Cable companies will become (if they haven't already) ISPs with streaming services. End users will barely notice the difference.
In most places, their customers would have no recourse. My dad's cable company dropped the cable service earlier this year. They recommended DirecTV or YouTube TV as replacements. My dad simply decided to do without, and rely on fringe OTA reception.I don't think cable companies can just drop their cable service, or their customers would get very angry.
I don't think cable companies can just drop their cable service, or their customers would get very angry.
Another thing I wonder about is people replacing cable with an antenna. Because in a way, that makes no sense. Sure, you can get the locals (in a lot of areas, but not all), but no cable networks. Besides, in a lot of areas an antenna does not produce a very good picture, because of reception. There are still a lot of people living in areas where there is no OTA reception, such as Cape Cod. What do those people do when they cut the cord?
40 isn’t elderly. I’m also 40 and haven’t had cable since I was at college and it was the college’s cable system. I don’t know anyone else my age or older around here that has cable.I know there's a heavy focus on younger people, but you have to think about elders as well. I am 40 years old, and I know quite a few people my age who still have cable. As someone said, I think it's mostly for sports. But also, it's what we're used to. And there's still several people older than me who still have cable. What are they gonna do?
40 isn’t elderly. I’m also 40 and haven’t had cable since I was at college and it was the college’s cable system. I don’t know anyone else my age or older around here that has cable.
I did that in 2010, when I moved to an apartment complex who's owners refused to allow Cox Cable in (the provider had Dish Network, which I don't like either, but their ISP was decent). I used an antenna and whatever streaming services Roku had. Fortunately, one of those was MLB.TV.I'm 71 and replaced cable with an indoor antenna for OTA locals and Roku for streaming in 2018 when Spectrum's triple play package hit $180 without a single premium channel.
Cable and satellite services are rapidly becoming obsolete. They had a good run. DirecTV made it clear years ago that their satellites would eventually die, and they would not be maintained in the long haul. They haven't died yet, but they will. Most cable providers will become strictly ISPs with TV via streaming before this decade is out.Cable used to have quality channels at a reasonable cost a generation ago, now it has neither
I think we will have to look for places where Cable TV is really important while the rest of the country switch to streaming TV apps in my case. I can see urban/suburban areas leaving Cable TV first for Streaming.
All these channels and I maybe watch 10. Most of them sports.