Othersharon wrote:Interesting conversation about the roku. My bill keeps going up it seems and about the only thing I don’t want to lose I my internet connection. I can live without cable and landline but no other decent internet provider in this area. So still not sure what I’ll do. Watching the weather reports for the south and hoping Martha is doing okay. Neighbor is still gone and working on power lines in LA from Ida so don’t know how this will affect their work and when he’ll get back home.
Good morning! I'm also hoping that Martha is safe. Just got here from reading the morning news, it says that this latest hurricane may "stall" over Louisiana. Hope that it doesn't do that. . .
Sorry to keep pounding the drum about Roku on here (LOL - I have no financial interest in the Roku company whatsoever). . . It's just that I think that cable tv has a disgusting stranglehold on television content (which is oh-so-slowly changing thanks to companies like Roku).
Keep in mind that (if you currently have satellite or cable) it isn't an "either-or" situation if you want to give Roku a try. If you receive internet and cable from the same provider, you should be able to eliminate the cable part of your bill (if and when you decide to go with something like Roku exclusively) if you choose to, but untangling the two types of service (internet and tv - or even internet, phone and tv) might get a bit confusing.
https://www.cnet.com/tech/home-entertainment/how-to-cut-the-cable-cord-in-2021/Here is a pretty balanced view from Consumer Reports:
https://www.consumerreports.org/streaming-media/how-to-decide-if-cord-cutting-is-right-for-you/You can have both cable
and Roku both at the same time (so long as you have a good broadband - internet - connection for the Roku).
And the price of an "entry-level" Roku device is about
twenty-nine dollars. That's
it. https://www.roku.com/how-it-worksNo monthly fees (unless you choose to add a pay channel) and available content so vast, it is difficult to describe to someone who has never experienced Roku:
Puppy videos? Check. All-news-all-the-time? Check. Full-length documentaries about YOUR favorite topic (whatever it might be) Check. How-to 'fix it' videos for whatever you might own? Check. Dramas? Check. Nature shows? Check. Gardening shows? Check. Travel shows? Check. How-to RV (and just about anything else 'how-to' you could imagine)? Check. Weather shows? Check. Movies? Check. Tv shows? Check.
Sports? Hrm. I will confess I don't know about sports. I have exactly zero interest in sports in general, the same amount of interest in sporting events specifically: none. Zero. Zip.
On the other hand, there are, literally, thousands of options of what you might like to watch - for free - on Roku. If you want to watch things like Netflix, ESPN, the networks, etc. - you
can watch these through your Roku also, but these require a monthly fee. I, myself, have never felt the need to shell out for any kind of pay channels (except for a very brief flirtation with PBS - @ $5.00/mo).
And I have used Roku for my television watching,
exclusively, for around ten years.
I, personally, think that cable television (this includes satellite tv) is doing it's level best to kill the goose that lays the golden egg. And it is getting there. . .
LOL. Anyway, I'm stopping now.
If you would, please, send some of that rain you are expecting my way!!
Anne