So, with our move to Jacksonville, we bought an older, 1950's home. Long story short, the seller was supposed to upgrade the wiring, but didn't and offered us a cash credit at the last minute instead. We could either back out or take the credit and go forward, we decided to go forward. I say that to say that Uverse wouldn't install cable because we don't have a grounding system at this point, will get around to it...
So, we were basically forced into trying out the cord cutting thing. We are trying out a 3 month trial of DirecTV Now for $35/month, which came with a free Apple TV (look it up, the deal I think is still available and is well worth it for a new cord cutter who doesn't yet have a smart TV). Apple TV is great if you don't already have a really good smart TV, I recommend it. We rarely actually use the DirecTV Now and won't continue it once the free trial is over. Aside from sports, we rarely watch live TV (we purposefully shun the "news"). We also have my parent's Uverse login which we can use with the network apps and with Watch ESPN, so basically, we can get all the programming we enjoyed before. We have a $10/m Hulu subscription, which is nice to have because commercial free, but we could live without it.
The big difference with cord cutting is the viewing experience.
Here are the drawbacks:
- I really really miss my DVR. Just for normal, everyday viewing, it's nice to just click your available recordings and pull up whatever you want to watch. It's also really nice to pause your TV, go do something for a minute, come back and not miss a thing and fast forward through commercials.
- You have to know what you're looking for. When you have your DVR set up with season passes on the shows you want to watch, it's way quicker and easier to sit down and veg out for 30 minutes or an hour and not have to spend 10 minutes trying to find something to watch.
- I really just don't see how I'm going to get through football season without a real cable subscription, again, because of the DVR thing. I have to be able to pause and replay whenever I want. When watching a game, how often do they glaze right over a controversial call while talking about the ******* third string center or something? Also, the commercial breaks are ridiculous. I want to be able to get up, go fix a drink or take my wings out of the oven and come back and not miss any of the action, then just speed through the commercials. The last part is, I've found the sound, image quality, etc to simply be subpar on Watch ESPN.
- I also like to keep recordings of Canes games and be able to replay critical calls or big moments days later. Sure, you can usually find the videos online, but not always, and why have to search for something when you can just record it on your own box?
I think we have 50mbps Uverse fiber connection. Our home is all plaster walls, and the main TV has the fireplace between it and the wifi router, so I need to figure out a way to get a signal booster or repeater, but aside from that, the signal appears to be plenty robust.
Any other cord cutters out there that like to time-shift their watching and have tips on that or anything else? Aside from watching the Canes, I'm willing to deal with the other drawbacks of cutting the cord and saving $200/m+ (not joking, our DirecTV bill for three fricking TV's was in that range). I'm just not willing to compromise when it comes to watching the Canes. I do plan on attending most if not all the home games this year, my first with season tickets in many years now that I'm back in FLA, but still, gotta have that seemless game day experience that I'm used to for the road games.