes the location where you have a subscription service (MetroCast, Comcast, Charter, etc), and 'slings' the signal to your second location using the Internet.

All you have to purchase is the 'Sling TV' device. About $100 on Amazon for M2 player model.

I think you're suggesting a Slingbox, not Sling TV. Sling TV is a service that gives you a package of cable channels through the internet for a monthly fee. A Slingbox lets you send your home cable service to other devices on the internet for free.

bigdog 04-12-2017 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by webmaster (Post 277028)
I think you're suggesting a Slingbox, not Sling TV. Sling TV is a service that gives you a package of cable channels through the internet for a monthly fee. A Slingbox lets you send your home cable service to other devices on the internet for free.

You are correct Sir, thanks for for providing the accurate description !

Biggd 04-17-2017 12:35 PM

I have internet only thru Metrocast at $60 per month. Get a Smart TV or just hook up your lap top and you can stream just about anything.

Lakeboater 04-17-2017 01:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Biggd (Post 277216)
I have internet only thru Metrocast at $60 per month. Get a Smart TV or just hook up your lap top and you can stream just about anything.

Does the $60 include all taxes and fees? Just the minimal basic cable is now almost $50 with all the taxes and fees.
Edit: I just checked and it's $47.59 a month

Biggd 04-17-2017 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lakeboater (Post 277220)
Does the $60 include all taxes and fees? Just the minimal basic cable is now almost $50 with all the taxes and fees.
Edit: I just checked and it's $47.59 a month

That's my total bill. It's my vacation home but even if I lived there year round there is still plenty to watch by just streaming. The only issue is it takes a little bit of searching. I have an Amazone Firestick which basically turns your regular TV into a smart TV. If you are an Amazon Prime member you have free access to Amazone TV. My son has Net Flicks and I log onto his account also.

Jos 04-18-2017 07:25 AM

Island internet
 
I live on Cow. I don't really want TV, but it would be nice to have internet. Any advice for me?

Orion 04-19-2017 10:32 AM

Advice in forum
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jos (Post 277252)
I live on Cow. I don't really want TV, but it would be nice to have internet. Any advice for me?

This topic has been covered several times in these forums. Lots of advice if you do a quick search. But on Cow, you'll really need to contact Fairpoint for their DSL service. It ain't much 2.5 to 10 Mbps depending on where you are on the island, but it's something.

Jos 04-19-2017 02:43 PM

Thanks very much

wifi 04-19-2017 07:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Orion (Post 277329)
...It ain't much 2.5 to 10 Mbps depending on where you are on the island, but it's something.

Mi gaud, on an island? People would have given their right arm 10 years ago, up here for that. Not mocking you, just taking advantage of the comment. It is the more, more, more generation. The faculty expense to supply that to a remote location, vastly overruns the cost to the utility..... just saying.

So, do you land lubbers want to subsidize growth to other out of the way areas ? Just remember, not to complain about the cost of your bill

IslandRadio 04-19-2017 10:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Orion (Post 277329)
This topic has been covered several times in these forums. Lots of advice if you do a quick search. But on Cow, you'll really need to contact Fairpoint for their DSL service. It ain't much 2.5 to 10 Mbps depending on where you are on the island, but it's something.

2.5 to 10 megabits is fantastic for DSL ! That's not too bad actually.

Orion 04-20-2017 05:42 AM

relativity
 
It really is great for DSL (I remember 300Kbps DSL days), but 2.5 is marginal for video streaming which is what you need if you don't want to have to buy Dish/Direct yet want some TV on the island. Yes, once upon a time I was thrilled with 75 Kbps acoustic-coupled dialup teletype, but Internet demands keep ramping up the threshold and if you're gonna have teenage "guests" you're gonna hear some whining. ;)

P-3 Guy 04-21-2017 05:54 PM

Quote:

I have had DirecTV for pretty much 30 years as well.
Quote:

I likewise have had DIRECTV for 30+ years
Guys, DirecTV didn't launch until June 17, 1994, meaning the service will celebrate its 23rd anniversary in a few months. I really hope you weren't paying for a nonexistent service for 7+ years.

radar4401 04-23-2017 09:15 AM

Directv Start date
 
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Directv first started off as a Hughes Aircraft spinoff. It was licensed in 1985 and started shortly thereafter. I don't know exactly when,but I paid a discounted price of about $500 to purchase a system. So 30 years is about right. You can google Directv history and see the dates yourself.

