I'm a long-time BIG CABLE COMPANY customer. Used to have to say the same about Ma Bell too, but dumped them for VOIP years ago and have never, EVER, been happier. Now, I'm seriously thinking about cutting THE cord. Except I'm addicted to sports. Sports are the saving grace of the cable industry and the day the cable companies' stock craters is the day an internet company wins over a major sports broadcast franchise.
BIG CABLE COMPANY has done everything to make me an ex-customer, including doubling my bill over a few months period. Somebody discovered my grandfathered account and 'upgraded' it out of existence so the company could report a fraction of a fraction of a percentage point of higher profit to it's share-holders. Loyalty to customers who've been paying bills regularly for decades? Pfui. I want to be done with them. Looking to make this move is as much about revenge as it is saving money.
I've looked at vMedia for TV and Internet and believe I can get my sports channels, plus the main Canadian and American networks, plus a specialty channel or three, plus the Internet for roughly 33 dollars less a month than BIG CABLE COMPANY is capriciously charging me now. Next month, who knows? The one time charges that I can see, a vBox at the minimum, a DOCsis modem and installation fees do tote up to roughly $220, meaning moving to vMedia would mean those costs would be earned back over slightly less than 8 months. But if more hardware needs purchasing, then the profit turnover point moves further into the future. And it might.
In other words, it might still be a good purchase decision, but if the startup cost return on switchover takes more than a year, doubts begin to be created. Honestly, as the pay back point moves futher into the future, the worry over stability versus self-satisfaction only increases. So, some due diligence is required:
Internet up time has to be stellar. The legendary five 9's of Bell fame is too much to ask for. But three nines, 99.9 percent, which allows for a total of about three-quarters of an hour of down-time per month? The reason I need the Internet up 24/7 is that I'm a semi-invalid with no cell phone. Simply put, I need VOIP to be functional. (At the urgings of others, I buy year-long cell-phone contracts every now and then, but at the end of the 12 months--really 360 days as I was reminded by the last set of thiefs I did business with--when I've used about ten percent of the pre-paid minutes and the company claws back the unused money, I furiously cancel the phone. They couldn't do that with gift cards or even gift certificates, but the telecom industry has NO problem stealing money from emergency phone owners who don't text and browse on little five inch screens).
I'm a sports junkie. The game(s) have to be dependably available. I can live without PVR cuz I like the immediacy of watching and NOT having a pause button to take a bathroom break. It means torturing myself at times, but what is sports fandom if not self-inflicted torture? Games are obviously mostly played in primetime and that's the bandwidth hog heaven for the cable industry. Or is it the hell? Whatever. I've been through periods where BIG CABLE COMPANY had ... issues ... with delivering picture and sound in good quality. Didn't show up as a discount on the next bill, yet another reason I am so disaffected with BIG CABLE COMPANY? However, this forum's boards have left me sanguine regarding vMedia's ability to deliver when I want it. Am I wrong?
Things I've got now and would prefer something equivalent or better to come out of the switch: I have a main TV in the living room and a man cave on a different floor (troglodytes might actually call it a bedroom [G]). In the cave, I have a quad TV setup that makes Sunday afternoon football a delight to watch. Three of the TVs are analog. Currently, I can watch all four (a strip of three DIFFERENT MAKES over the main one, from yet a fourth company) without doing a lot of channel hopping with my Logitech remote control. I DO see commercials, but not all that often, as I divert attention from one screen to the next as play stops. I wonder how vMedia would cover my multi-floor, multi-TV watching. As I understand it, the vBox WOULD handle three TVs. But in one confined space? (I'm already preparing myself for losing the extravagance of that fourth TV) And I WOULD need a second vBox downstairs. Am I right? And what if I gave up TWO of the cave TVs, would one vBox cover the remaining three over two floors? Could you explain the process for how the optimal solution would work? For whatever it's worth, I have two DIFFERENT cables from BIG CABLE COMPANY coming in, one for each floor.
Is there any late night support? Even by email? I'm more nocturnal than not and work to my own schedule. Which means MY problems are after normal work hours for vMedia.
There's talk in the FAQs of thumbdrives. Will the equipment handle external drives in the terabyte size, or thereabouts? Does the encryption of the data prevent the use of any unused portions of that external drive for other purposes? Would power be an issue since many external drives require power from the base device? I can accommodate either model, but it would be good not to get surprised. (And I AM right about the encryption since the external data is play only on the originating device, right?)
Having been a loud and frequent complainer with BIG CABLE COMPANY, JUST how much trouble will they cause me in my defection to vMedia? They can't play their missed appointment trick because I WILL be here when they are. But are there other things I should be wary of?
I want to switch to vMedia. It is as simple as that. A year from now, I want to be as happy that I defected from BIG CABLE COMPANY as I was to tell that Bell salesman who charged me for, get this, an early termination fee (after four decades) for my home phone, "Send me the bill and then lose my number. I guarantee I will be blocking everything from Bell you ever send me again!" One of the happiest days in my life.
And don't we all need more happiness in our lives? Looking forward to the same conversation with whoever at BIG CABLE COMPANY calls me when they finally figure out that I WILL be leaving and nothing, and I mean NOTHING, will keep me within their harm's way. I'm smiling now just thinking about that moment.
