Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
Since I have a rare day at my desk I am going to start new topics on SF!
Moving into an apartment has taught me something I did not know: I like a couple of TV shows enough that I want to watch them every week.
It taught me something else: I hate Comcast with the kind of driving, permanent fury I generally reserve for child molesters and christian evangelicals.
For google and posterity I'll note it only took two phone calls and about fifteen minute to go from utter neutrality - perhaps even a mildly favorable disposition on the subject of comcast - to seething rage and a desire to commit unspeakable, physical violence.
Outside of that digression: I like just a couple of things on TV enough to actually watch them. I have purchased special AV hardware, dedicated computers and massive storage space, all with the idea of watching TV on my own schedule and without commercial interruption.
The cheapest cable package I can get which includes HBO, which airs "Deadwood", "Six Feet Under", "Carnivale" and "The Sopranos", is $70 a month. $840 a year. All that for, at best 36 hours of HBO programming in a year, or $23 per episode of the shows I want to watch... and that assumes that each series has a season in a given year (The Sopranos seems to be on a new season per 18 months schedule).
OK, I do watch more than that: I watch "The Shield" on fx, a basic cable channel (basic cable in this case being $40 a month), and sometimes I flip the TV on while I'm cleaning or working on a PC.
I can wait for the DVDs, yes, but support for DVDs isn't going to assure that new episodes of the things I like are going to be produced. The DVDs are after the fact. There are only a couple of cases where the popularity of a DVD set has resulted in new production of a cancelled TV Show ("Family Guy" and the continuation of "Firefly" as the movie "Serenity"). Doesn't seem like a good bet.
Fast forward to about 20 minutes ago: All my AV gear is sitting in a big pile in the middle of my apartment, where there is also no cable, no satellite and no antenna. I want to watch "The Shield" this evening, and I missed it last night.
So I hit a torrent site, where I downloaded last night's episode (349MB of xvid sampled from an HD capture) in 8 minutes. No commercials and video quality that is actually FAR better than what I was getting from my satellite system.
The thing is... this is outrageous. Not that I can go and download whatever the hell I want. We've known about that for a long time. The outrageous thing is that I'm getting something that's better quality than the legitimate service I was paying $1500 a year for, for free, with nearly zero effort on my part, and at the speed of instant gratification. $1500 will buy a decent used car!
Given the possibilities suggested by this, what the hell are we paying all that money for? Comcast can't even give me the channels I want. $900 a year and I can't choose what channels I get? What is being delivered by the cable and satellite companies that's worth all that money?
Moving into an apartment has taught me something I did not know: I like a couple of TV shows enough that I want to watch them every week.
It taught me something else: I hate Comcast with the kind of driving, permanent fury I generally reserve for child molesters and christian evangelicals.
For google and posterity I'll note it only took two phone calls and about fifteen minute to go from utter neutrality - perhaps even a mildly favorable disposition on the subject of comcast - to seething rage and a desire to commit unspeakable, physical violence.
Outside of that digression: I like just a couple of things on TV enough to actually watch them. I have purchased special AV hardware, dedicated computers and massive storage space, all with the idea of watching TV on my own schedule and without commercial interruption.
The cheapest cable package I can get which includes HBO, which airs "Deadwood", "Six Feet Under", "Carnivale" and "The Sopranos", is $70 a month. $840 a year. All that for, at best 36 hours of HBO programming in a year, or $23 per episode of the shows I want to watch... and that assumes that each series has a season in a given year (The Sopranos seems to be on a new season per 18 months schedule).
OK, I do watch more than that: I watch "The Shield" on fx, a basic cable channel (basic cable in this case being $40 a month), and sometimes I flip the TV on while I'm cleaning or working on a PC.
I can wait for the DVDs, yes, but support for DVDs isn't going to assure that new episodes of the things I like are going to be produced. The DVDs are after the fact. There are only a couple of cases where the popularity of a DVD set has resulted in new production of a cancelled TV Show ("Family Guy" and the continuation of "Firefly" as the movie "Serenity"). Doesn't seem like a good bet.
Fast forward to about 20 minutes ago: All my AV gear is sitting in a big pile in the middle of my apartment, where there is also no cable, no satellite and no antenna. I want to watch "The Shield" this evening, and I missed it last night.
So I hit a torrent site, where I downloaded last night's episode (349MB of xvid sampled from an HD capture) in 8 minutes. No commercials and video quality that is actually FAR better than what I was getting from my satellite system.
The thing is... this is outrageous. Not that I can go and download whatever the hell I want. We've known about that for a long time. The outrageous thing is that I'm getting something that's better quality than the legitimate service I was paying $1500 a year for, for free, with nearly zero effort on my part, and at the speed of instant gratification. $1500 will buy a decent used car!
Given the possibilities suggested by this, what the hell are we paying all that money for? Comcast can't even give me the channels I want. $900 a year and I can't choose what channels I get? What is being delivered by the cable and satellite companies that's worth all that money?