While I’ve certainly been skeptical of Apple’s TV hardware strategy, the product is nowhere close to being in jeopardy. If anything, Apple TV is more important than it’s ever been.
These days, we have plenty of options for viewing the NCAA Tournament. Still, you’ll need to choose wisely if you want to get a similar (or better) experience than what you had with cable.
Over the years of writing this newsletter and my weekly TechHive column, I often hear from folks who are getting priced out of cable, but just don’t know where to start with cutting the cord. This guide will help.
In 2019, when people have more streaming TV options than ever, and nearly all of those options let you terminate service online by clicking a few buttons, it’s preposterous that cable and satellite providers haven’t caught up.
I hate to bear bad news, but using your phone as a hotspot remains impractical if you plan to watch any significant amount of video on your laptop, tablet, or television.
Why isn’t PBS available in live TV streaming services such as Sling TV, YouTube TV, DirecTV Now, and PlayStation Vue? It turns out bringing live PBS stations online involves a lot of challenges.
I’ve reviewed a lot of over-the-air DVR options over the past few years: from TiVo and Tablo to HDHomeRun and Fire TV Recast. But I personally have never relied on a single solution.
A funny thing’s happened in recent years: Smart TV software from LG and Samsung has actually gotten pretty good. Now, I’m wondering why those companies don’t take a page from Roku and Amazon, and put their software on external streaming players.