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Originally Posted by wizwor
Amazon is just passing on the increased cost of shipping and adding content to their libraries. Netflix has done this and Comcast does it a couple times a year. While I do not see the price increase ($1.67/month) as a key factor in deciding to use or lose Prime, it does remind people that they are paying for television.
We cut the cable nearly five years ago. With 40 broadcast stations in our market, there is a lot of programming to choose from. Cutting cable reduced my recurring entertainment bill from $170/month to $53/month. That $53 pays for an ISP and Netflix. The ISP's rate is guaranteed for life.
Since cutting the cable, we have saved ~$7k. That presumes that my rate would not have risen in seven years -- which is a silly presumption. We've spent about $2k of this on infrastructure -- a new router, two antennas, an amplified combiner, an amplified splitter, five set top DVRs, five blu-ray players (which streamed Netflix), six Rokus, and PlayOn/PlayLater with HD plugins.
I recently put four Simple DVRs in my basement which collect broadcast television on 2t usb disks. I can stream the collected programs or live tv from any one of these to as many as five devices which may include Rokus, tablets, or PCs. This works on my LAN or remotely. I streamed from my antenna to a Roku at my mother's house. That cost ~$600.
We mostly watch broadcast television. There are the national affiliates (CBS, ABCx2, NBC, Fox), the local independents, national syndicators (RTV, MeTV, ION, Cozi, Bounce), movie channels (This, Fox Movies, getTV), and PBS (Prime, Kids, Explore, World, Create).
When I have a hankering for nudity or curse words, we watch Netflix -- either live or time shifted with PlayLater. We watch some programming via PlayOn (Hulu, Food Network, CBS and Fox Classics) and some via Roku channels (Fox News, Amazon Instant, History, Lifetime, and A&E). All of these account for less than 10% of our viewing.
I have been tempted to switch from Netflix to Prime. We do a lot of shopping on Amazon and all have Fires, so there is some additional value. In the end, I prefer the Netflix catalog, plan my purchases, and content myself with my own ebook library.
We have looked at Hulu, but most of the content is available over the air or on Netflix, so that's not appealing.
The fact that Amazon has increased their free shipping threshold from $25 to $35 has had a greater impact on our relationship. I have postponed or passed on purchases due to shipping costs. Often, Wal-mart or Best Buy are competitive since I can pick up items on my way home from work.
The bottom line is that there is a cost and a value associated with every purchase. Each person has to determine when cost exceeds value. For me with Pay TV, that ship has sailed.
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Don't do it, I mean, switch from NetFlix to Amazon Prime.
I cut the cable like 4 months ago. I also returned the provided Comcast modem and setup my own; now I get 70 Mbps download speed (peaks), when I actually pay for 50 Mbps. Old Comcast modem was crap.
We have Netflix, Aereo, Hulu Plus and prime, but Netflix beats Amazon on movies. Hulu is a good complementary service because it focuses on TV shows that my wife loves. But I'm keeping Prime mostly because shipping, as I order a lot.
I'm a huge Amazon fan, but to me, Amazon Prime content still is in develop. Not enough for having it alone.
By the way, I pay 53 bucks with taxes for Comcast blast. AT&T is not good and fast enough for what I need, as I do gaming too. So I need fast Internet with low latency, which can only be provided, unfortunately, by Comcast, at least in my area.
Now, to the topic. 99 per year for Prime is still a bargain. It's around 8 dollars per month. I can't imagine any person in USA, with a decent job, that can't afford that. Of course, you can argue that and say you have different priorities, fair enough, but still, 8 dollars a month is not a very expensive proposition giving the case of the added value: free shipping, access to movies, some ebooks free to rent, online music storage.