Howardh
Established Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2011
- Messages
- 9,202
If it's not on its way out already?
Thinking with most (sadly not all) of the population having access to fast broadband, and getting used to using apps such as Netflix, Youtube, Amazon TV and such, why would they continue with Sky satellite when it's "sister" NowTV has upped it's game? Example, NowTV is available in 1080p, 4k is on the way I'm led to believe, you can now access BT sports via a Now stick/box, and also access Sky Sport's red button channels on certain devices - previously impossible. Of course one major advantage is you can subscribe without contract, so finish when your month's up.
If Now was supposed to be the deliberately cheapskate version of Sky, for those who simply don't want a dish, with 720p picture, continuous buffering and dropping out/reloading, and limited channels; has that now all changed - maybe Sky are following public demand and moving towards streaming?
Of course satellite TV is a must for those in areas of poor reception and very slow broadband so must stay for many years yet, but as digital TV replaced analogue, will on-line replace satellite, and how soon?
Thinking with most (sadly not all) of the population having access to fast broadband, and getting used to using apps such as Netflix, Youtube, Amazon TV and such, why would they continue with Sky satellite when it's "sister" NowTV has upped it's game? Example, NowTV is available in 1080p, 4k is on the way I'm led to believe, you can now access BT sports via a Now stick/box, and also access Sky Sport's red button channels on certain devices - previously impossible. Of course one major advantage is you can subscribe without contract, so finish when your month's up.
If Now was supposed to be the deliberately cheapskate version of Sky, for those who simply don't want a dish, with 720p picture, continuous buffering and dropping out/reloading, and limited channels; has that now all changed - maybe Sky are following public demand and moving towards streaming?
Of course satellite TV is a must for those in areas of poor reception and very slow broadband so must stay for many years yet, but as digital TV replaced analogue, will on-line replace satellite, and how soon?