P-3 Guy 04-23-2017 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by radar4401 (Post 277497)
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Directv first started off as a Hughes Aircraft spinoff. It was licensed in 1985 and started shortly thereafter. I don't know exactly when,but I paid a discounted price of about $500 to purchase a system. So 30 years is about right. You can google Directv history and see the dates yourself.

My bubble is still intact. You may have been paying for a satellite TV service before June, 1994, but if so whatever it was it wasn't called DirecTV. I was also an early DirecTV adopter. I watched the home equipment appear on retail shelves in 1994, and I purchased a system in December, 1996.


DirecTV (stylized as DIRECTV) is an American direct broadcast satellite service provider based in El Segundo, California and is a subsidiary of AT&T. Its satellite service, launched on June 17, 1994, transmits digital satellite television and audio to households in the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DirecTV



Key Historical Dates

1990: Founded
1994: Launched Service
1995: One Millionth Customer
1999: PRIMESTAR and USSB Acquisitions
2001: Ten Millionth Customer
2003: News Corp. acquires 34% interest in DIRECTV
2005: 15 Millionth Customer
2006: 100% Ownership of DIRECTV Latin America acquired
2007: High definition revolution begins with more than 70 national HD channels*
2008: Liberty Media acquires 41% of The DIRECTV Group
2009: Became independent company through transaction with Liberty Media
2010: Became world’s largest pay-TV provider with more than 27.5 million customers
2011: Launched DIRECTV Everywhere service
2012: Launched Genie HD DVR
2014: First pay-TV provider to launch 4K content


https://www.directv.com/DTVAPP/conte...ompany_profile

upthesaukee 04-23-2017 12:14 PM

Who the heck cares? 30+ years; 23 years; 18 years, 4 months, 26 days, 9 hours, 18 months, and counting. He had DirecTV for a long time. Lighten up.

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P-3 Guy 04-23-2017 02:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by upthesaukee (Post 277501)
Who the heck cares? 30+ years; 23 years; 18 years, 4 months, 26 days, 9 hours, 18 months, and counting. He had DirecTV for a long time. Lighten up.

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Don't worry; I'm plenty relaxed. My first post in this thread (which you thanked me for), just pointed out, in a friendly way, that two other posters were mistaken about how long DirecTV has been around. A seven year plus error is fairly significant. We can either care about putting out accurate information or not. I prefer to care.

When I was called out as wrong and challenged to "Google Directv history and see the dates" myself, I figured that was easy enough to do. Simply making a claim doesn't make it true. It would be a good thing if more of us realized that.

wifi 04-23-2017 04:07 PM

The summer hasn't started yet, and bickering already is starting......

laketrout 05-10-2017 01:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Biggd (Post 277216)
I have internet only thru Metrocast at $60 per month. Get a Smart TV or just hook up your lap top and you can stream just about anything.

Good idea but even Metro-sux Internet is slow where I live and they are ok people to deal with they are just working for the large out of state Metro cast company but Metro cast has to be the worst Cable company I have had to deal with in years /decades. Selections stink and the prices are high!

Biggd 05-11-2017 02:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by laketrout (Post 278441)
Good idea but even Metro-sux Internet is slow where I live and they are ok people to deal with they are just working for the large out of state Metro cast company but Metro cast has to be the worst Cable company I have had to deal with in years /decades. Selections stink and the prices are high!

I've had no problems with internet only and it needs to be fast enough for streaming which it mine is. Maybe you need to upgrade your speeds.

BroadHopper 05-12-2017 05:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Biggd (Post 278542)
I've had no problems with internet only and it needs to be fast enough for streaming which it mine is. Maybe you need to upgrade your speeds.

If you look at the terms and agreements Metrocast has the right to slow down internet speed depending on demand of internet usage on the system. They will also apply less speed as you get closer to your monthly allotment of usage. In my case 350 GB a month. If you use the Roku stick and have a family networking games and movies, the limit comes up fairly quickly.


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