News

Sky Announces Plans To Ditch The Satellite Dish

Sky Plan To Ditch Satellite Dishes

These days, the option of having some form of home TV subscription is so common it’s practically standard. When it comes to certain providers, however, your option can be limited.

For example, Virgin Media generally requires that your home has a cable connection. Sky, on the other hand, requires your house to either have a cable connection or the installation of a satellite dish. The latter of which can be difficult if local obstructions block your signal.

A possible solution to Sky problems!

In a report via the BBC, Sky has announced plans to remove the requirement of a satellite dish to access their services. As part of the plans, they intend to make all of their content available online. Therefore, removing the need and allowing customers who can not currently access their service to consider them again.

When will it be available?

When the exact roll-out will occur is unclear. What is clear, however, is that Sky is losing potential customers with those who can not accommodate the dish. While they do have their own internet-based service, Now TV, it isn’t exactly perfect. The growth of Netflix, however, is hard for them to ignore.

It is thought that Italy will be the first to be able to access all Sky channels online with Austria to shortly follow at some point this year. The UK is expected to also adopt this service either late 2018 or at some stage in 2019.

How much will it cost?

The short answer is, it’s hard to say. Sky themselves have yet to comment if the service, sans a dish, will cost any less. One, however, would think that a reduced cost is almost certain or at least logical. They don’t, after all, have to pay to many engineers to fit them, to maintain them or even to launch satellites.

A sky subscription certainly isn’t cheap under the current platform with even a basic package costing around £30.

In pure speculation, Sky will likely try and tie some offer into their own internet service. One can only hope, however, that they improve their customer support.

What do you think? Will the change mean more customers? Will going internet only potentially mean a reduced cost? – Let us know in the comments!

Mike Sanders

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Thermaltake CYCLEDESK 100 Smart Gaming Desk

The CYCLEDESK 100 is not just an ordinary gaming desk, it is designed for a…

1 day ago

NZXT LIFT 2 STARFIELD Symmetrical Optical Gaming Mouse

The NZXT Lift 2 is an symmetrical mouse that goes the distance. Its lightweight design…

2 days ago

MSI MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WiFi + AMD 7800X 3D + MSI MAG CORELIQUID E240 AIO Bundle

The MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WIFI is a gaming oriented ATX motherboard constructed around the latest…

2 days ago

Sapphire AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT NITRO+ 16GB Graphics Card

Experience incredible performance, visuals, and efficiency when gaming and streaming with the AMD Radeon™ RX…

2 days ago

AMD Ryzen 5 7600X 6 Core AM5 CPU/Processor

Welcome to the new era of performance. AMD Ryzen 7000 Series ushers in the speed…

2 days ago

MSI Intel Z790 GAMING PLUS DDR5 PCIE 5 WIFI ATX Motherboard

Take a step into the future with the Z790 Gaming Plus Wifi motherboard, designed and…

2 days ago