I know that Charter should eventually be an improvement for the Ripley and Brownsville, TN areas that had TW.
Makes sense since Time Warner is a separate company. That was always confusing.
I haven't read the article yet but yesterday's Charlotte Observer had a front page headline asking what this means for Time Warner subscribers.
I did get some good news yesterday. To watch an episode of a Fox show I waited too long to see, I only had to verify that I was a customer of one of the listed companies. In the case of Fox, Time Warner was on the list.
Then I couldn't remember my name. Or my password. I have since reset my password, but trying too many times locked me out. Anyway, now there's no time limit for that episode.
And I'd probably know this except I haven't read that article yet.They haven't even started converting any of the clusters yet, and won't start doing that until this fall at the earliest. It will take years to convert everything over.
I only use Time-Warner Cable for internet. I sure hope Charter delivers faster speeds for standard internet and at a fair price per month.
I have been with Charter Cable for about 18 months now, and so far, no real problems. I made a move in this period, and they allowed a no-fee transfer from one address to another and the service was on-time and professionally done.
The negatives are the inane Charter commercials that proliferate through the cable system, but I don't know if that is anything different from other cable companies.
Their service is similar to Comcast, with good "On-Demand" services, and similar pricing for similar service. However, I am tiring of paying 160 a month for so many channels that I don't watch. But that is a "ME" problem. Their internet service is good and fast. I have no major complaints with Charter, but be aware that like many cable companies, they lure you in for a 1-year introductory plan, then it goes way up after that.
You should do what we did. Dump the cable TV and go with Netflix and/or Hulu. Yes, there is more available than any human being could ever watch but it's cheaper than cable.
But what if I like watching local news or my favorite MLB team? I doubt Netflix and/or Hulu can do anything for me there...Yeah, I know I can stream local news, but you still can't stream live major league sports unless you pay a fee. If I am missing something here let me know...
If you're close enough to the tower and aren't experiencing interference, does that make a difference? I get that it's harder, but it's not impossible, right?Many so-called "HD antennas" or "digital antennas" only receive UHF.
If you're close enough to the tower and aren't experiencing interference, does that make a difference? I get that it's harder, but it's not impossible, right?
If the Hornets are playing in Spectrum Arena, why did I get a bill from Time Warner?
Because it is going to take a long time to switch over every single market from Time Warner Cable to Spectrum.
Switching a few signs on an arena is comparatively a whole lot easier.