Sky announces the death of the satellite dish - Sky Glass
Sky announces the death of the satellite dish - Sky Glass
Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

76 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
I have been saying for a few years that Sky will be delivered purely via internet soon, and it seems to be finally happening. The satellite dish and set top box are being killed off.

The cost saving of not having to replace the existing Astra satellites, or install satellite dishes on homes, must be absolutely massive.

Say hello to 'Sky Glass'...

But, there is a catch: Sky are going with the idea of "You have to buy our TV with Sky built in" Very odd!

Surely they will start offering Sky to 'normal' smart Tv's at some point via an App or dongle, but Sky say not!

Buy yours here apparently: https://www.sky.com/glass

A Betamax moment?

https://inews.co.uk/news/technology/sky-satellite-...

https://www.theverge.com/2021/10/7/22714076/sky-gl...

https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-a...



Edited by anonymous-user on Thursday 7th October 16:19

Radec

5,359 posts

69 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Yeah I can't see how this will take off without some sort of app or dongle for regular TV's.
No one's buying another TV just to watch Sky.

At least I won't lose signal in heavy rain and snow anymore if they decide to go the streaming route.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

76 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Radec said:
Yeah I can't see how this will take off without some sort of app or dongle for regular TV's.
No one's buying another TV just to watch Sky.

At least I won't lose signal in heavy rain and snow anymore if they decide to go the streaming route.
The 'Sky Glass TV' is pretty ugly. It appears to be a metal mesh construction and about 2 inches thick.





Not for me, and I imagine that most people already have a couple of TV's they are perfectly happy with.

Why Sky wish to get involved in producing and supplying TV's is beyond me. Surely they would be better offering Sky as a Netflix style app for smart TV's or a dongle for standard TV's.

Venturist

3,472 posts

217 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
It would be fascinating to hear the business logic behind getting into making TVs. That’s a conscious choice, someone had to propose it and had to convince the board it was the smart choice for the future of the company.

Considering they already have the universally available NowTV service, they could have just expanded that a little bit whilst pocketing the savings from retiring the satellite service.

If the pricing is including the TV and the service it seems quite reasonable but I’m not sure how many people would be excited about renting a new telly as a combo deal to get their Sky, when they probably already have a perfectly good telly if they’re interested enough in TV to still be keen on paying for Sky.

Note the TV itself doesn’t do anything special, it’s the “puck” device that it seems acts like any other dongle, but is only available with the telly. Expect to see the TVs retired in 12 months and the dongle carry on solo.

miniman

29,206 posts

284 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Interestingly the Independent article refers to the TV being available as a £13/month subscription as well as outright purchase. Presumably it will be branded D E R

At this point Sky becomes a content business with no significant USP over Netflix, Amazon etc. I guess.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

76 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Venturist said:
It would be fascinating to hear the business logic behind getting into making TVs. That’s a conscious choice, someone had to propose it and had to convince the board it was the smart choice for the future of the company.

Considering they already have the universally available NowTV service, they could have just expanded that a little bit whilst pocketing the savings from retiring the satellite service.

If the pricing is including the TV and the service it seems quite reasonable but I’m not sure how many people would be excited about renting a new telly as a combo deal to get their Sky, when they probably already have a perfectly good telly if they’re interested enough in TV to still be keen on paying for Sky.

Note the TV itself doesn’t do anything special, it’s the “puck” device that it seems acts like any other dongle, but is only available with the telly. Expect to see the TVs retired in 12 months and the dongle carry on solo.
It is all a bit confusing.

It appears that you pay £34 a month for the £55 inch TV, and then £26 on top for the Sky subscription, making it £60 per month.

Or is the Sky subscription included in the TV price? It is as clear as mud.

Have Sky just become the 2021 version of Radio Rentals?

Pricing from Sky here:

https://www.sky.com/glass/technical-specifications...





Edited by anonymous-user on Thursday 7th October 13:18

ChocolateFrog

34,870 posts

195 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
That's got epic fail Betamax style written all over it.

steveo3002

11,024 posts

196 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
maybe bring out new tv every 6 months , so folk will pay to keep up with next door like apple do with the phones

stevemcs

9,909 posts

115 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
So i would need to replace 4 tv's (I assume there's are Samsung as they use quantum dot tech) and i need a 35mbps connect for ultra HD or 10mbps for standard HD, given i'm with Sky at the moment for broadband then there would need to be investment in broadband as the most we can receive is 3mbps. BT just don't appear to have the connections available.

If it comes down to buying a TV i will ditch sky.

pquinn

7,167 posts

68 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Not sure that people want dedicated hardware, seems a big misstep. A bit like thinking people want a TV like that. Or that they want 'voice first' controls. Build an app and get the customer supplying the hardware and save money that way. I suspect it's probably their encryption fetish doing them in.

