Forum Discussion

melissahowk's avatar
melissahowk
New Poster
6 years ago

DISH & HBO.. still **bleep** fighting. Will a streaming device help reduce buffering on HBO GO

Hi, Ive been down the Google rabbithole many times with the constant buffering issue that's been a problem since day 1 with Hughes net. It's now a big issue for me as Dish and HBO don't seem to want to resolve their contract issue so my only other option to watch HBO is thru the HBO app.. because of the rural area I live in I get stuck paying for crappy service often. I will flip my **bleep** if I can't watch GOT without the constant buffering so will a streaming device help much if any or I'm gonna make that call to direct..that's my only option. I understand I made the choices and still do so I'm not complaining anymore.. I just need someone to give me advice that is smarter than me about this stuff
  • A few things:

    1. Satellite internet is not really made for streaming TV online. The inherent latency causes problems with some video servers.

    2. Standard definition programming or less might be ok, but it only gets worse with higher resolution programs that require a faster ping rate than satellite can provide.

    3. A one-hour HD program is about 3-5GB and will eat your plan data like there's no tomorrow.

    4. Putting your satellite TV box on the internet will also eat a lot of data as it defaults to that for many of the functions, like guide data, etc.

  • Hi Melissa,

     

    Sorry to hear you are having trouble streaming HBO Go. As a GoT fan myself, I know this year is big, so all the more reason to get this working for you. When you try to stream HBO Go today, what device are you using? 

     

    -Amanda

  • GabeU's avatar
    GabeU
    Distinguished Professor IV

    melissahowk 

     

    I can tell you that my experience with HBO Go is touch and go, no pun intended.  I don't normally use HBO Go, but when I have it's worked fairly well during the day and late at night, but in the evenings, when most people are online, I saw some buffering.  And, unfortunately, there's no way to manually adjust the definition, so there's no way to reduce the amount of bandwidth needed for the streaming.  This was mostly using a Windows 10 laptop, though I did try it a few times on a Windows 10 desktop, including just now, with the same results.  

     

    One thing I'm not sure of, though, is your HBO subscription with Dish due to the carrier dispute.  If it's not active, as in an active HBO subscription, HBO Go will likely not work for you, as your Dish sign on credentials may not show an active subscription.  The best thing you can do is just try it.  It only takes a few minutes to do it through the HBO Go site.  You'll have to choose Dish from the provider's list pull down, then sign in using your Dish credentials.  If it doesn't work, you'll know.  And, if that's the case, you'll have to look into HBO Now, which you have to pay for.

     

    As for how well HBO Now works with HughesNet, I can't tell you, but it's likely that it's similar to HBO Go.  In other words, there are no guarantees regarding buffering, as it appears that HBO Now doesn't allow manual adjustment of definition, either.    

    • MarkJFine's avatar
      MarkJFine
      Professor

      The interesting thing here, is that I watched a few seasons leading up to Season 7 via HBO Go on my Verizon iPhone, using LTE. It still buffered at least once per hour(-ish) show despite having full signal strength and no loss in data speed.

       

      Goes to show that: Sometimes, it's just not the network. Sometimes it's the provider. The network is just easier to blame.

      • GabeU's avatar
        GabeU
        Distinguished Professor IV

        MarkJFine 

         

        I ought to try it on my Tracfone using HughesNet's WiFi.  It looks like HBO's Go app for Android phones is a glitchy train wreck, so I'll try it with out the app, just to see what happens.  And, I'll try it with the app, as well.  The reason for this is that I'm wondering if it's an adaptive stream.  Granted, watching it on a 5.5" screen isn't exactly what I would want to do, and I don't have to as I have HBO with my DirecTV subscription, but it might be interesting to find out how it works.  

         

        If it's not too glitchy, either with or without using the app, I might try it with my phone's data, which is via Verizon's network (it's a CDMA/LTE Tracfone).