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YouTube TV has some nifty features - and some big drawbacks

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  • YouTube TV has some nifty features - and some big drawbacks

    By Anick Jesdanun

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    In this Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017, file photo, YouTube CEO Susan Wojicki speaks during the introduction of YouTube TV at YouTube Space LA in Los Angeles. Google's online package of about 40 television channels debuts on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in the tech industry's latest bid to get cable-shunning millennials to pay for television. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File)

    YouTube TV, Google's new streaming package of about 40 television channels, is the tech industry's latest bid to get cable-shunning millennials to pay for live TV over the internet. It offers intriguing advantages over rivals, but it remains hobbled by a limited channel selection.

    Don't confuse the YouTube service, which debuts Wednesday, with Netflix, Amazon Prime and other streaming offerings. Like similar efforts from Sony, Dish and AT&T's DirecTV , YouTube TV primarily aims to let you channel surf over the internet, not to stream from an online library of shows and movies. So these internet-cable services can offer live programming, especially sports.

    But they also come with some serious drawbacks. While these services are typically cheaper than traditional cable or satellite services, people haven't been signing up in droves. Google is targeting viewers who have never subscribed to cable or satellite TV and are just as happy to get all their video from the internet; getting them to cough up $35 a month could be a hard sell.

    Google aims to lure subscribers with more sophisticated program search, personalized recommendations and a more fully featured online DVR than rival services offer. But it faces many of the limitations its rivals have.

    YouTube TV, for instance, features staples such as ESPN and major broadcast networks, but lacks key networks such as PBS, CNN and Comedy Central. And it will initially be only available in a handful of major U.S. cities because media rights are still stuck in the 20th century .

    WHAT YOU GET...AND WHAT YOU DON'T

    YouTube TV offers plenty of live sports, one of the chief reasons people stick with cable. Pick a team, and the service automatically records all the televised games it can find. Available channels include ESPN, Big Ten and sports networks from Comcast, Fox and CBS—but not Turner networks such as TBS and others that aired the bulk of March Madness. New York Mets fans won't get baseball games on SNY.

    YouTube also has the youth-oriented Freeform and CW networks; its rivals lack The CW. AMC is coming in a few weeks, so you'll have to wait to catch up on the just-ended season of "The Walking Dead."

    Since most channel numbers and names are meaningless in a digital world, YouTube TV arranges live channels by topic, starting with broadcast networks, sports, youth-oriented channels, then everything else. Subscriptions are initially limited to New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and the San Francisco Bay Area—all locations where YouTube could get rights to local ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC stations.

    SEARCH PARTY

    As you'd expect from Google, search is one of YouTube's big selling points. Its rivals already offer search by shows and sometimes by actors; YouTube adds topical searches, such as "aliens" or "road trips."

    Unfortunately, it's still a work in progress. A search for "nerd comedy" brings up "The Big Bang Theory," but "comedy about nerds" does not. And a search for "Modern Family episode on basketball" doesn't bring up the episode titled "Basketball."

    YouTube could also stand to take a cue from TiVo recorders and let you automatically record all programs featuring, say, Jennifer Lawrence, including her talk-show appearances. You can search for Jennifer Lawrence, but you need to go through the results and choose shows to record individually—too much work for a service that promises simplicity.

    One big plus: YouTube's unlimited DVR will store recordings for nine months, long enough for entire seasons of network shows. Sony's PlayStation Vue — the only similar service offering an unlimited online DVR—offers only 28 days of storage, nowhere near enough for binge-watching.

    YouTube TV works on phones, tablets and laptop browsers. Watching on an actual TV requires Google's Chromecast, an inexpensive streaming stick you control with your phone. (Early subscribers get one for free.)

    ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

    This being Google, your viewing and search histories might be mined for targeted advertising. You can suspend tracking in the settings, though that will hinder personalized recommendations. (It's too early to tell if that's a loss or not, though some of the early recommendations have been spot on.)

    You can share your subscription with five friends or relatives in your household, with three simultaneous streams allowed. No need to share passwords; they sign in with their own Google accounts. Recordings and recommendations are kept separate, so your roommates can't make fun of you for bingeing "The Real Housewives."
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    1. You may not be able to get YouTube TV

    YouTube TV includes streaming access to all four major broadcast networks, along with The CW, which is great for people looking for a true cable replacement. Unfortunately, that also limits YouTube TV to launching in markets where the local network affiliates are actually owned and operated by the networks.

    So for now, YouTube TV is only available in the following five markets: Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, and the San Francisco Bay Area. Granted, those five metro areas account for a sizable chunk of the population, but it still leaves out the large majority of the country.

    2. No HBO

    If you want HBO, you’ll have to purchase it separately through HBO Now. The only premium movie channel available as an add-on for YouTube TV is Showtime. Shudder and Sundance will be added soon. Soccer fans can pay extra for Fox Soccer Plus.

    The lack of HBO shouldn’t be a deal breaker for most cord-cutters, as HBO Now is readily available. It just means you have to make a separate purchase.

    3. Up to 6 accounts

    A bonus for families or groups of friends: Each YouTube TV account comes with up to six independent sub-accounts, each with its own virtual DVR, preferences, recommendations.

    4. Unlimited-ish DVR storage

    Speaking of the cloud-based DVR used for YouTube TV, Google says there’s no upper limit on how much you can store. However, you can only store recordings for up to nine months. So no saving an entire season of a TV show and binge-watching it a year later before the next season starts.

    One nice feature — if it lives up to Google’s promise — of this DVR is that it’s accessible anywhere in the country. So while the YouTube TV service might currently be geographically limited, your recorded videos apparently are not.

    5. Chromecast-only, for now

    If you want to get YouTube TV on your actual TV, Google says you’ll either need a TV with built-in Chromecast or a Chromecast dongle. However, the company says the service will be available on additional connected TV devices in the future.

    Google is also giving subscriber’s a free Chromecast after they pay for one month of service.

    The mobile app for YouTube TV, which is separate from the YouTube app, is available for both iOS and Android devices.

    You can read more about YouTube TV on the official blog, before deciding whether to sign up for the 1 week free trial.

    https://consumerist.com/2017/04/05/5...aming-service/
    The Hackmaster

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