Originally posted by: isekii
Originally posted by: wyvrn
For pure cost, an HTPC is cheaper. I built mine for $450. This includes a nice AMD machine from Frys with a 2.8Ghz, and a Beyond TV/Wintv150 package that came with a remote free. I can watch OTA HD channels with an antenna, and record in regular quality.
To get PVR for satellite or cable, cost is minimum $60 per month, which is $720 per year. I get more channels, but the quality is about he same in recordings (satellite compression really sucks on a big screen). I miss some cable channels but not that much. There are plenty of quality shows on regular tv, not to mention sporting events.
Cheaper in the long run for HTPC but not as much content.
um pvr for satellite isn't 60 a month.
they charge you like 5-8 bucks a month per unit for a regular pvr/dvr.
To get a pvr, you must subscribe to a package. The cheapest package with pvr that I could find was $60 per month. Please read my post again.
The drawback to HTPC is less content unless you subscribe to cable or satellite. But for an overall comparison of the two, here goes:
DVR with standard satellite = $60 per month for basic package
Cable with recorder = $65 per month for basic package
comes with ~ 60-70 channels, including locals
quality is so-so on a big screen because of compression
vs.
OTA HD free
HTPC for ~450 dep. on features
no monthly subscription fees
OTA HD is better quality, but less content (no espn, discovery, tlc, etc..)
Total cost for the year = $720 for cable or satellite with recording capability
good selection of channels (though a lot of it is crap)
quality is so-so
$450 first yearonly for OTA HD and HTPC
selection is ~ 25 channels, including the Tube music videos
viewing quality is superior, recording quality approx same as satellite
bonus: can play videos, slideshows, pc games, and surf internet on HTPC
Looking at that comparison, the main difference is the content, which I found suprisingly easy to give up. The only thing I really miss is Sci Fi fridays, but I can rent the DVDs for much less than the monthly subscription fee for cable or satellite. Most of the shows I want are on broadcast TV anyway.
Over a 5 year period, assuming I rent the DVDs for one series per month to catch up on my favorite cable series, my approximate savings is $2000 over the dvr/subscription method, and I have more flexibility over what I want to watch and pay for.