Moving from cable TV to IPTV: six months later — honest reflection

LauraApps

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Jul 4, 2018
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Cut the cord six months ago and moved entirely to IPTV from a cable package. Wanted to share an honest reflection after living with it full time rather than just trialling. Some things are better, some things are different.
 
Six months in as well and this is a good thread to be honest about the trade-offs. Positives and negatives from my experience:\n\n**Better than cable:**\n• Significant monthly cost saving\n• Access to content from multiple countries in one place\n• 4K channels at no extra cost (cable charged a premium for HD, let alone 4K)\n• Catch-up typically covers 7 days across most channels
 
**Different/worse than cable:**\n• Occasional brief buffering during peak hours (cable never buffered)\n• EPG is close to cable quality but not identical — some metadata is occasionally wrong\n• App setup and maintenance requires some technical willingness\n• The experience depends on your ISP quality in a way cable does not
 
UK user — the EPG accuracy difference is real but minor. Cable EPG is populated by the broadcaster directly. IPTV EPG depends on the XMLTV data your provider uses, which may lag by 15–30 minutes during live event overruns. For most viewing it is unnoticeable.
 
Ireland — the biggest adjustment for me was the network dependency. Cable works during an internet outage. IPTV does not. The one time my ISP had a 2-hour outage on a Saturday evening, I had no TV at all. Cable would have continued working. This is a real difference worth knowing about.
 
Canada — worth noting the picture quality improvement. My cable package delivered 1080i (interlaced) for most channels. Many IPTV streams are 1080p (progressive) or 4K. On a modern TV, the difference is visible, particularly during fast motion in sports.
 
Australia — the "technical willingness" required varies a lot. My setup required Ethernet cable running to the TV, an Android box, and TiviMate configuration. For me this was a one-afternoon project. For a non-technical person, this would be a barrier.
 
New Zealand — catch-up quality varies. Cable catch-up was seamless and reliable (using the same cable infrastructure). IPTV catch-up on the services I have used is reliable for major channels but patchy for smaller channels. This is the area where IPTV has most room to improve.
 
Overall: for anyone considering the switch — the cost savings are real and the quality for live viewing is excellent if your internet connection is stable. The trade-offs (occasional buffering, internet dependency, setup effort) are manageable with the right setup.
 
Agreed — the setup effort is front-loaded. Once everything is configured correctly, day-to-day it is as simple as turning on a TV.
 
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