There's a little question mark icon by it that explains why. They say they want to tailor your viewing, and age can play a part in that. Maybe there are real reasons. I normally put the right year but not the actual date for things like this.
Same here. I put in a date close but not actual and a year off.
Sheesh! The way this data is shared between business, government institutions and credit bureaus you are messed up for life. Did you ever see the episode of Grace and Frankie where Frankie had to deal with the consequences of having told some organization she was deceased?
+1I took the bait and put a note in my calendar to review in a year before the full price kicks in. I don’t think we’ll use it enough to pay the full price but we’ll try it!
To our surprise, we got upgraded to the Elite Package (reg $79.99/mo) 97 channels including HBO, ShowTime on Wed! First time we've seen an upgrade promo with PS Vue. It ends Sunday, but it's been fun to have a few channels we lost coming from Dish (at over twice the price)...we can't imagine ever going back to cable or satellite.
How did you learn about the upgrade? I haven't received anything from PSV yet and I am a Core plan customer. Thanks.
So thinking about it a bit more, now, in light of perhaps getting the deal...If you've got more than one credit card try a different one. Worked for me.
After signing up and browsing the movie selection, it's obvious where the "B" movies go to die. Don't think I'd pay more than 99 cents a month. But that's me, YMMV.Thanks for the tip. For .99 cents a month why not sign up.......
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Now, of course, that's us: With Netflix and Hulu, HBO and Showtime, we binge watch originals (only). As such, a full year of access is not worth any more than how many months it would take to binge watch a full year of their original programming. For Hulu, for us, that's still less than one month.
This $0.99 a month (probably no longer available?) is charged monthly and one can cancel at any time. So a small investment for Hulu newbies to see if they like it.
Offer valid through November 26, 2018 or while promotion last.
After signing up and browsing the movie selection, it's obvious where the "B" movies go to die. Don't think I'd pay more than 99 cents a month. But that's me, YMMV.
I don't find a ton of stuff on Netflix that interest me. There are a couple of series I like there and I binged watched those last month, but just dropped the service. So I will always be a short term subscriber on most of these. I will stay with Hula for the year promo as I'm sure I will find enough value in the deal. More than likely I will drop when it ends tho.
I can't imagine there would be one that would really work well, since not all antennas are equal. I've tried out a number different antennas in my house as I'm a long distance from the towers, with mountains to work around. I got very different results in the different antennas, influenced by exactly where I positioned it. I can't imagine a hand held device giving me a useful answer. I need to know how well a specific antenna works.I wonder: are there reliable hand-held devices that can check signal strength (without actually hooking up an antenna)? If so, any experience/recommendations?
I looked up a couple of antennas on Amazon and neither had any kind of information matching what antennaweb specified (CTA certification color) I'd need. They just give mileage range, which isn't very useful because I can pick up stations from 78 miles away better than I can ones 25 miles away.https://antennaweb.org/Address may give you enough info. It even shows you what type of antenna you'll need.
I can't imagine there would be one that would really work well, since not all antennas are equal.
Hulu has an arrangement with several networks (ABC, TNT) to air current series a few days after broadcast. If you like to stream and don't want to record, it's one way to get on demand without paying the cable company.Yeah, I hear ya on Netflix. I get it for free (Tmobile) and know I wouldn't pay for it. I guess I'm not in the demographics for Hulu, Netflix, et al.
Use TV Fool instead of AntennaWeb. TV Fool accounts for the terrain and the Earths curvature should that apply. IMO TV Fool will give you a much more accurate result of what you can receive OTA. I have played with TV signals for years, and this is from my experience.I can't imagine there would be one that would really work well, since not all antennas are equal. I've tried out a number different antennas in my house as I'm a long distance from the towers, with mountains to work around. I got very different results in the different antennas, influenced by exactly where I positioned it. I can't imagine a hand held device giving me a useful answer. I need to know how well a specific antenna works.
https://antennaweb.org/Address may give you enough info. It even shows you what type of antenna you'll need. I either missed it or it wasn't there when I last used it, and I just tried different ones and kept the best, but I think I do get all the stations they list, and it doesn't list other nearby stations that I haven't been able to pick up. I'm in a funny area that have 4 different areas that seem possible to receive from and the best is furthest away--probably a stronger signal, and it is in the largest city.
Use TV Fool instead of AntennaWeb. TV Fool accounts for the terrain and the Earths curvature should that apply. IMO TV Fool will give you a much more accurate result of what you can receive OTA. I have played with TV signals for years, and this is from my experience.
Well, sometimes AntennaWeb is accurate, as to your situation, but by and large, in the majority of cases, TV Fool does a better job IMO.
I They just give mileage range, which isn't very useful because I can pick up stations from 78 miles away better than I can ones 25 miles away.
Oddly, TV Fool shows more possibilities, but totally misses on 3 I get very well, out of the same town I get others. NBC, Fox, and UPN locals, and they don't seem to be known by another name. And it claims I can get one, might become a WB affiliate?, that I can't get.Use TV Fool instead of AntennaWeb. TV Fool accounts for the terrain and the Earths curvature should that apply. IMO TV Fool will give you a much more accurate result of what you can receive OTA. I have played with TV signals for years, and this is from my experience.
Well, sometimes AntennaWeb is accurate, as to your situation, but by and large, in the majority of cases, TV Fool does a better job IMO.
I find antennaweb too conservative. TV Fool is more technical.