?But they do give you a discount with that bundle (or they used to at least… everyone keeps changing things up on us). Unfortunately though, you can’t use that annual option if you bundled Disney/ESPN-have to do that monthly. You can purchase Hulu’s on demand service for $60 annually if you want to keep that option open, then use something else for the live content. Just bring it up to present options you may want to consider. Wasn’t due to any particular dissatisfaction with previous services or anything… purely a move to save some cash. I have fitted the attic with an antenna to feed the locals up to ~70 miles away to the whole house, so the local/regional channels really aren’t an issue anymore. I can also log in to things like the ESPN app to stream directly without having to use any funky grid based program guide, which was a pleasant surprise. Their core package is going to give us all the channels we actually watch from the Sling Orange + Blue option for a little bit less, which is also less then what I was paying for Hulu Live a couple years back before they started all their price hikes. I have tested Vidgo via a free trial and we are actually switching to them this weekend. Previously on $pectrum, I was reported as actually being in Florence, SC (roughly a 2 hours drive away), so I got regional content appropriate to where I actually live. And Hulu does not trust/accept our location data because of it-largely because it monkeys with their regional content delivery arrangements.įor example, SlingTV feeds me regional content based on me being in Charlotte, NC… because that is where I “tunnel” to on TMO. Among other issues with how packets are being handled, it results in us running through a sort of funky CGNAT/VPN tunnel to centralized locations-often reporting us as being somewhere out in left field from where we actually are. It is basically because of TMO’s XLAT464 implementation. Go to myip.ms through TMO Home Internet and check where it reports your location versus going through your phone’s data… this might demonstrate one of the core problems with TMO HI. I do not know of ANY other major players, VOD or Live streaming that encounter this issue. Home address is or shouldn't be the focal point. Simply told T-MOBILE home internet customers that our business wasn't wanted? T-MOBILE home internet is still unstable and goes down very often, so the IP address update is something they face every other day, but Hulu could have EASILY created a work around. Instead of latching onto the IP address of the streaming device, Roku, Firestick, smart TV, etc, Hulu chose instead to lose my 130.00 a month account of the past 5 years, never a late payment. In less than 20 seconds complete service restoration! That was terminated by Hulu today Aug 20th, 2020. Until yesterday, Aug 19th, you could simply call Hulu, request an escalation, provide them the new IP address and confirm your account information. Again, ridiculous being that I use my Hulu account, over T-MOBILE cellular EVERYDAY. Hulu immediately sees this as You're Not At Home. The reason being, T-MOBILE home internet hubs have a need to throw a new, different IP address everytime there home internet hub device lises signal, even for a second. The ONLY thing I cannot do is watch directly through a my home wifi to the television or projectors, even using a Roku. Now, I can take that cellphone connected to my home wifi(T-MOBILE) and cast any and all Hulu content to my Roku. Hiw is it possible that Hulu has an issue with hone internet or ip addresses given I can watch continuously over cell, all day. At home or in another state I can watch, uninterrupted, on my cellular devices. That being said, on my cell phone, I can watch, flawlessly, Hulu while connected to my T-MOBILE home internet. My phone is certainly a cellular device, and it is T-MOBILE cellular, at that. I use Hulu more on my phone than on my television. What is most bothersome about the previous replies would be this.…
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