Satellite TV is a hot commodity these days and it’s perfectly understandable that niche market products would also take advantage to profit of this boom. Unfortunately, not all are legitimate—I’m talking here about satellite TV for the PC.
Unlike most scams, the
Satellite TV for PC has a real iota of truth in it. It does allow you to watch TV programming with your PC over the internet. And you can watch it using their downloadable software, although what most people don’t know—is that you can watch these TV programming even without using their software.
Let me elaborate further.
Basically, there are two types of TV broadcast available: one is free-to-air (FTA) TV and the other is the pay TV which refers usually to subscription-based TV.
FTA TV programming are limited in broadcast range, heavily features advertisements but are available to anyone who can pick up and watch the signal.
Pay TV, on the other hand, requires payment such as monthly subscription. In turn, subscribers get the premium channels mostly absent in FTA TV; examples are HBO, Cinemax, Starz, Showtime, and premium sports channels such as NFL Sunday Ticket, ESPN Gameplan, NHL Center Ice, and so on.
Now, there are websites that host FTA TV content from all over the world. These websites are pretty much accessible to anyone, no fees required to watch shows that are hosted in the site. What Satellite TV for PC does is aggregate links of these websites. Using the software they are selling for as much as $95, you get an interface containing links to where you can watch TV content online—which is available to anyone who cares to search in the first place. And you won’t get premium TV shows or sports channels, such as NFL Sunday Ticket or Cinemax—because these type of programming charges monthly payments.
Why waste your money if not your time over channel aggregators.
Just go ahead and Compare Satellite TV versus satellite TV for the PC.
In the scheme of things, satellite TV for PC just falls slightly under the category of scam. It over promises but under delivers. Way under delivers. It can’t replace satellite TV, cable TV or even FTA TV as a medium of TV programming.
"Did I Do That"--Steven Q. Urkel