Life without cable TV -part one

Posted on Tuesday, November 21, 2006 7:46 PM
Starting today, I'm living a life without cable television; the only thing I'm going to switch on my TV for from now on, is a DVD or Laserdisc. I'll explain.

When I moved from my crampt room to a full-blown house, I already decided I didn't want to have anything to do with Essent and @Home if I could help it. I get my electricity and natural gas from GreenChoice (through Essent-cabling and pipes, unfortunately, but I can't help that), the plumbing and tap water comes from Vitens and I hooked up to the cable-TV connection while it was available. I don't watch as much TV as I did seven years ago, and figured I wouldn't miss it if I were to be cut off.

Eight months went past; I enjoyed an episode of ER and Top Gear now and then and that was it. The number of hours I actually spent in a week watching TV programmes was something like 8 hours or so. Then came the letter.

"Dear inhabitants of this house,

We at @Home, have no record of a subscription of you to our services, but your house is still connected to our network.
Because of this, we have to cut you off, but we're sure you wouldn't want that. Therefore we advise you to contact us and take a subscription with us. The previous months are obviously for free. (author's note; obviously; I didn't ask nor sign up for your services in the first place, so you have no claim whatsoever)

Sincerely, the @Home team."

Well, in most households, such a letter would cause quite a stir. Oh noes! Our cable connection will be cut and we'll miss out on quality shows, like Everybody Loves Raymond, The Cosby Show reruns, Fear Factor season 27, Suddenly Susan, and a guy who's hardly as funny as he likes to think: Robert Jensen.
Weeeelll, not in this household.

I decided I didn't want to pay over €15 a month, just to see ER and the occasional movie, so I threw the letter away, and went on with my life. I decided then and there that I would see how I went without cable, and if I ever felt the need for broadcast television again, I would fork out a couple of hundred for a satellite dish. After all; a dish and a decent tuner/decoder will set me back about €200, and about €40 a year for a subscription on some extra Dutch channels. Compared to the €180 a year @Home would charge me, that's a bargain.

It took them two months, but when I got home today, I found a card in my mailbox, stating that they had disconnected me from their network, meaning I could no longer watch TV, listen to cable radio or using the internet through cable, in case I had that.
But I don't, so I won't miss it. :)

So here I go, working on my backlog of DVD's I still have to watch and cruising the internet through my DSL-connection.
As for ER; DVD-boxes can be quite cheap if you know where to look...

Cheers, K.

Feedback

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/22/2006 9:41 AM by Cailin Coilleach
Why you don't want @Home I can understand, but what's wrong with Essent?

Also: AFAIK a satelite subscription costs considerably more than fourty bucks a year. Oh well.

Me, I couldn't be happier with Casema who do everything for us: Internet, phone and (D)TV. We pay them around forty-five euros per month for these three services, which IMHO isn't a bad deal. And I just _love_ having five BBC channels! Their stuff is so amazing.

Anywho: an admirable step you've made. Living without TV should free up loads of spare time to do other stuff :)

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/22/2006 4:21 PM by Kaijuu
Essent is also known for screwing things up in their administration, so I'd like to not doing business with them. ;)

You can make a satellite subscription as cheap or expensive as you want; if you're only interested in FTA-stuff, you fork out some dosh for the kit itself and you're done. If you want the basic Dutch channels, you're set for around €3,30 a month.
I'm not a TV-person (allthough I'd love to get a chance to be on Japanese TV just for once), so what I'm winning are 8 hours of free time I would normally spend watching ER and Top Gear.

I will go into Triple Play another time. ;)

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/22/2006 9:47 PM by Atomsk
There's also a thirth option: KPN TV/digitenne. Works for me, although I don't recommend the standard Samsung DVB-T decoder. It's just too susceptible to interference.

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/22/2006 10:15 PM by Cailin Coilleach
Me? I wouldn't trust KPN for the world... *shudder*

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/23/2006 12:35 AM by Kaijuu
DigiTenne is something we don't have around here; Q2, 2007 according to KPN.

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/23/2006 10:53 AM by Atomsk
@Cailin: I don't see why not. They're quite reliable when it comes to telephony, gsm, etc. Some new technologies like VOIP are the exception though. DVB-T works, DVB-S reception might not always be good under bad weather conditions (heavy rainfall).

@Kaj: yeah, forgot about that. You'd only have the FTA channels in december.

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/23/2006 8:59 PM by Cailin Coilleach
> @Cailin: I don't see why not.
Because I've worked for them over the past thirteen months. Really, it's a mess ;_;

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

11/29/2006 1:43 AM by Suus
Ah, just wait for fiber to the home in next couple of years :D In Amsterdam they're starting with this at the end of this year.

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

12/2/2006 10:57 AM by Kaijuu
In Amsterdam, yes... Which probably means that FttH will be available over here around 2015 or something.

I remember a company called BredBand, which wanted to provide the very same thing; 10Mbit at every home, starting with a new housing project in Almere in 2001. They went broke, the company that was to supply the electronics needed, nearly went under as well and nobody even mentioned the term for years.

# Life without cable TV -part two

12/2/2006 11:27 AM by Kaijuu's Blog

# Life without cable TV -part two

12/2/2006 11:28 AM by Kaijuu's Blog

# re: Life without cable TV -part one

3/6/2007 11:24 AM by Bokkie
woot ^^

well i still have KPN digital, god knows why :P

but the wife sometimes watches the news and spoorloos
despite that i hardly ever watch tv

good choice, still though satalite is a bargain yes, but hey 200 plus 40 a year for 300+ channels of crap or 130 a year for 22 channels of crap

well you get the idea ^^

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