Sling TV streaming: The good, the bad, and the ugly

Sling TV logoI’m not much of a television watcher, but recently I thought that I would check out Sling TV for streaming live television stations. Seeing as I also have an Amazon FireTV, the choice seemed to be an easy one, and since they were offering a 7-day free trial, I had nothing to lose. After my free trial, though, I decided that Sling is not quite ready for the prime time (at least in my opinion). Here are some bullet points about my overall experience (some good, some not-so-good, and some downright ugly). I hope that these points will give you a quick overview of Sling so that you can decide if it is right for you. After the list of points, I will discuss some of the more important concerns in greater detail.

  • The Good:
  • The Bad:
    • Quality is not as high as watching over regular co-ax cable or satellite
    • Customer service was not very helpful in any regard
    • Pausing/fast-forwarding/rewinding doesn’t work well, or on many channels. It doesn’t work at all on 3-day replay streams.
    • No Linux support for the Sling App
    • The Windows app doesn’t work in anything below Windows 7, and then won’t uninstall
    • Video quality is forced to a VERY low level inside a virtual machine
    • In a Windows 7 VM (running inside VirtualBox), the app uncleanly closes every time
    • 3-day replay streams don’t ever start in the Windows app
  • The Ugly:
    • Limited to one concurrent stream per account
    • No in-browser streaming

Now that there’s a list of some of my bigger points, I’d like to go into further detail about some of the key factors that determined my stance on the current state of Sling (e.g. it not yet being ready for prime time). All of the good points are self-explanatory, and more information can be found on Sling’s website.

For some of the bad aspects, the quality really wasn’t as good as standard cable or satellite. I found the picture to be very soft by comparison, and the sound quality was lacking, especially on a nicer 5.x audio system. I also experienced several glitches in the video streams, and popping sounds in the audio streams (despite a fibre internet connection). When I emailed customer service about my concerns, I only received canned responses that weren’t very helpful. Further, they would close the ticket immediately, which gives the impression that they don’t care about keeping my business, but rather just want to close support cases as quickly as possible.

With regard to the applications that can be used on Windows and Mac, I didn’t have much luck. As a Linux user, I had no option except to try to install the Windows app inside of a Windows virtual machine (VM). I firstly tried it in an old Windows XP VM. Though it installed, it didn’t actually run, and then refused to fully uninstall. I put it in a Windows 7 VM, and at least it ran. However, any time I would start a stream (live or 3-day replay), an error message popped up stating that the “quality was reduced to a minimum” because my “video card was not supported,” and to “update my video drivers or upgrade my video card.” Basically, it seemed like the application didn’t function much at all inside of a VM.

Now for the ugly parts. 🙁 Though I can deal with the lack of streaming within an internet browser, it is still a huge oversight on Sling’s part. In-browser streaming works on most platforms these days (e.g. Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, et cetera). If Sling provided in-browser streaming, it would eliminate the problem with the apps only being available for Windows and Mac. It would also negate the issues that I had with the Windows app inside a virtual machine.

The biggest problem with Sling is the limitation of one stream per account. To put that in perspective, let’s say that you have a few televisions in your home, and a couple tablets (iPads or Android-based). If you wanted to watch a particular TV channel via Sling on the TV in your bedroom, and one of your kids wanted to watch his favourite show on his tablet or phone in his room, you would need two separate Sling accounts in order to do that. With only one Sling account, your stream would stop when he started streaming his show. This is a complete deal-breaker for many people, and by today’s standards, it’s really unacceptable from a service provider. I can understand that they don’t want people pirating out the service, but what about checking for the connections coming from the same external IP? That wouldn’t be ideal either, considering you could be out of the home and using your mobile device, but at least it would allow for all devices in the same home (and tied to the same network) to stream concurrently.

Overall, I think Sling is a great idea in that it will allow people like me to have television service. I think that they currently fall short in several areas, though, and for those reasons, I won’t continue to subscribe. Hopefully in the months and years to come, they will rectify these problems (especially the ones in the “ugly” category). If they do, it would be a service that I could stand behind.

Cheers,
Zach

Babies or tiny drunks?

Recently I found this great thread on Reddit about two toddlers being like drunk girls. Though the animated GIF was entertaining, one particular comment in the thread was pure gold:

Babies are born blackout drunk and slowly sober as they age.

They form no permanent memories for several years, have no hand-eye coordination, and are either crying or sleeping. Slowly they regain the ability to crawl around on all fours, then to stumble drunkenly across the room before falling on their faces.

Eventually they become sober enough to start speaking slurred, broken sentences. But their emotions are still totally out of control, and they’ll fly into a rage, a sobbing fit, or uncontrollable giggles at the slightest provocation.

Puberty is the hangover.

You can see the comment and context here.

Too funny… and accurate.

Cheers,
Zach

Happy 18th Birthday, Noah

Happy 18th Birthday, Noah! I hope that you have a great day today, and that this upcoming year is your best one yet! Not too long ago, I saw a video of someone solving a Rubik’s cube blindfolded, (after only looking at the cube for about a minute), and it made me think back to solving them together. It also made me think of the cube that we made using photos, and not realising that it would be absurdly more difficult than ones with just colours—since you would have to have each square oriented correctly as well.

Noah's custom Rubik's cube for his birthday in 2009
Click to enlarge

Remember that?

Anyway, I hope that you have a great birthday! Maybe we’ll get to talk sometime soon. I would like to hear about all the things that have gone on over the last six years, and especially what your plans are for college.

Love ya’, kid,
–Zach