I expected more people to react to this. I know several here have been waiting.HBO Max is coming to Roku tomorrow
https://www.nj.com/entertainment/2020/1 ... users.html
I expected more people to react to this. I know several here have been waiting.HBO Max is coming to Roku tomorrow
That's why they did this new promo. To throw a bone to longtime subscribers as well. I just didn't know you had to be with them since June 2018. BummerFrom what I've read, the YTTV/Chromecast thing is available to new subscribers as well.
I wasn't paying attention and saw it this morning. I'm pumped.I expected more people to react to this. I know several here have been waiting.HBO Max is coming to Roku tomorrow
https://www.nj.com/entertainment/2020/1 ... users.html
That's insane. Having 100/10 is insane to begin with and then paying that much for that slow internet....yeesh.Spectrum just raised my bill for 100/10 mbps internet to $75 a month.
A buddy of mine has it rough. Verizon ran fiber to the end of his street, but has not run it down his actual street. That was 8 years ago, and nothing has changed, so he’s stuck with Comcast.Yeah I'm very thankful we have Fios here.
Broadband and TV providers will finally be required to stop charging "rental" fees for equipment that customers own themselves, thanks to a new US law that takes effect on Sunday.
The bogus fees were outlawed by the Television Viewer Protection Act (TVPA), which was approved by Congress and signed by President Trump in December 2019. The law was originally scheduled to take effect on June 20, but Congress gave the Federal Communications Commission leeway to delay enforcement by six months if the FCC "finds that good cause exists for such an additional extension."
The FCC in April granted the six-month delay to ISPs, claiming that providers needed more time to comply because of the coronavirus pandemic. That decision delayed implementation of the new requirements until December 20, 2020.
That's doubtful. Not enough population density to warrant competition or to push Spectrum to increase speeds at our tier.Maybe in 20 years you’ll catch up to the rest of civilization.
You probably have nothing to worry about: The "Protecting Lawful Streaming Act," which was introduced earlier this month by Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican from North Carolina, doesn't target casual internet users. The law specifies that it doesn't apply to people who use illegal streaming services or "individuals who access pirated streams or unwittingly stream unauthorized copies of copyrighted works."
Rather, it's focused on "commercial, for-profit streaming piracy services" that make money from illegally streaming copyrighted material.
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