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This week on TechHive: Why some cable companies are sacrificing their set-top boxes

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Cord-cutting has become so popular that some small cable companies are joining in, trading their own set-top boxes for streaming TV service.

This week, a video delivery company called MobiTV announced that it’s working with more than 50 small cable companies and telcos–covering one million U.S. subscribers–to offer streaming channel bundles in place traditional TV. The cable companies still offer the actual service, handle the billing, and put their names on the finished product, but MobiTV builds the underlying software and negotiates the requisite streaming rights with TV networks.

The result for consumers is lower costs even if they don’t fully cut the cord, at least for these small cable companies, and it’s a natural act of survival for them as more people take their TV business elsewhere. As for larger companies like Comcast and Spectrum, they’re still not quite ready to let go. Read the full column on TechHive.


Weekly rewind

DirecTV Now gets NFL Network (but not Redzone): Taking some of the sting out of last month’s price hikes, AT&T added the NFL Network to DirecTV Now’s $55 per month “Gotta Have It” package and higher. The bad news? NFL Redzone isn’t part of the deal..

The NFL Network itself isn’t as essential as it used to be. This season, only two Thursday Night Football games will be exclusive to the network, with the rest airing on Fox and streaming through Amazon’s Prime Video and Twitch services. Verizon will also stream all the games for free on mobile devices, regardless of whether you’re not a wireless subscriber. All the stranger, then, that DirecTV Now isn’t offering Redzone to go with it.

If you can’t live without Redzone’s whiparound coverage during football season, it’s available through PlayStation Vue ($50 per month, plus $10 per month for the “Sports Pack”), Sling TV ($25 per month, plus $10 per month for “Sports Extra”), and FuboTV ($45 per month, plus $9 per month for “Sports Plus”).

Hulu’s Showtime price hike: Hulu subscribers who pay $9 per month extra for Showtime will have to pay $2 per month more starting in November. The price hike will apply to existing subscribers on October 1.

The higher price is the same as what Showtime charges for its standalone streaming service. For now, you can still pay the lower rate by adding Showtime to an Amazon Prime subscription. You can also save the two bucks a month by combining Showtime with CBS All Access. It’s unclear whether those discounts will also go away come this fall.

CuriosityStream’s price drop: It’s not all bad news for streaming video prices these days. CuriosityStream–sort of an old-school Discovery Channel with on-demand science, nature, and space documentaries–is reducing its prices, from $6 per month to $3 per month for HD video, and from $12 per month to $10 per month for 4K. It’s also started streaming some free episodes with ads on its website.

The reason? People just aren’t willing to pay a lot for standalone streaming services that aren’t Netflix, Hulu, or Amazon Prime Video, and according to the Wall Street Journal, CuriosityStream was falling well short of its original subscriber projections. In a twisted way, that’s good for consumers, provided the service can pick up some traction and persevere.

More catch-up

  • CBS will add local news coverage to its free CBSN apps.
  • Tablo’s Apple TV app is much better now.
  • PlutoTV’s free streaming channels get their own input on Vizio TVs.

Save more money

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Until August 7 (or while supplies last), TiVo is letting people transfer their lifetime DVR service from an older device to a newer one for $99, plus the cost of newer hardware. If you have a TiVo Series 2, TiVo Series 3, TiVo HD, TiVo HDXL, or TiVo Premiere, you can upgrade to the Bolt Vox with 500 GB of storage for $298 total, or to the 3 TB model for $598.

While I’m not crazy about TiVo’s streaming video features, and adding whole-home DVR raises the cost considerably, its core recording features are still excellent. The newer Bolt Vox models support over-the-air antennas and come with a voice remote, so this is a good opportunity for existing TiVo users to drop cable and upgrade their hardware at the same time. Just make sure to follow the upgrade instructions on TiVo’s sale page to get the discount.


Thanks for reading!

It’s always nice to see more activity on the cord-cutting front after a couple of slow news weeks. If you have more cord-cutting questions–even ones you might think are too embarrassing to ask–please send them my way. You never know how many people are wondering the same things.

Until next week,
Jared

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