Comments on: Verizon's TV dreams
Company launches its TV service to better compete with cable operators--what else is up its sleeve?
Company launches its TV service to better compete with cable operators--what else is up its sleeve?
January 3, 2010 4:40 PM PST
January 3, 2010 3:10 PM PST
January 3, 2010 12:20 PM PST
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If they provide more features at a competitive cost and the installs get good work of mouth then they will have success.
They responded to the site in less than an hour to ascertain the damage and a repair crew was on site in less than two hours. They continued the repair during inclement weather into the evening to restore my service.
Every step of the service restoration was very professionally handled.
(FIOS-Ready)...
things are AWESOME. I switched from DirecTV to FiOS because I
wanted more HD channels and better PQ, and that's what I got.
The SD channels are so-so, but the HD channels are clearly
better than DBS (their 1080i is only 1280x1080 scaled to 1920,
anyway). In fast action sequences there's still pixelation, but it's
better. Plus, because it's IP-based, it has fewer image dropouts
due to bad packets being able to be resent rather than lost. I
haven't seen any serious voids in the images since I've had FiOS
TV (only 1 1/2 weeks).
David
- Upgrade over Comcast
- by blauschwein October 9, 2007 6:28 AM PDT
- With the Fios 'triple play' (fiber line phone, internet, tv)for $99, I decided to ditch Comcast because of my dissatisfaction with their customer 'service.' In one swell foop, I cut my tv bill to $0 for the next two years, and got a serious upgrade over Comcast in terms of both image quality and UI.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(21 Comments)Though I don't own a digital TV, I have one of those 5-year-old Panasonic Tau TVs that can detect an HD signal and render a clearer picture. And the FiOS image I'm getting is significantly sharper and clearer than my Comcast image.
But I think a bigger improvement is in the UI, which is intuitive, flexible, full-featured, and delightfully graphic. I got it with the DVR box, and everything you expect is there: programmable favorites, record-to-DVR from the guide, live TV pause, and yes, the guide has page up-page-down functionality (it's the channel up/down button).
The remote, despite the usual surfeit of buttons, arrows and keys, is actually well designed and intuitive to use. It knows when you depress a button whether to send the signal to the box or the TV. No toggling as with my infuriating Comcast remote.
The only fly in the oatmeal was the cooling fan on the high def Motoroloa DCT6412 DVR set top box. But I fixed that with a $20 off-the-shelf laptop cooling pad (radio shack, circuit city, etc), which I placed 1" below the unit. Those silent 1500 rpm fans shut off the Moto fan within 15 seconds. It runs off one of the Moto's USB ports.
Our second TV is using a standard def set top box. But it can still record and playback via the main DVR set top. The in home FiOS local network is managed by a wireless router, which can also service any wireless macs or pcs you may have. It's a secure unit with it's own wep key, so your neighbors won't get free broadband at your expense.
Bottom line: FiOS, for me, was a major upgrade.