Watching TV on the laptop--and on the cheap

Watching TV on the laptop--and on the cheap
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reporter's notebook I know this may sound crazy, but I don't have a television.

This isn't a problem, except when I get glimpses of what I might be missing, like when the New York Mets choked and it was all anybody could talk about in the office that day.

I also happened to catch some episodes of Animal Planet's Meerkat Manor on a public hospital TV recently. I was captivated by the story of matriarch meerkat "Flower" and her tragic death from a cobra bite while saving her pups in the Kalahari desert. I just had to watch the next episode to see which of her daughters would win the power struggle to succeed her. But how could I do that without cable or even a TV?

I went on a search for some of my old--and new--favorite TV shows on the Internet. The one caveat: it had to be free, because this TV dilettante wasn't paying for anything other than my phone and DSL broadband service.

While I pay about $30 a month for phone and DSL, my neighbors spend anywhere from $70 to $140 for cable and Internet access, depending on the number of channels and level of service. That cost difference, plus the desire to avoid having a boob tube around, means the laptop is the only screen in my home.

I may be odd, but I'm not alone. A whole 2 percent of U.S. households are TV-less, according to Nielsen. (OK, so I'm almost alone). And nearly 16 percent of American households with Internet access watch television broadcasts online, a report released this week by The Conference Board and TNS Media Intelligence found.

Networks and studios are recognizing this trend. While paid downloads make more money for content producers, ad-supported video streaming is growing--it's expected to bring in $117 million in revenues this year for producers of prime time and daytime TV programming alone, up from $43 million last year, according to Adams Media Research.

My first step to becoming an Internet couch potato was to search for Meerkat Manor online. I found a link at the top of the search engine's sponsored results section that led to the Discovery Channel site, where I could watch the last four episodes after installing a video player.

The video quality was poor and the transmission was glitchy. It really ruins the timing of jokes when (Jon) Stewart's mouth is saying one thing and you are hearing something else.

There was a 10-second ad for Oust air freshener that ran before the show started, and then the Meerkats were on, in all their anthropomorphic glory. I could watch them for hours, but unfortunately, a commercial break came. I was subjected to a 30-second ad this time, from the same air freshener company. Time to check e-mail.

As soon as I heard the commercial end I was back to the screen for more Meerkat adventures. The video quality, while it didn't seem quite as clear as on a TV, was beautiful. And then, before you knew it, the exact same commercial as before came up. This same ad was shown three times during the show. I somehow thought I would be spared the commercials by watching TV on the Internet. I was wrong.

One of the great laments I've had about not having a TV the past few years is that I miss my daily dose of humor--The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. So, I quickly found myself on the Comedy Central site, where Stewart's monologue from the day before started right up in a very small window. There are also sections called "Most Recent Videos" and "Last Week's Highlights." I watched Stewart poking fun at the Republican presidential debate and then conducting an awkward interview with Vice President Cheney's wife, Lynne.

But what if I don't just want highlights? What if I want to watch the entire show? While watching a show in segments like this might make for more efficient TV viewing, I missed watching the flow of an entire show, where Stewart and his cohorts often make references to things that happened before the commercial break.

In addition to the fact that the site seemed to be showing the same ad for each of the highlights I viewed, I was squinting to see the screen because the video window was so small. The video quality was poor and the transmission was glitchy. It really ruins the timing of jokes when Stewart's mouth is saying one thing and you're hearing something else.

Next, I went straight to TV network Web sites. On ABC, I launched the full episode player, which offered a full screen and mini mode. I had heard that tech entrepreneur and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban was on Dancing with the Stars, so I thought I'd check that show out.

I was very pleased to see that I could click a button to skip the ad that kept repeating (in this case for Garnier Nutritioniste) shortly after it began. I was disappointed when I thought I could only watch a condensed version of the program for the Web audience, but later learned that you can get to full episodes via a button on the home page of ABC.

