Good morning.
I (finally) finished my cargo van to camper van in September, but have yet to do my maiden voyage. Was scheduled to go to the West Coast GTG recently held in Oregon, but had to bail due to weather issues and an ill older dog.
Anyway.
Since I have yet to hit the road, I'm not sure that this would work or not - but I am what is referred to as a "cord cutter", meaning that I don't have cable nor satellite tv. I cut the cord well over a year ago when I did a little math, and have not regretted it one minute.
Being the type that is easily bored, I would watch the clock on top of my tv every time a commercial came on, just to see how long it lasted. It wasn't too long before I realized that about 50% of the tv I was watching consisted of commercials. Here is where the match comes in:
My lower-tier satellite bill was about $75.00 a month. I was watching about 2 hours of television a day, which meant that I was watching one hour of programming and one hour of commercials. Which meant that I was paying $37.50/month JUST TO WATCH *BLEEPING* COMMERCIALS!
I was
done.
Does this mean that I don't watch tv anymore? Far from it. I stream all of my tv watching through my Roku box:
http://www.roku.com/Trust me when I say this: there is more to watch on my Roku than any cable channel/satellite provider combined. What is the cost? I got the Roku 2, which at the time was a fast $79.00. What are the additional monthly fees, you are now asking? Depending on what you want to watch. . . and I primarily watch the news and PBS shows. . . the additional monthly cost is "zero".
So, I went from a fast $900.00/year for my satellite subscription to your basic nuttin' honey for my Roku.
Again, it depends on what you want to watch - if you want Hulu Plus (which, I am told, has the network programming, of which I am not interested) the fee is about $8.00/month. Not a typo - eight dollars a month. I also have Amazon Prime ($89.00/year), which has hundreds of movies and (commercial-free) television shows that can then be streamed/watched as part of yearly subscription. I find that I watch very little Amazon Prime, so may ditch it (again, I am mostly news & PBS) at the end of my term.
Most of what isn't available on Roku to stream can be found to stream on the network websites on the day after original broadcast.
BUT I don't know what kind of band width/download speed is offered by these campgrounds that advertise that they have "WiFi" (haven't been there yet). Maybe it is just too slow for streaming. . . for the moment!! If you have AT&T U-verse:
http://www.att.com/u-verse/shop/index.jsp#fbid=sYCutOotcYA (U-Verse is my internet service provider, about $50/month), this also gives you U-verse on the road (where available). Don't know about Verizon, because I don't have that.
This whole internet/bandwidth thing is in flux. A (newer) technology called WiMax is making inroads to rural areas everywhere. There are also whispers that changes to WiFi/WiMax will enable it to deliver more content over less bandwidth.
Wimax:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAXAs a tech geek, I think it is a great time to be alive. If only I wasn't so damn old!!
Since I will be hitting the road on the Poverty Plan, the cost (for me) to have any kind of tv antenna for my van is not on the agenda. Add that to the fact that there just won't be room inside my van eliminates it from consideration. HOWEVER, I will have my laptop along, and will be getting an updated smartphone before departing on my whirlwind tour
For me, that will have to be enough. I will also bring my Kindle, fully loaded.
PM me if anyone has questions.
Mitch, glad to see you back in the fray.
Anne