Also not convinced they'd really dump the dish - quite apart from it not being purely for their stuff if you're talking multi channel broadcast vs on demand then doing it over IP isn't exactly free and requires a lot of kit too with significant scaling costs (cloud and peering/embedded deployments); a satellite costs the same regardless of audience scale and you get to charge people to share it.

miniman

29,206 posts

284 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
stevemcs said:
If it comes down to buying a TV i will ditch sky.
We ditched Sky a couple of years ago and don't miss it. I pay £10 occasionally for F1 races, otherwise we watch everything on demand or over Freesat. There's plenty of content on Netflix et al at a fraction of the cost.

xeny

5,438 posts

100 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Lord Marylebone said:
Have Sky just become the 2021 version of Radio Rentals?
Everything has become "as a service". This is presumably seen as a logical extension of that, and possibly enough customers find the technicalities tricky enough this will reduce support costs?

ChocolateFrog

34,870 posts

195 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
The TV itself looks like it should be in Curry's circa 2005.

Oh they've painted it different colours, edgy.

ecs

1,389 posts

192 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
They manage to get people to pay £50-100/month for channels which show +20mins of adverts per hour so I'm sure they'll be able to get people to pay for a crap TV too.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

76 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
ChocolateFrog said:
The TV itself looks like it should be in Curry's circa 2005.

Oh they've painted it different colours, edgy.
It is hideous.

I also agree with your other post, that this idea has 'fail' written all over it.

If they had built a Sky app for use on Smart TV's, or released a Sky dongle for plugging into any tv or projector, then yes, I could see that Idea being a smash hit. No more set top box, no dish, and no new TV's required.

pquinn

7,167 posts

68 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
ecs said:
They manage to get people to pay £50-100/month for channels which show +20mins of adverts per hour so I'm sure they'll be able to get people to pay for a crap TV too.
This is true. High density ads on a (exorbitant) paid service was one reason for ditching.

Zoon

7,209 posts

143 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
I scrapped sky years ago, don't see any value in it whatsoever.
This hasn't changed my mind.

P-Jay

11,217 posts

213 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Venturist said:
It would be fascinating to hear the business logic behind getting into making TVs. That’s a conscious choice, someone had to propose it and had to convince the board it was the smart choice for the future of the company.

Considering they already have the universally available NowTV service, they could have just expanded that a little bit whilst pocketing the savings from retiring the satellite service.

If the pricing is including the TV and the service it seems quite reasonable but I’m not sure how many people would be excited about renting a new telly as a combo deal to get their Sky, when they probably already have a perfectly good telly if they’re interested enough in TV to still be keen on paying for Sky.

Note the TV itself doesn’t do anything special, it’s the “puck” device that it seems acts like any other dongle, but is only available with the telly. Expect to see the TVs retired in 12 months and the dongle carry on solo.
The rumour was that Sky was going to merge Now with Q when they went 'dishless'.

Sky would have a few problems to deal with doing that. Consumer surveys typically show that few Sky (or virgin for that matter) customers actually watch that much premium programming anymore, still spending most of their time gawping at channels that are on freeview or whatever that's called now. A situation only made worse by the big streaming services taking back their biggest shows from the likes of Sky Atlantic (I know it's called something else now) for their own platforms. Look at any of the 'biggest TV Shows of 2021' lists online and the majority of them are either on BBC/ITV, or Netflix, Disney+/Starz or Prime.

https://www.telltalesonline.com/27957/popular-tv-s... there's 2 or 3 possibly that Sky have exclusive rights to in the UK in the top 50 that I can see?

The only real exception in the UK is HBO, legacy stuff like The Sopranos / The Wire people love to watch over and over and current stuff like Billions, Sky pretty much has exclusive rights to that in the UK... until HBO Max launches, possibly mid-2022.

Sports is the obvious exception, but with Netflix sniffing around F1 rights, Sky might not be able to keep their monopoly much longer.

Sky's real MSP, if customers are honest, is still Sky+, a single, user friendly portal that contains all the broadcast channels in one place, and well, yes recording them, but that's really starting to feel a bit 20th Century now, especially to younger consumers. Again, this is being eroded slightly by the streamers not being on it.

By leasing their customers the TV (instead of a set-top box) they can continue to keep them on the contract merry-go-round. A lot of Sky customers are very loyal and will lap it up, but I think they're older people, for who, Satellite TV, even without the Satellite is exotic.

I do wonder if this is a last ditch defence for Sky, at least as they are now. They're revamping most of their channels, of which frankly there are few, spreading them out, and moving them around like deckchairs on the Titanic


Edited by P-Jay on Thursday 7th October 13:47

Zoon

7,209 posts

143 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Fast forward ads included free for 12 months, then £5 a month to keep or simply remove it. All Sky TV packs have a 31 day contract.

No!

voram

8,024 posts

56 months

Thursday 7th October 2021
quotequote all
Zoon said:
I scrapped sky years ago, don't see any value in it whatsoever.
This hasn't changed my mind.
I've been waiting for an excuse to dump Sky - and this will probably be it!