Re: Television on the boat.
I sell many of the Shakespeare antennas and they come with everything but the mount. It's an amplified and powered version and I'd not use the existing cable. I think they're around a hundred dollars.
Re: Television on the boat.
I ve cancelled directTV about a year ago an now use an appleTV to stream Amazon Prime and other apps like fox news. It takes a good connection (i use a cell modem) and good router but worth it. There are so many on demand services now that you dont really need regular TV
One caveat is that you need to have cable or sat service back home to get the on demand programming
The one service i will not subscribe to for obvious political reasons is netflix...
Re: Television on the boat.
Just curious Pascal, what are the political reasons to not get Netflix, this is new to me, I guess I live under a rock.
Re: Television on the boat.
That's a new way to describe life in California. With all the lefty liberals there you didn't notice obummer and Susan rice a roni?
Re: Television on the boat.
By the way I dont consider streaming services the same as television. Television is a wireless transmission system for getting programming over the air. Satellite is pretty much the same. Streaming services (OTT) need internet.
Re: Television on the boat.
Well netflix has a bunch of uber liberal host and series, including signing a former presidetn to develop content... you know... the guy with the same middle name as a former iraqui dictator.
Netflix also heavily donated to a number of far out there campaigns like a black lives matter activist baltimore mayor.
Yes, streaming isnt TV but with so many options it is pretty good altenative to TV on a boat. Nowadays you pretty much need internet anyway so i d rather pay $70 a months for celullar data card instead of $70 + $100 or more for a decent sat package plus $2000 for an antenna
Now if you have DirecTV at home you can get extra re eivers for $10 a month but sill need the $2000 antenna
It all depends on what you want to watch... i realized i was watching fox news 90% of the time... not worth $120 a month when i can stream it
Oh... and yes... not a penny to HBO as long as maher as a show....
Re: Television on the boat.
I agree with the no Netflix thing. But enough about that. To answer the OP's question between the over the air HD TV and (what works for us right now) a DirectTV streaming app with a bunch of channels we always have something to watch. Cheap too!
Re: Television on the boat.
My solution was to drop DirectTV.. $120 a month. My boat already had a big Shakespeare type flying saucer mounted under the upper helm cowling (Glomex). It's excellent for over the air HD channels, inc all local and national channels. I then swapped out all the TV's (because they were stolen), and replaced with "smart" TV's. Smart TV's connect to streaming services like Hulu and Amazon Prime. And also allow you to "screen share" with your smart phone. So, I got Amazon Prime, I get " free" Hulu with my sprint unlimited plan, and I pay $25 a month for SlingTV... I stream SlingTV on my phone and screen share with the smart TV, or use the marinas wifi and connect directly the TV to stream. The smart TV allows me to toggle input sources, over the air TV, DVD, HDMI (for fire stick), or screen share... So now instead of 120 a month, I pay 120 annually for Amazon prime, and 25 monthly fro Sling..haven't missed Direct a bit.
Re: Television on the boat.
Needs for tv differ.
At home I have the full cable package for all the things I like. Keep the Spoiled Pusified Overpaid Revolting Trying Showoffs (look at the caps) .
When I'm on the boat at the dock I get the same as the house plus the off air. I watch more and more off air lately. When we are on the water tv is such a small issue the off air is more than enough.