IrishIroamed wrote:...or Busy Bees?
Mornin' ladies~~~
Just a quick Howdy!
I'm really behind the times, but I don't understand the need for Hulu, Roku, etc. What are the benefits? Special movies, etc? We had cable eons ago and was canceled pretty quickly. When camping I just use OTA for local info, and if no OTA is around, use my Dish.
Nothing even itty bitty today. Just nosy. Have a good day!
Good morning, Cheryl.
The reason I am a Roku devotee is because, although I live in a small-ish city, there are some tall-ish buildings (LOL - not so tall, really, just taller than my house) nearby that block the OTA (Over-The-Air) signal; thus I am unable to receive any television OTA here at my home.
As for Dish - I am assuming that you are not using some kind of dish (small "d") but rather Dish network (large "d"). I am not aware of any kind of dish (either small or large
) that brings in programming without at least some kind of minimal $$subscription$$.
Roku is streamed content, no kind of dish or antenna needed, all programming is streamed over the internet. The only thing needed is a broadband connection of some kind; Beth posted a bit ago of how she has even figured out how to use Roku using the bandwidth from her smartphone.
The Roku device is truly "plug-and-play": you plug it in, it works. No fancy programming or connections needed. I have seen the Roku device on sale for $29.00. That's it. No further monthly fees, no further fees of any kind (so long as you don't want some pay subscriptions, like HBO, for example, which cost extra). Programming on Roku is FREE, unless one wishes to subscribe to a pay channel, which are also available via Roku.
There are literally
thousands of "channels" available through Roku, from full-length ballets, to films, to tv shows, to basic "fix-it" videos. ALL FOR FREE. Anything you might wish to watch, on every topic imaginable, is there waiting for you to watch it. Right now, at this very moment, or later on, on
your schedule. FOR FREE.
About 10 years ago, when my Dish subscription (or maybe it was DirecTv, I forget which) went up to $75.00/mo. ($900.00/year!!) I dropped it and went with Roku, which was a pretty new technology "back then"
. I have never regretted this decision, and have never looked back.
Interesting aside: Had I continued to pay $75.00/mo over the last 10 years (not counting into the equation the fact that the fee is a lot more than $75.00 today) I would be out a fast $9,000.00 (yep, nine-thousand) dollars in fees for the ability to just watch tv. Last time I looked, one could almost buy a fairly decent new TT for this kind of money.
If you have any more questions, please ask. I LOVE my Roku.
Anne