I cut the cord recently, which means that I now access network TV via a hodgepodge of Roku apps and a Sling subscription. However, this appears to hold some promise, but I can’t seem to separate fact from the sales pitch.
Here’s what I want to know.
A) Considering that I live 100 miles from the nearest broadcast TV tower, do I need to have an outdoor antenna professionally installed? Or can I get by with the indoor antenna? Or will it even work at all?
B) Can I bypass the antenna all together and get my content via the internet?
C) Anything else you can tell me.
Thanks!
It looks like this thing just combines a Roku with your antenna channels in one thing. If you already have a Roku I don’t see the point.
All this appears to do is, it lets you connect all of your TVs use a single antenna without having to run wires all over your house. If you have only one TV, that it appears to be useless, unless the TV is nowhere near where the antenna line enters the house. I once had something similar for my satellite radio, but instead of using my existing WiFi, it broadcast its own signal to its own receiver, which was connected to the radio’s antenna input.
You live 100 miles from any broadcast antennas? I doubt even the best antennas could pick those up, and I seriously doubt any indoor ones can - I can’t get anything that’s even 50 miles away with mine.