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Television Movies Technology

T-Mobile Rebrands Layer3 Service as 'TVision Home', Inks Deal To Add Amazon Prime Video (variety.com) 29

T-Mobile today unveiled a new name for its Layer3 TV internet television service -- TVision Home -- with enhanced features, and announced a deal with Amazon to add Prime Video to the service later in 2019. From a report: TVision Home will be available starting April 14 in eight markets (the same areas Layer3 TV has already been available): Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Washington D.C., and Longmont, Colo. It's not a skinny bundle: TVision Home starts at $90 per month, which includes more than 150 channels, local broadcast stations and regional sports networks, as well as 15,000 VOD titles. Premium TV packages like HBO and Showtime are extra. In addition, TVision Home users must pay a $10 monthly set-top fee per connected TV. (Actually, the regular price of TVision Home for non-T-Mobile wireless customers is $99.99 per month, but the carrier is including a $9.99-per-month discount to all new subs for a limited time.)
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T-Mobile Rebrands Layer3 Service as 'TVision Home', Inks Deal To Add Amazon Prime Video

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  • I get the distinct impression that all these new "TV" providers - be it T-Mobile, YouTube, or whomever - don't really understand why it is people have been fleeing their cable TV subscriptions in increasing numbers over the past 10-15 years.

    • by flippy ( 62353 )
      More likely, they do understand but just don't care. As long as the masses are willing to pay large amounts for bundled entertainment, perhaps because that's a good deal easier than any other option, the companies will continue to make lots of profit. And that's the only thing they care about.
      • More likely, they do understand but just don't care. As long as the masses are willing to pay large amounts for bundled entertainment

        That's what I don't get - are they really finding customers at this prices?

        If they are finding customers, then they are not wrong about people wanting large bundles and they can carry on.

        If they are no finding customers, they would care very quickly since they cannot run a business.

        So who are the people subscribing to these large non-cable bundles? Are there any? This is whe

        • by flippy ( 62353 )

          They're either finding customers for these bundles (in which case I agree with you - they're free to carry on), or they won't find customers, the service will be unprofitable, and it'll fold, in which case the whole thing becomes a non-issue.

          I'd be curious to see the results of that journalism, though!

      • by jetkust ( 596906 )
        It's not as simple as that. This is about creating competition with the cable companies by first providing tv over their internet, and then eventually replacing them completely with 5g.

        From their website:

        TVision Home is part of T-Mobile’s 5G strategy and vision to give consumers real options to the cable companies, and that starts with the Sprint merger. Today, almost half of the country’s households (45%), and more than three quarters of rural households (76%) have no high-speed service (100 Mbps average) or only one option for high-speed broadband3. But if the merger is approved, by bringing together T-Mobile and Sprint, the New T-Mobile will have the scale and capacity to create a supercharged 5G network capable of reaching over half the country’s households with high-speed broadband by 2024.

        And while TVision Home uses your existing wired broadband today, TVision Home is IPTV designed for a 5G future where wireless broadband can replace your home internet. That means millions can finally free themselves from the Cableopoly once and for all.

        “TVision Home is about so much more than home TV it’s TV built for the 5G era,” said Mike Sievert, COO and President of T-Mobile. “With New T-Mobile, we’ll bring real choice, competition, better service, lower prices and faster speedsright into your living room. And – speaking of speed – while the Cableopoly innovates at the pace of the cable companies, we’ll innovate at the pace of the internet to give customers more value and more freedom more quickly.”

    • content providers are to blame primarily. They also don't and many times i've seen them get into wars about prices for their content and the cable/sat company then drops the channels Viacom i'm looking at you!
  • Will it count as part of your cap on ISP's with tv?
    Altice, AT&T, Comcast, Cox, Charter Spectrum, Frontier, Nextlight, RCN/Wave and Verizon

    Any ways $90/base + $/10 outlet is high.

  • It's almost like a parody of cord-cutting. $10/mo. for a set top box? Are the cable/satellite companies even this bad?

    • by flippy ( 62353 )
      Yeah, they're that bad. They do the exact same thing with set-top boxes.
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      $10/mo. for a set top box? Are the cable/satellite companies even this bad?

      T-Mobile's pricing is a mimicking that of the cable companies. You would generally spend $3-5/mo for a no-frills basic basic DTA. $7-10/mo would get you a full-fledged converter with VOD access, a searchable on-screen guide, maybe the ability to turn itself off and on when your favorite program comes on, the ability to interface with an in-home DVR system (but it would not be able to record itself). And above that would be the $12-15/mo DVR. Maybe a couple dollars more for the higher capacity, networking on

    • Comcast is $10 per SD set-top box, $20 per box for HD.
  • No to set top boxes & overpriced TV. I got rid of my TIVOs because of their crappy service and support, they were better than my FIOS STBs but still they were crap. This is a fail from the get-go. SlingTV, YoutubeTV, Hulu and Netflix are more robust, already established and don't need all these encumbrances.

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