CONTINUED: Where's the continuity?...
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39 comments (Page 1 of 3)
Get a Slingbox
by arobb24143 October 17, 2007 5:06 AM PDT
Get a Slingbox and a friend willing to let you park it on top of their cable box and you've got TV anywhere on the planet with an internet connection. regards, allan
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TV Online
by Alessandra713 October 17, 2007 5:08 AM PDT
I am a TV Producer and out of frugality or inability to live by the Cableman's repair schedule have also lived tv free for long stretches And now I live cable free in Italy, where most of the sites you mentioned are blocked. Apparently a "Medium" episode viewed in the EU would disrupt the time/space continuum of revenue. However, FRONTLINE has no such boundary. You should by all means go to http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/view/ and find a treasure trove of programming. I could go on about how commercials actually serve a purpose you can only appreciate when they disappear (and I don't mean funding) but the Simpsons are on (in Italian) and I gotta go. Alessandra
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BBC World is online...
by rafe01 October 17, 2007 5:57 AM PDT
...at least in Europe as a REAL (yuk) stream http://www.bbcworld.com/Pages/default.aspx The BBC like many other broadcasters has restrictions due to existing contracts for its own content and bought-in content from external suppliers as to what it can stream. Perhaps the deal with the cable/sat companies in US means they don't offer a free web stream. Within the UK where the BBC comes from :-) & I mostly reside the 4 "networks" (ie BBC, ITV, CH4, five) do provide some kind of online service. The ITV channels (four of them) are all available as live streaming feeds (from www.itv.com). Both the BBC and CH4 also offer free (with time-limited DRM) P2P catch-up applications for most of their shows. Subscribers to the main Satellite provider also have access to similarly time-limted DRMed shows and movies from the past few weeks from channels they have subscriptions for including I guess the above networks (but as I have their PVR I can set the set-top box to record shows I want from the EPG on the web or on my cell which works better for me :-)
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Paradigm shift
by ajwatt12 October 17, 2007 7:03 AM PDT
I dropped my dish subscription a year ago and bought a 22" widescreen monitor, with the goal of replacing all of my TV viewing with online viewing and lowering the total bill. The difference between cable and satellite subscrptions and watching over the internet is that with the internet you have more a la carte options. I subscribe to two soccer packages online for about $100 per year total, and I get to see all the same matches I could with a $70/month Dish subscription. Add Amazon Unbox or Netflix and you can watch movies too. The quality is not as good as TV yet, but it will get better. And I spend less on TV now. For those sporting events you can't find online, my solution is to head over to the pub and have a beer and watch on their big screen. There are free services such as Miro (http://www.getmiro.com/) that show things like Onion TV. The offerings there should increase over time.
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Here's how you watch cable for free or half price
by bobby_brady October 17, 2007 8:27 AM PDT
Most likely you have friends with cable. Most likely they have a computer. If they have Vista, they already have Media Center, if they have XP, hopefully they have the MC version. What I do for my friends is record shows that they want to watch. They can choose what to record on MSN and MC will record it. Have MC record it on a external hard drive. When you go over there, you simply copy the shows onto their computer. If they have Xbox, you don't have to watch it on the computer. You can watch it in your living room. Better then Tivo, you have 30 second skip, not just FF for ads. You have them pay you for a percentage of the cable bills to. Get enough friends and you can make money, eh? Works like a charm and it's one way to stick it to the man.
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I agree
by rdupuy11 October 17, 2007 8:51 AM PDT
I agree, Jayne Seymour really does dance well for a dead mother dancer. What the&#&??? Anyway... this story was more about your tastes, and they seemed a bit oddball, but then again, you didn't dive into the world of porn, so for that we are grateful. The best the internet has to offer, though, for us 98% who still have TV's...is what is not shown on TV. For some, that is porn...but for me its foreign language programming...it really allows for access to things that were once too distant to get at.
Reply to this comment
Watching shows
by Mike_in_Florida October 17, 2007 8:55 AM PDT
I found a website that collects links for Christmas-related shows. At least these are free to watch http://XmasDVD.com
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The Problem
by 247mark October 17, 2007 9:01 AM PDT
Problem with this method is that your laptop soon has a proprietary video player from every "TV station" you want to watch. Try watching NBC content on an ABC-downloaded player. Yeah, right. With 100+ channels now, your laptop could become a de facto tv; instead of changing channels, you change media players. I've been to law school - I understand the contractual obligations to protect the content and the advertisers but wake up to the reality - it's all out there on torrents anyway. Stopping the torrents is rather like plugging a fire hydrant with your finger - won't happen. RIAA is still trying to figure this out, but that's another story. The only one who really can't see tv programs online is people like me who don't use torrents and who refuse to have a half dozen different media players filling up their hard drive. Just like DRM with the music, the legit user gets hosed every time. I'm not advocating stopping torrents but let's make it easier for the rest of us.
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Finally, sort of TV on the net
by keystonepa October 17, 2007 9:07 AM PDT
I remember reading on Cnet or perhaps ZDnet in the late nineties how TV was coming to the web and we could all watch it for free. As a person who has not owned a TV in years I was less than excited. I have used Movie link, Cinema Now, Vongo, Itunes , Unbox, Netflicks to rent content. I have used Joost, and other free online content providers as well. Since the current fall season has started I have cut my online rentals way-way down as I now watch one or two shows from each network-CBS, ABC, Fox, CW, PBS. In fact, as a grad? student with limited resources I am canceling my Net Flicks account as I can spend my limited down time watching for free. Of course, there is no comparison between a good ?art house flick? and Tv. Who knows, in 3 months I maybe so bored with the TV content that I go back to renting content online.
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bittorrent has it all!
by smokeonit October 17, 2007 9:07 AM PDT
via bittorrent trackers like eztvefnet.org you get all the US/UK TV shows there are! in SDTV or HDTV quality!!! and it's free, you have them on your harddrive and can burn them to DVD or whatever format you need them, iphone or ipod for example with software that is readily available....
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