25 Nov 2023 09:35 AM
My SKY contract is up for renewal, and again they are increasing the price. It's annoying having to barter with them every 12/18/24 months. I have have had SKY TV in its various incarnations since 1990 (OK, I'm officially old). I currently have SkyQ having moved across a few years ago.
I have a Sony OLED TV that's about 12 months old and a 1GB internet connection with ethernet and WiFi available right behind it.
Thinking about what I watch, I don't know whether to bother! I have Sky (with Movies), Netflix and AmazonPrime (I get it for the delivery). I have a free AppleTV promo that I haven't even bothered activating and I tried out Disney on a freebe but only watched StarWars and Loki so discontinued it.
I watch YouTube on the computer more than I watch TV. With TV, I watch terrestrial much more than anything else. Rarely (once a month) I watch a movie. The only series I ever watch from Sky is FBI. My main use of the Sky box is that I never watch anything live. It's all recorded. I record every new evening series on BBC/ITV, delete most of it and then watch some of it, often months later. I like the Sky planner.
So - should I move to Sky Stream or NowTV (what's the difference) and buy the occasional movie from time to time? Should I just get rid of Sky altogether? If I did, would I miss the ability to record everything, or is that not needed with Freeview Play - or is there analternate box with a good planner that records?
Current sub is:
Sky Signature £18
Ultimate TV Add on £3
Sky Cinema £0
Sky HD £9
Ultra HD £4
25 Nov 2023 09:41 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@sylsylsyl wrote:My main use of the Sky box is that I never watch anything live. It's all recorded. I record every new evening series on BBC/ITV, delete most of it and then watch some of it, often months later. I like the Sky planner.
An alternative is FreeSat 4K - you can get recordable boxes that you own without a subscription.
So - should I move to Sky Stream or NowTV (what's the difference)
NowTV is streaming version of Sky - you use your own hardware. Your LG has a native app for it.
Stream is Sky's version - they supply the streaming device and you have a subscription of your choice.
25 Nov 2023 09:58 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@sylsylsyl wrote:
With TV, I watch terrestrial much more than anything else. Rarely (once a month) I watch a movie. The only series I ever watch from Sky is FBI. My main use of the Sky box is that I never watch anything live. It's all recorded. I record every new evening series on BBC/ITV, delete most of it and then watch some of it, often months later. I like the Sky planner.
Remember that Glass/Stream has no local recording capability at all, playback of that kind of content will depend on it either being still available on the channels own catch-up app infrastructure, or on the maybe there /maybe not 'cloud' recording (which isn't really any such thing).
I suspect you'd find Glass/Stream very different and quite possibly extremely annoying in that kind of use model.
25 Nov 2023 10:02 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreBoth Freesat and Freeplay have receiver models with hard drives : the modern ones are branded '4K' although there's no actual transmission in that resolution. Freeview Play is delivered online into such hardware.
No problem. Browse or search to find help, or start a new discussion on Community.
On average, new discussions are replied to by our users within 90 minutes
New Discussion