5 Reasons to Ditch Your Cable Box or Satellite Dish

Why spend $50 to $100 a month for video entertainment when there's so much good, free stuff on the Web? Good-bye, couch potato, and hello, mouse potato.

Lost lost me a long time ago. I'm sick to death of all doctor shows (but especially Grey's Anatomy). And if I see one more CSI or Law& Order spin-off, I may turn homicidal myself.

I figure millions of other sofa surfers feel the same way I do. Fortunately, we now have a wealth of online alternatives to the same old, same old. Webcasters such as Joost and Veoh have emerged to compete head-to-head with cable, satellite, and broadcast TV--and new services seem to pop up every week.

Unlike video portals like Hulu.com or YouTube, these Webcasters offer stand-alone viewers and cable-like channel lineups, as well as new ways to interact with what you're watching and who elsemight bewatching with you.

Admittedly, some services are more ready for prime time than others. But all offer smart alternatives to the idiot box, for a lot less than $50 to $100 a month.Here are five good reasons to kick the cable/satellite habit.

1. Joost

Joost online video service; click to view full-size image.From Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis--the brainy Finns who brought you Kazaa and Skype--comes the much-hyped Joost, which is less like a new form of TV than the old one juiced up with such Webbish features as chat and blogging.

Once you launch Joost'sstand-alone player, it acts like a TV set that you'veswitched on, automatically streaming whatever channel you were watching when you last turned it off. Joost's programming is a mix of older mainstream programs--original Star Trek and Twilight Zone episodes, Snoop Dogg and REM music videos, Ren and Stimpy cartoons--plus selections from sources like The Kung Fu Film Channel and College Humor TV. Some are preceded by 10- to 30-second spots for Clorox, Cadillac, Excedrin, and other products, but otherwise it's all free.

What makes Joost different is how it integrates with the social Web. You can open a chat window and jaw with other viewers, e-mail video links to your friends, send IMs via Google Talk, or post a blog entry about what you're watching--all without leaving the video screen. But it's up to you to find stuff worth talking about.

2. Vuze

Vuze online video service; click to view full-size image.In the increasingly crowded field of Webcasters, Azureus's Vuze stands out mostly because its video looks better, thanks to a rich selection of HD content. The other thing that makes Vuze different is that it uses BitTorrent, which makes big downloads much faster (though dicier, too, if your ISP throttles BitTorrent traffic).

Aside from film previews, though, Vuze's content is far from the mainstream. You'll find indie music videos, full-length films like Blood of Ghastly Horror, mashups combining film clips with popular songs, obscure sports (paintball, dune buggy racing), and some "mature" content (such as bikini photo shoots). Most are available for free; some you can rent or buy for $1 to $2.

In most cases you can download or stream the clips and play low-res samples before committing (a good thing, since HD videos soak up 10MB to 50MB per minute). You can also download games such as Eidos's Hitman and play free for 60 minutes before coughing up for the full game. Vuze saves everything to a dashboard that makes finding stuff later easy.

Are you a wanna-be videographer? You can upload your own videos, and then offer them for free, collect a percentage of revenue generated by ads that play along with your clip, or sell your videos and split the take with Vuze. Try doing that with your cable set-top box.

3. Blinkx Broadband Television

Blinkx Broadband Television; click to view full-size image.Blinkx Broadband TV's content is easily a notch above what you'll find on many cable and satellite stations. Because it uses the Blinkx video search engine to pull content from all over the Web, BBTV offers features, dramas, short films, and comedy sketches you typically might find only on PBS or the Independent Film Channel, if you found them at all. (BBTV also has an adult section that's definitely NSFW.) It didn't have a ton of video available at press time, but whatit does offer isgenerally pretty good. And though BBTV is designed to be ad supported, I didn't see a single commercial in my hours of free viewing.

That's the good news. The bad news is, unlike Joost or Vuze, BBTV's interface looks less like a cable channel guide and more like one designed for a computer. Its menu is organized into six broad categories (such as entertainment, news and info, and sports) with subcategories (animation, comedy, etc.), and then multiple channelswithin each. Strangely for a service built around a video search engine, there's no way to search for content inside BBTV.

The stand-alone video player is also clearly a work in progress. It crashed or stuttered several times while I was testing it (your mileage may vary), and video quality was only so-so. The Transcription feature, which uses speech recognition to translate audio into text that displays alongside the video, didn't work for most videos--and when it did work, it was laughably bad.

Launched in April, BBTV has some kinks to work out. Despite that, you may find yourself wasting hours watching it when you really should be working.

4. Babelgum

Babelgum video social network; click to view full-size image.Babelgum is really a social network built around video--like YouTube, but without the grainy videos, copyright violations, or annoying Webcam confessionals. Babelgum's 64 channels include PBS, Paranormal TV, and the Drive-In Movie Channel, but most of the content consists of nonfiction news clips, documentaries, and short independent films with a distinctly international flavor.

Still, it's the social aspect that sets this video service apart. You can rate videos, tag them, create your own page of favorites, embed them in your blog, or add them to your Facebook profile. You can join communities centered on, say, old cartoons or motorcycles, and then exchange comments on screen with other community members. And of course you can search for content by tags that other Babelgummers have attached to each clip.

The coolest feature: You can create "smart channels" that aggregate clips based on search terms, with pleasingly random results. For example, my search for "maxim" created a channel featuring Maxim magazine models, old commercials for Maxim Instant Coffee, and a vintage clip of Maxim Litvinoff, Stalin's commissar for foreign affairs.

Still in beta at press time, Babelgum seems to have only a few thousand users (one of whom is Spike Lee, who chaired the recently completed Babelgum Film Festival in Cannes). Be the first on your block to watch it.

5. Veoh

Veoh online video service; click to view full-size image.If you had to sum up Veoh's philosophy, it might be that a mind is a wonderful thing to waste. The service easily offers the widest selection of mainstream content,pulling from Google, Hulu, Yahoo, andYouTube video searches, as well as nearly every other well-known online source. You'll find moviessuch asAlien or The Usual Suspects, episodes of older TV shows like Adam 12 and Firefly, and a wide range of Web-only content (including some adult-oriented material). You can search shows by tag or title. Like TiVo, Veoh can offer recommendations based on videos you've watched.

Veoh also lets you build your own Veoh portal mixing video with Flickr photos, news headlines, Web-based e-mail, Amazon searches, Craigslist ads, weather reports, and other RSS-fueled widgets.

The downside? You must deal with the limitations of each source, such asunskippable commercials, grainy videos that are hard to watch in large sizes, and "shows" that are actually just clips instead of entire episodes. Another problem: If you play a clip from Hulu and click anywhere on the screen,that automatically sends your browser to Hulu.com--which gets annoying fast.

If you believe 500 channels simply aren't enough, Veoh will give you plenty of new ways to waste your brain.

Contributing Editor Dan Tynan wastes his brain daily on his blog, Tynan on Technology.

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