Print Email RSS RSS  Share del.icio.us Facebook Twitter
Cable vs. Satellite vs. FiOS
Choosing the right television service can be daunting. From picture quality to price, content to connectivity, we line 'em up and give you pros and cons to each.
Cable vs. Satellite vs. FiOS
Slideshow
image
View Slideshow

December 19, 2007 | by Ben Hardy

Choosing a home’s television service provider gets a little more difficult each year. Emerging technologies, changing rates and packages, and access limitations all factor into this battle royal between old – and new - enemies. There are some basics you can expect from everyone, like DVRs, HD channels, and bundled internet service. But take a closer look and you’ll see some differences that may push one of them over the top and into your home.

Cable
That the word “cable” is often used to refer to any television service – digital, analog, HD, you name it – is suggestive of the dominance over the television industry of those companies providing service over coaxial lines. What we can now call “traditional cable” service is associated with heavy-hitters like Time Warner Cable, Comcast, and the like. These companies provide digital cable content, including HD service, largely via underground cable lines.

Although the cable industry is taking heat on many fronts (regulatory issues, inflated bills, etc.), the bigger companies have been at the table for a long time, and that experience can be seen in the way these providers shape their content. “Our on-demand service just passed six billion views since 2003,” says Derek Harrar, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Video Service for Comcast. He broke their numbers down farther, adding: “We’re seeing 250 million views a month, or 100 views a second.” Research into the habits of Comcast’s 14 million subscribers indicates that on-demand usage is on the rise, and the company has responded by expanding their on-demand offerings to include much more than just current-release movies. Customers can find television episodes, music, and educational content. “We even have guitar lessons available,” says Harrar.

Detractors of cable cite the industry’s aging infrastructure as a reason to switch to the competition. Some think that the increasing bandwidth demands of high-definition content will prove to be too much for the existing network; others say that the need to compress content – particularly high definition – leads to less-than-expected picture and audio quality on the receiving end. Comcast recently countered these claims with a blind, third-party picture quality test, pitting Comcast’s Hi-Def picture against one of the leading satellite’s. “Two to one the satellite customers chose the Comcast picture,” states Harrar. So much for the detractors…

Cable companies like Comcast are also able to offer bundled services. Their Triple-Play package includes cable, internet, and digital voice (VoIP) services that use the same network. Bundled services are payable on one bill, and usually incur a lesser cost than the sum of the individual services.

Cable Pros and Cons


- Easy Installation
- Bundled Service
- Wide range of on-demand options
- Large HD selection
- Relatively accessible


- Aging Infrastructure
- Cost: Lack of competition within market leads to price increases
- Compressed content can result in compromised image and audio quality


Why Get Cable?
Some of the companies have been around for a long time. They know their customers – you – and they give them what they want, by way of on-demand options, a refined channel guide, and quality customer service. Cable is also about convenience. Establishing cable service is easier than any other option. The bundled services make bill-paying a lot easier, too.



Ben Hardy - Contributing Writer
Between watching re-runs of the The Jetsons and convincing his Insteon and Z-Wave controls to get along, Ben Hardy is immersed in the world of home automation, home control, and home networking.



Article Topics
What's Related
Popular Tags
Social Bookmark   less


Comments (37) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by Kenneth Lawson  on  12/21/07  at  07:29 PM

I live up in western Ny, Far enough out I can’t get a decent tv signal so it was to Dishnetwork we went,  We’ve had Dish almost 10 years and love it, I have a couple of theitr older sd dvrs and they work great, Very ralely dose the weather drop the signal anymore, I think they have better satiles up their now so they don’t drop signal like they used too… It took 10 years for our local phone company to finely get us dsl after promising us for years, so the chances of ever getting anything you folk in the city get a very remote, So one of the biggest consideration is what you can get and, as far as priciing I’ve only a very few 1-2 increases in my rate over the years,,  if one has the choice try dish network…

Posted by Ray Carey  on  12/21/07  at  06:34 PM

I have had Comcast.  I still keep Comcast for internet,  I have had Directv for over a year now and the Picture and sound quality is GREAT! 

I also have the HD- DVR and it is Fantastic.  Im running with a Vizio TV and the picture is Excellent.

Posted by Josh  on  12/21/07  at  03:29 PM

I’m surprised that this article fails to mention why so many people subscribe to DTV-The NFL Sunday Ticket. I didn’t have a choice if I wanted to watch out of market games. I like the HD channel lineup but the HD channels looked better when I had cable. Also, the HD DVRs have two cables running into them which makes the rat’s nest behind my entertainment center look even worse. A nice thing about FIOS is that you can watch recorded shows all over the house regardless of where the DVR is. I had FIOS internet installed but I’m stuck with DTV unless somebody else gets Sunday Ticket.

Posted by Jim  on  12/21/07  at  01:33 PM

No one has mentioned (or at least I don’t think I read
anything about)pricing.  Cable has a history of more rate hikes than does Satellite.  And I hear that Verizon is going to have somewhere around a 9% rate hike coming soon.

Posted by John Duncan Yoyo  on  12/21/07  at  05:51 AM

I got FIOS for internet and phone but passed on TV only because I have three DirecTV SD TiVOs and they are still working fine. 

It appears that there is a class of TV signal that will function like basic cable from the box outside the house.  The locals and public access do not need the converter box but any of the rest of it do.  Has anyone tested this?

FIOS only runs fiber to a point and then it switches to existing wiring.  I have a foot and a half square box on the outside of the house that contains about ten feet of coiled FIOS fiber cable and the hardware to convert between the fiber to the copper for TV, internet and phone.  The coil of FIOS fiber was the slack needed for one man to do the installation from telephone pole to the house with a ladder.


+ View all comments on for this article



Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.