YouTube TV Opens To the Whole US (venturebeat.com) 57
Google is today expanding its premium YouTube TV streaming service to the majority of locations in the U.S., with the rest to follow shortly. From a report: At launch, YouTube TV was available through mobile apps in five markets. In the nearly two years since its introduction, it has arrived on the big screen via apps for Android TV and Xbox, as well as Apple TV and Roku, and expanded to 100 U.S. markets, covering 85 percent of households. Now it's landing in an additional 95 markets, which will extend this coverage to 98 percent of households. Other markets not yet covered will soon be added to the mix.
Get more channels from the cable company (Score:2)
Also, this still only works in Chrome.
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not being locked into a multi year contract is a huge improvement
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You know by paying more, you are economically saying "I am willing to pay more for video content, you should raise my rates." to your cable co.
Personally, I prefer to subscribe to HBO Now, Netflix, and other commercial free services. I hate commercials. If I want to watch something that isn't on those services, I use iTunes to rent or purchase it (if its something others will want to watch or something I prefer to have).
Everything is in relatively great quality, commercial free, and on demand. Oh, and on al
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I find that content pretty boring, a lot of it has been really lame for decades, poorly done repeats. The only way I can generally watch it, is while playing computer games or browsing the internet. That canned shite has simply become too boring, poorly written, poorly told stories. Finally watched that STD show on Netflix, sexually transmitted disease alright, so stupidly written, turning scifi into a gobfest, ohh the klingon orcs couldn't stand to hear them talk in slow motion with a mouth full of marbles
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Then go with Sling. Highest cost plan is 52 channels for $40 a month or two smaller tiers for only $25 (one of those with 49 channels the other with 32). It also works on way more devices.
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What decade do you live in? Most cable companies have tablet and phone apps for both on-demand and live TV watching for years now.
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Also supported on Roku devices (but not Amazon Fire devices).
It's missing a few key channels still (History, A&E). But has my major local channels.
CW annoyingly requires recorded shows to be replaced (I think after a day or so) with their on-demand feeds. That means you can't skip the commercials. (But not sure if other cloud TV providers have the same problem.)
Love the unlimited DVR feature -- that's the real reason I picked YouTubeTV.
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The crazy thing is those sports channels are probably responsible for at least 55% of the total monthly price due to the crazy agreements they require of anyone that wants to provide them to their customers.
When is reg. YT going to open the whole world? (Score:2)
Getting tired of bullshit "This content is not available in your region" when sending links to friends in Canada. Really, Canada??? WTF.
Hell, fix that stupid 400 error that breaks YouTube every other month because some javascript noob is storing too many gsScrollPos-# in Local Storage.
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It's the owner of the video putting those restrictions on, while YouTube only provides the tools. Quite often, the company/network posting the video only has distribution rights for a country or a few, and are not the ultimate owners. How else do you allow them to post at all without breaking their contacts?
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Content creator posts public video on a public website.
Artificially restricts who can view it.
*Facepalm*
Isn't the WHOLE point of putting it on YouTube in the first place is to get views???
Wait till they find out about free advertising! It will blow their mind!! /s
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Content creator posts public video on a public website.
Artificially restricts who can view it.
Yeah it's called geoblocking. Welcome to the way content licensing and distribution has worked for decades.
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Geoblocking is short-sighted.
If I'm on vacation on another country then I can't view content I've legally paid access to? This is bullshit. It isn't 1920 anymore. /sarcasm And then they wonder why people pirate.
Content Licensing needs to pull their head out of their asses and get with the 21st century.
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Let's use an extremely simple example. CBS wants to post a video of Big Bang Theory on YouTube to promote it. They are not the content creator - Warmer Brothers is. They also don't have worldwide distribution rights. Sure, they could ask Warner Bros to post it, but they'd really rather the video be on their own account and link people to other CBS shows.
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Content creator posts public video on a public website.
You're confused. YouTube is owned lock, stock and barrel by a corporation. The fact that they have a part of the website available for free access and upload of user content doesn't make the entire website "public."
Isn't the WHOLE point of putting it on YouTube in the first place is to get views???
No. The "whole point" of this specific part of YouTube is to act as a delivery medium for content you have to pay to get.
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Somewhere in every media company is a person updating a spreadsheet that maximizes revenue from pricing & licensing deals for every mode of distribution in every geography. Broadcast, OTT SVOD, OTT ad-supported VOD, TV Everywhere, MVPD, MVPD VOD, Blu-Ray, DVD, etc.
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It was just the White House, actually. And it didn't burn completely down - it was rebuilt and there is still some blackened arches and beams which remain as evidence of the torching.
And very few commercial projects have world wide distribution - it's often far more profitable to sell distribution rights on a piece by piece basis - you can make more money selling the US and Canadian distribution rights separately than you can selling the ri
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They didn't even invest in YouTube! Unless you mean Capitol.
Youtube (Score:1)
Today I learned ... (Score:2)
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Market (Score:2)
We live in states, countries or nation, not in markets, you insensitive clod.
Countries delegate "market" decision to licensees (Score:2)
Countries' radio regulators issue licenses to traditional terrestrial free-to-air broadcasters. These broadcasters' signal coverage determines what's a "viewing area" for the purpose of retransmission of NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox affiliates' programming on multichannel pay TV networks.
Will they rename the company? (Score:2)
Won't they have to rename YouTube after this? The point of YouTube is that it's "You" making videos. Now it's "Them". Welcome to ThemTube.
Same scam cable TV runs (Score:2)
60+ networks for $40/mo. I don't want 60+ networks. I only want the ones I watch. That was the whole reason I cut the cable, so they're not enticing me back by troweling out the same garbage channels at an inflated price.
Get rid of the sports channels (Score:2)
Offer real choice. Let people choose what they pay for instead of just repeating the same old cable TV package mistakes of the last 40yrs.
Sneakernet (Score:2)
If your friend ditches the local cable company and the local fiber company, he or she will lose high-speed Internet access and may have to fall back to sneakernet: trading copies of shows on hard drives. Sneakernet dissemination of creative works has been around for a while; an older example is "tape trees" organized by fans of the Grateful Dead [cmu.edu]. It could work for movies, scripted TV series, and in-depth news magazines. It's not ideal for reality, game shows, entertainment award shows, sports, daily politic
We use it, and like it quite a bit (Score:2)
We really like YouTube TV.
Benefits:
1. Unlimited cloud based DVR saving of shows (retained for 9 months)
2. Works on computer, Roku, tablets, phones (all able to stream live and saved shows, great when travelling)
3. Local channels available.
4. For many shows they have on demand, some offer 5+ seasons of backlog (they do have commercials you can't skip, for DVRed shows you can skip them).
5. I enjoy some sports, it has the national, regional, and some international (soccer) offerings
6. We went from over $1
No millennial is going to pay for this. (Score:1)
Sorry but the days of me paying $40, $30, or even $20 / month for you to stream ads in my face every 15 minutes, just so I can have "live" TV, are long, long gone. If you're going to show me ads, the service better be free. If I am paying, there better be no ads.
As an aside - my daughter is 4 years old now and except when we're outside the house, shes never seen a TV ad in her life. When she sees them interrupt her shows, they really throw her for a loop and she gets upset. As she should, really. This trend