PLEASE make me a vMedia customer!!
IP
PS: Thanks for reading this far. You passed the first test [g]
BIG CABLE COMPANY has done everything to make me an ex-customer, including doubling my bill over a few months period. Somebody discovered my grandfathered account and 'upgraded' it out of existence so the company could report a fraction of a fraction of a percentage point of higher profit to it's share-holders. Loyalty to customers who've been paying bills regularly for decades? Pfui. I want to be done with them. Looking to make this move is as much about revenge as it is saving money.
I've looked at vMedia for TV and Internet and believe I can get my sports channels, plus the main Canadian and American networks, plus a specialty channel or three, plus the Internet for roughly 33 dollars less a month than BIG CABLE COMPANY is capriciously charging me now. Next month, who knows? The one time charges that I can see, a vBox at the minimum, a DOCsis modem and installation fees do tote up to roughly $220, meaning moving to vMedia would mean those costs would be earned back over slightly less than 8 months. But if more hardware needs purchasing, then the profit turnover point moves further into the future. And it might.
In other words, it might still be a good purchase decision, but if the startup cost return on switchover takes more than a year, doubts begin to be created. Honestly, as the pay back point moves futher into the future, the worry over stability versus self-satisfaction only increases. So, some due diligence is required:
Internet up time has to be stellar. The legendary five 9's of Bell fame is too much to ask for. But three nines, 99.9 percent, which allows for a total of about three-quarters of an hour of down-time per month? The reason I need the Internet up 24/7 is that I'm a semi-invalid with no cell phone. Simply put, I need VOIP to be functional. (At the urgings of others, I buy year-long cell-phone contracts every now and then, but at the end of the 12 months--really 360 days as I was reminded by the last set of thiefs I did business with--when I've used about ten percent of the pre-paid minutes and the company claws back the unused money, I furiously cancel the phone. They couldn't do that with gift cards or even gift certificates, but the telecom industry has NO problem stealing money from emergency phone owners who don't text and browse on little five inch screens).
I'm a sports junkie. The game(s) have to be dependably available. I can live without PVR cuz I like the immediacy of watching and NOT having a pause button to take a bathroom break. It means torturing myself at times, but what is sports fandom if not self-inflicted torture? Games are obviously mostly played in primetime and that's the bandwidth hog heaven for the cable industry. Or is it the hell? Whatever. I've been through periods where BIG CABLE COMPANY had ... issues ... with delivering picture and sound in good quality. Didn't show up as a discount on the next bill, yet another reason I am so disaffected with BIG CABLE COMPANY? However, this forum's boards have left me sanguine regarding vMedia's ability to deliver when I want it. Am I wrong?
Things I've got now and would prefer something equivalent or better to come out of the switch: I have a main TV in the living room and a man cave on a different floor (troglodytes might actually call it a bedroom [G]). In the cave, I have a quad TV setup that makes Sunday afternoon football a delight to watch. Three of the TVs are analog. Currently, I can watch all four (a strip of three DIFFERENT MAKES over the main one, from yet a fourth company) without doing a lot of channel hopping with my Logitech remote control. I DO see commercials, but not all that often, as I divert attention from one screen to the next as play stops. I wonder how vMedia would cover my multi-floor, multi-TV watching. As I understand it, the vBox WOULD handle three TVs. But in one confined space? (I'm already preparing myself for losing the extravagance of that fourth TV) And I WOULD need a second vBox downstairs. Am I right? And what if I gave up TWO of the cave TVs, would one vBox cover the remaining three over two floors? Could you explain the process for how the optimal solution would work? For whatever it's worth, I have two DIFFERENT cables from BIG CABLE COMPANY coming in, one for each floor.
Is there any late night support? Even by email? I'm more nocturnal than not and work to my own schedule. Which means MY problems are after normal work hours for vMedia.
There's talk in the FAQs of thumbdrives. Will the equipment handle external drives in the terabyte size, or thereabouts? Does the encryption of the data prevent the use of any unused portions of that external drive for other purposes? Would power be an issue since many external drives require power from the base device? I can accommodate either model, but it would be good not to get surprised. (And I AM right about the encryption since the external data is play only on the originating device, right?)
Having been a loud and frequent complainer with BIG CABLE COMPANY, JUST how much trouble will they cause me in my defection to vMedia? They can't play their missed appointment trick because I WILL be here when they are. But are there other things I should be wary of?
I want to switch to vMedia. It is as simple as that. A year from now, I want to be as happy that I defected from BIG CABLE COMPANY as I was to tell that Bell salesman who charged me for, get this, an early termination fee (after four decades) for my home phone, "Send me the bill and then lose my number. I guarantee I will be blocking everything from Bell you ever send me again!" One of the happiest days in my life.
And don't we all need more happiness in our lives? Looking forward to the same conversation with whoever at BIG CABLE COMPANY calls me when they finally figure out that I WILL be leaving and nothing, and I mean NOTHING, will keep me within their harm's way. I'm smiling now just thinking about that moment.
PLEASE make me a vMedia customer!!
IP
PS: Thanks for reading this far. You passed the first test [g]
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