If there's iOS compatibility, then I guess you can airplay from an i-device to 
an AppleTV if you don't have or want a Chromecast. 
I may have to consider this for when my Dish contract ends at the end of this 
year. I'm not a TV person much, but the sighted wife is. With kodi on a 
Firestick and something like this, it may be enough to drop cable.
I wonder if Kody is at all accessible now with the improved accessibility 
support on Amazon devices... Anyway, that's probably a topic for another list.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Sieghard Weitzel
Sent: Sunday, March 05, 2017 7:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: YouTube TV Release Date, Price and Specs

And all who are not in the US can ignore this as none of this applies to 
outside of the United States unless maybe you have a VPN which pretends you are 
in the US.


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
M. Taylor
Sent: Sunday, March 5, 2017 5:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: YouTube TV Release Date, Price and Specs

Hello Everyone,

Here is an article that I thought you may find interesting.

Enjoy,

Mark

YouTube TV Release Date, Price and Specs - CNET CNET Reviews - Wednesday, March 
1, 2017 at 11:52 AM

Cable TV just got its biggest competitor yet.

YouTube, the most popular video service on the web that recently announced it 
streamed one billion hours per day, is now launching a live TV service called 
YouTube TV. 

Unlike the free YouTube you know so well, populated by cat videos, how-tos and 
myriad independent channels and shows, YouTube TV is a direct competitor to 
cable you'll have to pay for. It will deliver live local TV channels like ABC, 
CBS, Fox and NBC as well as cable stalwarts like ESPN, the Disney Channel, Fox 
News and Bravo. (Disclosure: CBS is the parent company of CNET and Showtime.) 
The cost? $35 per month. YouTube hasn't yet set a release date, saying only 
that YouTube TV will appear "in the next few months."

If you've never had cable TV service, you've already cut the cord, or you're on 
the fence considering whether to do so, YouTube TV offers yet another basically 
risk-free service to consider. Risk-free because you can cancel anytime and 
you're only out $35. Try that with your cable company.

Three similar services exist already, namely Sling TV, PlayStation Vue and 
DirecTV Now, and Hulu has said it will debut yet another entry in this field 
before the end of the year, too. All offer various channel packages and 
features for a range of prices, starting at $20 per month for Sling TV.
Here's a closer look.

How does YouTube TV's channels compare?
This is the big unknown, mainly because it could add more channels between now 
and when it launches.

YouTube TV claims it's still negotiating with a few program providers to add 
channels. It says that the price won't go up if and when that happens.

In the meantime, here are all of the channels it has announced so far:
 
The networks included in YouTube TV are mostly the major broadcast networks and 
the cable channels owned by their parent companies.
YouTube 

If it launches with only the channels above, its total number of channels will 
fall short of the base packages offered by DirecTV Now ($35/month) and 
PlayStation Vue ($30 or $40). The selection above is more than Sling offers in 
its base package ($20/month), however. 

Major channels missing from YouTube TV's lineup, yet available on other 
services, include AMC, CNN, Comedy Central, Discovery, Food Network, MTV and 
TNT, among many others. HBO is also a no-show, but you can sign up for HBO Now 
separately.

If you're curious, here's a tally of all of the channels available on the other 
three. 
YouTube TV will include YouTube Red original shows and movies. It also says 
that all of YouTube's trademark user-generated and online-native content would 
be folded into YouTube TV's searches.
Beyond channels, what else should I know?

The features included with a YouTube TV subscription are similar to what is 
offered on other devices, with some major differences.

.       Cloud DVR with unlimited storage
.       3 simultaneous streams per account
.       6 user profiles with separate log-ins per account
.       Works with Chromecast, Google Home, computers, iOS and Android
phones and tablets
.       Launching in select major US cities only

The cloud DVR lets you "record" shows to watch later, just like a traditional 
cable DVR, and sounds superior to what's offered on competitors.
PlayStation Vue's cloud DVR erases your shows after 28 days. Sling TV's cloud 
DVR is still in beta and only available with certain devices, while DirecTV's 
has been promised but hasn't launched yet.

The multiple simultaneous streams is similar to a "family plan" on a service 
like Spotify, allowing you to stream to more than one TV or device at the same 
time. Competitors (beyond Sling's base plan) also offer it. Only YouTube TV and 
Vue allows user profiles (similar to Netflix and Hulu), however, and only 
YouTube TV lets you log in with different credentials (email and password) to 
the same account. That makes it the most "shareable"
of the bunch.
  
So far, Chromecast is the only TV device Google says will work with YouTube TV.
Sarah Tew/CNET 

Device support is spotty so far, however, with only Chromecast able to connect 
to a TV (Google Home owners can also command it via voice). If you have a TV 
with "Chromecast built-in," like Vizio SmartCast models or Sony sets running 
Android TV, it will work with those too. Like its competitors, YouTube TV is 
also available on mobile phones, tablets and computers.

YouTube says support for "many other connected streaming devices and smart TVs 
is coming in 2017." That means it could add other TV platforms before launch, 
such as Android TV, Roku, Amazon Fire TV or Apple TV -- all of which offer the 
standard YouTube app. 
Unike the others, YouTube TV won't be available nationwide. It will launch in 
select major cities only at first, and YouTube has yet to specify which ones. 
That's because the local channels it offers (ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC) have to be 
negotiated separately with local network stations, a process that's still 
ongoing. Local channels on the other three services are similarly restricted by 
region.

Here's a quick look at how YouTube TV compares to the other three, in table 
form. Entries marked 

Original URL Updated March 2 with additional information from YouTube.
https://www.cnet.com/products/youtube-tv/#ftag=CADe9e329a



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