Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Media

Comcast Unveils $5-a-Month Streaming Service Xfinity Flex (cnet.com) 59

Comcast announced a $5-a-month streaming video service Thursday called Xfinity Flex, an offering that aggregates on-demand video from your subscriptions like Netflix Amazon Prime Video and HBO, as well as offering free ad-supported shows to watch and options to rent and buy programming. From a report: It essentially replicates some of the features of a cable service but delivers over the internet rather than... well, cable. But it won't have live channels or DVR, and it won't let you watch a live-TV streaming service like YouTube TV or Sling TV, keeping Flex squarely in the realm of on-demand viewing that's less threatening to Comcast's traditional -- and lucrative -- cable TV packages. Instead, Flex will have built-in ways to upgrade to live TV from Comcast. Xfinity Flex comes with a 4K and HDR-ready wireless set-top box with an X1 voice remote, Engadget adds. It's scheduled to launch March 26th, and will be available to customers who have Comcast internet.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Comcast Unveils $5-a-Month Streaming Service Xfinity Flex

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 21, 2019 @02:37PM (#58311700)
    Quoting from the story: "Xfinity Flex will run $5 a month on top of a Comcast customer's cost for internet service."
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Hahaha Uhm no. $5 to "aggregate" my streaming services? LOL. I "aggregated" them by putting all those apps into the same folder on my iPad. There, saved $5/mo. Wow, Idiots.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Fuck Comcast.

  • by mattb47 ( 85083 ) on Thursday March 21, 2019 @02:46PM (#58311758)

    I'd bet they charge $8/month for that streaming box, and that you can only rent it, not buy it.

    Still -- maybe? I have Comcast for internet only. It might work for me.

    • I have Comcast for internet only. It might work for me.

      The idea of a streaming service aggregator is a little mystifying to me, since I just run separate streaming apps and that works really well.

      Maybe if the aggregator UI was better than the stream apps UI? I can't see that being true for Netflix though (maybe for Prime which has a terrible UI).

      For searching, I can already search for content across multiple streaming apps on an AppleTV so it doesn't help any there...

      Maybe the Comcast specific aggregator w

    • My hope is they touch off a price war among the streaming services. There are way too many already, and it seems a new one every week.*

      *Likely an exaggeration, but the field needs to be culled a bit, and their content redistributed to the survivors. Although, unfortunately the sole survivor is likely to be Disney.
  • I wonder how they convince Amazon, Netflix, and HBO to allow them to stream their content rather than having customers go to their individual apps/sites/boxes/whatever.

    Still, I could see services like this having a place. One of the things that can be frustrating and limiting about these various streaming services is the content customers want is often spread out among multiple services and we have really gotten used to the idea of going to one source for each type of product.
    • I wonder how they convince Amazon, Netflix, and HBO to allow them to stream their content rather than having customers go to their individual apps/sites/boxes/whatever.

      This part isn't new. They already have most of the various streaming apps available under the "apps" menu on the xfinity cable tv box. They also integrate most subscribed services (Amazon, Netflix, HBO, Showtime, etc) into the "on demand" (filter : "Free to Me") heading as a single alphabetical listing of shows/movies to watch. If the movie is available from more than one source, it will give you the choice of which source you want to watch from.

      It works surprisingly well as an integrated source.

      In my ar

  • by sunking2 ( 521698 ) on Thursday March 21, 2019 @02:59PM (#58311848)

    I wouldn't pay an extra $5 for it though. I thought this was initially what the xbox one guide was supposed to be but it never seemed to happen. Would love it if this was enough to push them to finally implement it.

  • Basically, Comcast will rent you a Roku box? Brilliant...

    • Basically, Comcast will rent you a Roku box? Brilliant...

      It *is* brilliant. Because some people *will* fall for it.

  • by IWantMoreSpamPlease ( 571972 ) on Thursday March 21, 2019 @03:12PM (#58311938) Homepage Journal

    'torrenting...still free

    (/h or /s, you decide)

  • They recently jumped up my internet connection costs %5 without telling me anything,,, but no set-top box.

  • That sounds like an anti-trust lawsuit waiting to happen because I see them crippling access to say Netflix unless you pay the $5 to them.
    Anti-net neutrality laws opened the door for that sort of abuse so it might not even be anti-trust.
  • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Thursday March 21, 2019 @03:50PM (#58312226)

    Back when I had service from Comcast (before switching to AT&T Fiber and DirecTV Now), customers were allowed to stream channels to a mobile device within your home network, but not outside of it.

    I quickly solved that problem by installing a VPN server on my home network and using that to watch TV while on the road. No doubt many others did the same. This $5 / month fee is effectively a surcharge by Comcast for the computer illiterate.

  • So they have included "free ad-supported shows" for $5/month? Hmmmm.....

  • A never ending $5 a month for the privilege of leasing the equivalent of a Roku or Apple TV. This, when Rokus are $30-$40 to own. LOL, nope.

  • As usual, Comcast wants you to rent something you could buy cheap. For a low, low introductory price which will inevitably increase as time goes on. In a year you will have spent enough to buy the hardware at least twice.

    The hardware is intentionally feature-limited to avoid competing with Comcast legacy services.

    As a bonus, you get to call Comcast technical support if there's a problem.

    And, if at some later time you come to your senses, you'll discover just how difficult it is to return the hardware and

  • I wouldn't need their set-top box, just publish the APIs and developers can all work it into their media players. If it requires their box, then it's still "just cable."

In 1914, the first crossword puzzle was printed in a newspaper. The creator received $4000 down ... and $3000 across.

Working...