You could use what I use - get an Obi200and get free local and US long distance service from Google Voice. I pay $0 a month to call my wife at home in Chicago for hours every day. It’s impossible to port your number, but that’s the one all those Telemarketers already have.
Yeah, just set a friend up with the Plex client on his Roku and invited him into my Plex server. I bought a lifetime Plex Pass when they were running a special a year or two ago. I love this software!
I use Phone Power for my VOIP, but I’m pretty sure many of them are pretty similar. It’s $8.33/mo if you prepay a year. You actually get 2 lines with the service (although they’re attached to the same number). The porting is pretty easy and will only take a few days.
We did that exact thing one year ago. Signed up with Playstation Vue through the Roku, but we recently dumped that service when they jacked their prices up. Now we just use Hulu.
So that gives us Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, the free stations on Roku, and an indoor antenna for the local news and such. The Roku channel ain’t too shabby, and Crackle’s not bad, either. Tried Pluto, but we don’t like it at all.
We’ve just discovered Roku’s casting abilities. So we can now stream from our laptops and tablets straight to the TV. There are a couple of ways to do it on Windows 10, and one of the methods screws up the sound. If you’ll just hit the Cast button from Windows Media Player, it plays perfectly. Works for disks, too, if your laptop has a Blu-ray / DVD player.
Biggest recent problem we’ve had is BBC America through Hulu doesn’t have the Doctor Who Christmas Special.
As broadcast tv gets more popular, the more sub channels are added and more variety of shows are added to the line ups. I travel for work all over the area counties and satellite dishes are disappearing and antennas going up
Yeah, start adding up monthly costs and then talk about needing 24/7 tv anything. Why anyone would want to spend 1000+/- for tv…Get up and walk away from the tv if youre watching 24/7. Why is anyone addicted to that any more? Or should they?
I get news on the internet now. TV news is so warped anyway. You can get local news on broadcast and (inter)national news broadcast too. Anything else is available online. Internet pricing needs adjustment at some point in the future or now
We pay 39 a month now for internet. I need it for work so I can do away with that
I loved those channels too. Lots and lots of PBS channels via antenna on the roof. TONS! We had to cut the cord. Cable/satellite tv is not what it used to be. When the history channel, discover channel etc dont play what the channel name suggests and 75% of the other channels are reality tv…makes ridiculous fees.
250 month makes 3000 a year??? OMG!
If living in the city, you can get many many channels with a simple cheap antenna but out here in the boonies bigger higher antennas are needed. Its a one time cost. Isnt there something else you could enjoy with 3k a year instead of giving it to some corporate giant??
I think cable and dish companies are getting their rude awakenings these days
I went to Comcast this morning and slashed all the premium channels off. I expected resistance, but they just said “sure thing”. By doing this, I’m adding $1200 a year to my checking account, as my bill dropped from $276/mo to $176/mo. $35 of that is their bullshit fees and taxes. They did try to up-sell me with their home security package, included for free for two years. Problem with those kinds of offers is that after two years, they just start charging you for it, rather than asking if you want to continue. If my wife didn’t insist on being able to watch the Blazers games, I could have slashed it to about $100/mo.
Never mind my above advice. I’ve just unplugged both Roku units and tossed them into a drawer.
Streaming platform Roku hosts Infowars channel after Facebook, YouTube bans
Do they have a KKK channel, too?
That seems silly. Did you also throw away your computer when you found that the infowars web site was available on it?
You’ll notice that I didn’t say that I threw away my TV.
Check if your local library system has a partnership with Kanopy. If so, it’ll get you up to five movies a month. The collection is reasonable. Mostly classic or art house, but they have he entire A24 collection right now which is neat. And you can’t beat the price (free).
I see. You’re angry that the Roku software allows infowars to be seen. So have you stopped using Chrome (or Edge or Firefox or whatever browser you’re using) because it allows the infowars web site to be seen?
I have no interest in arguing nonsense. Bye now.
I think the issue is that InfoWars is listed in the Roku channel listing. Roku isn’t like a browser where you point it at some random address and it displays what is presented. Roku has some criteria for channels to be added to the official list that Roku users can find in the Search feature of the Roku box. It is possible to add unofficial channels to your Roku, but that is a manual step.
A browser analogy would be if InfoWars came up as one of the official tiled sites in the New Tab screen on a fresh install. It’s one thing if you manualy enter the InfoWars url as a bookmark, but it’s different if Chrome ships with an InfoWars bookmark built in.
By allowing InfoWars to be easily searchable from the Roku interface, it means it’s much easier for InfoWars to find an audience. Although some savvy users could add it manually, most customers would give up if InfoWars did not return any search results.
Go ahead and cut it. A television is the WORST possible device for finding out about important things that are going on in the world.
Netflix is raising their rates about $2/month:
“After the InfoWars channel became available, we heard from concerned parties and have determined that the channel should be removed from our platform. Deletion from the channel store and platform has begun and will be completed shortly.”
Damn! Even before I had a chance to RO about this all over Twitter.
You’re right. I had actually incorrectly thought that infowars was a private Roku channel, not a public one.
If the landline number is local (I can’t imagine it isn’t), then you should be able to swap it to any company. Call them up and say you want to port your number over to their service.
You can still have a “home” phone without it being a land line. When our kids were younger and everyone knew our land line number we moved to a flip phone (cellular) that sat on a charger in the same place and with the same number as our old land line. The kids could also take it if they needed a phone for some reason and we could confuse the heck out of my mom when we went on vacation and told her to just call the home number if she needed us . This was about 15 years ago so I’m pretty sure you could do the same. Plus it tied into our other cell plans and had unlimited talk and long distance so it cost maybe $10 extra per month over our cell plan way back then. $400 is about 4 times what it sounds like you should be spending.
To address the OP. A hint I stumbled upon is I got an Amazon Fire Replay (OTA DVR) and put it in a guest room on the second floor. I put the antenna in a window with a clear “line of sight” to the broadcast antennas. There isn’t even a TV in that room, but I can stream the OTA signal to all of my TV’s… even the ones in the basement that couldn’t get a good signal with an antenna down there.
We have a basement bar/game room with 2 Big TV’s (50" and 65") and we can watch pretty much what you would see in a sports bar using a combo of Sling TV and OTA (through the DVR).