(2018-03-17, 15:10)Mnementh Wrote: (2018-03-17, 13:55)speedwell68 Wrote: (2018-03-16, 11:51)Mnementh Wrote: Couldn't agree more, unfortunately I do watch live sport, that's literally the ONLY thing I watch live, so I unfortunately have to pay both the BBC tax and the Sky tax (the one where you have to pay for all of the rubbish you don't want to get the sport you do want in HD...).
I only has Sky for the kids channels and the Formula One. ... I could no longer justify the expense, just for the F1 (I now go round my Dad's house to watch it).
If I could find a legal way to get F1 in HD in the UK and also all of the American Football I would drop Sky like a hot potato and could then also drop my TV license as I would be in the same boat as you.
Although I do have other sports on in the background whilst doing other things and will occasionally have Soccer Saturday on I can happily do without those, I can't do without my F1 & NFL however.
Although not cheap (I think it was around £150 I paid last season) there is NFL Gamepass that would cover your NFL needs.
I believe that F1 are starting their own streaming service this season but I haven't looked into it so know nothing about its costs or availability.
There is also the alternative for you or any other sports fans who don't like paying for a ton of channels to gain access to the ones they do want which is Now TV,
at the moment Sky have a promotion on ahead of the F1 season where you can get all Sky Sports channels for 9 months for £150,
unfortunately I can't take that offer up as I'm already on another offer from them, but I would say to anyone interested in the Now TV route I probably only pay the full price for the sports channels a couple of months a year,
the rest of the year I get offers for £20 a month or less.
Back on topic,
Kodi has not cost Sky or VM or BT a penny where I am concerned, I haven't paid for a TV package for a few years now, preferring to pay for streaming options.
I use Kodi as my live TV/PVR (Freeview) machine via a HD Homerun Connect and then stream that content as well as my locally stored media around my home.
It would be nice if I could use Kodi for all my streaming needs but unfortunately not all content providers want to play ball, so currently I have Eurosport, BBC Iplayer, NFL Gamepass, UKTV (via the catchup tv and more addon), ESPN Player and ITV installed.
There are many reasons I prefer using Kodi but the main one is probably its ability to auto switch the framerate between the different video formats I play,
I also like the ability to custom zoom the picture, its most likely sacrilege to some but when I watch letterboxed content I will quite often zoom the picture up a bit to fill more of my TV screen.
There are other little things I like that no commercial operator seems to think of like a menu going back to the beginning when you reach the end rather than making you scroll all the way back again.
I also prefer Kodi's customisation, it can be as simple or complicated as someone can handle but I can get my setup exactly how I like it not how someone thinks I should have it.
I could bang on for ages about what Kodi does great that the commercial sector doesn't but I wont bore everyone and finish by saying thank you to everyone in the team for all they do on this great project.