05 Oct 2024 05:58 PM
I don't see any point in getting Sky Q when it's being phased out. Can you go the distance with your order without being redirected to Sky Glass Sky Stream?
05 Oct 2024 06:44 PM - last edited: 05 Oct 2024 07:30 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Sky is still offering Q on their website on new 24 month minimum terms. It is currently listed from £31 a month though, where Stream is £26, and may well not appear to all visitors (the menus on the web pages are dynamic)
06 Oct 2024 03:31 AM
@Martin+Gleeson Don't see the point in getting sky q?
well I'd rather have it at the moment compared to the constant issues that sky stream keeps having . Outages with channels disappearing, ongoing pixelation issues which has been going on for months it seems. Lip sync.
Like I've said before Sky need to get their streaming platform sorted because there is going to be a lot of customers leaving when they do close satellite. 2028 is nearly 3 years away.
06 Oct 2024 09:29 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Martin+Gleeson wrote:I don't see any point in getting Sky Q when it's being phased out. Can you go the distance with your order without being redirected to Sky Glass Sky Stream?
Yes
Whether you see any point in getting something that may be unavailable in 4 years is quite different from whether it's still possible to get it.
06 Oct 2024 11:30 AM
Sky Q is no longer being promoted by Sky,if it's available ok but Sky to discontinue in 1yr,2yrs,3 yrs or 4yrs then it's pointless. Why purchase a product that will eventually be discontinued. Freesats days are also numbered.
06 Oct 2024 11:35 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Martin+Gleeson wrote:
Why purchase a product that will eventually be discontinued.
Why not? A new customer can get years of Sky Q service before needing to change. Everyone will make a decision based on their own circumstances. Broadband not being strong enough for Glass/Stream yet is one that springs to mind. If you don't want to subscribe to Q that's fine.
06 Oct 2024 12:07 PM - last edited: 06 Oct 2024 12:07 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Martin+Gleeson wrote:Sky Q is no longer being promoted by Sky,if it's available ok but Sky to discontinue in 1yr,2yrs,3 yrs or 4yrs then it's pointless. Why purchase a product that will eventually be discontinued. Freesats days are also numbered.
Because you aren't "purchasing" anything, you're just subscribing to a service
06 Oct 2024 01:49 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Martin+Gleeson wrote:Why purchase a product that will eventually be discontinued.
All products are eventually discontinued.
06 Oct 2024 02:21 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Martin+Gleeson wrote:Sky Q is no longer being promoted by Sky,if it's available ok but Sky to discontinue in 1yr,2yrs,3 yrs or 4yrs then it's pointless. Why purchase a product that will eventually be discontinued. Freesats days are also numbered.
Sky ring me every couple of weeks now trying to get me to switch to Sky Q. So it's very much available.
10 Oct 2024 09:01 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreWell, according to RXTV, Sky have extended their SES contract until 2029, so that is your new deadline.
Satellite operator SES has confirmed an extension of a contract with Sky for the distribution of satellite TV services to the UK and Ireland.
Sky will continue to make use of multiple transponders on the SES-owned Astra 2 satellites orbiting at 28°E until 2029. The two companies previously had a deal running until 2028.
This means that Sky Q and Sky+HD users will continue to be able to access a wide range of channels via satellite for at least five more years, giving Sky more time to work on its internet-based TV platform (via Sky Stream/Sky Glass), widely expected to fully replace satellite in due course. 2029 will mark 31 years since Sky launched its digital satellite service. It will also be the 40th anniversary of the launch of its analogue multichannel service.
The contract extension means Sky will remain on satellite until the current fleet of Astra 2 satellites at 28°E reach end of life. Astra 2E, 2F and 2G were launched between 2012 and 2014 with a lifespan of at least 15 years.
10 Oct 2024 10:53 AM - last edited: 10 Oct 2024 10:57 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Given that now aligns with other SES clients and would achieve four decades of Sky satellite service, it does seem quite likely to be a good endpoint.
10 Oct 2024 12:49 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreAgreed @TimmyBGood.
I think it is fairly safe to say that this alignment puts a hard stop on it now and that is when mass product satellite broadcasting in the UK (as we have known it), will end.
10 Oct 2024 01:25 PM - last edited: 10 Oct 2024 01:26 PM
I think it's fair to say now that sky sat will become a legacy service late next year the very latest.
10 Oct 2024 02:49 PM - last edited: 10 Oct 2024 04:19 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Now there's an SES contract running 'through 2029', Sky could conceivably offer new two year contract terms with dates starting up until the end of 2027.
https://www.ses.com/press-release/ses-and-sky-extend-long-standing-partnership-uk-and-ireland
13 Oct 2024 10:42 AM - last edited: 13 Oct 2024 10:50 AM
Deleted.
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