YouTube TV is testing out four-way multiview in early access, finally bringing one of fubuTV’s best features to the streaming service.
Multiview allows a viewer to watch multiple streams simultaneously, splitting the screen between two or more events. fuboTV has had the feature for years, but YouTube TV is finally rolling it out to its users. While multiview is only available in early access, the company says all subscribers will be able to use it in the next few months.
During early access, some members will begin to see an option to watch up to four pre-selected, different streams at once in their âTop Picks for Youâ section. After selecting multiview, viewers will be able to switch audio and captions between streams, and jump in and out of a fullscreen view of a game. Multiview joins our suite of features for sports fans and weâre looking forward to continuing to improve the experience and introducing it to all YouTube TV subscribers over the next several months.
Best of all, the company is deploying the service in a way that all users, regardless of their home streaming equipment, will be able to use.
“We moved the processing requirements to happen on YouTubeâs servers,” said German Cheung, Engineering lead, YouTube TV. “This allows all subscribers to use the feature, regardless of their home equipment, because when it’s streamed to them, their device sees only one live feed, instead of two or four. â
Multiview is an awesome feature, especially for sports fans that don’t want to miss a moment of the action. By adding the feature to its service, YouTube TV is continuing to establish itself as the best all-around live TV streaming service.
YouTube TV appears to be experiencing an outage, one that is impacting Apple TV, TVision Hub, and other streaming devices.
Users began reporting errors on Monday afternoon. According to 9to5Mac, Apple TV users seem to be heavily impacted, although it’s not the only device experiencing trouble.
WPN confirmed that the Android-based TVision Hub was also impacted, although the problem appears to be fixed.
Google has beat out its rivals to secure a deal with the NFL to bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV and YouTube Premium.
Amazon, Apple, and Google were all in the running to secure NFL Sunday Ticket, beginning with the 2023 season. Apple was considered to be a frontrunner before backing out of the negotiations.
Google has now secured a multi-year deal with the NFL to bring the programming to both YouTube TV and YouTube Premium.
“We’re excited to bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV and YouTube Primetime Channels and usher in a new era of how fans across the United States access, watch and follow the NFL,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said. “For a number of years we have been focused on increased digital distribution of our games and this strategic partnership is yet another example of us looking towards the future and building the next generation of NFL fans.”
“YouTube has long been a home for football fans, whether they’re streaming live games, keeping up with their home team, or watching the best plays in highlights,” said Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube. “Through this expanded partnership with the NFL, viewers will now also be able to experience the game they love in compelling and innovative ways through YouTube TV or YouTube Primetime Channels. We’re excited to continue our work with the NFL to make YouTube a great place for sports lovers everywhere.”
While it may be a small feature, YouTube TV (YTTV) is finally getting a feature that most of its competitors have had for years â a clock.
As one of the most popular streaming TV services, it’s unusual when YTTV is missing a feature. It’s even more unusual when that feature is such a basic one that it’s hard to understand its omission in the first place.
According to a post on Twitter, YTTV has finally added the lowly clock to the service’s interface.
T-Mobile opted to back YouTube TV (YTTV) when it ended its own TVision streaming service, but customers are being left in the cold.
Like many T-Mobile customers, I cheered the companyâs entry into the TV streaming market. The magenta carrier has a well-earned reputation for putting customers first and has revolutionized the cell phone industry. Unfortunately, TVision was not meant to be, and T-Mobile announced it was shutting it down less than six months later.
T-Mobile partnered with Google to give its customers a discount on YouTube TV as an alternative to TVision. On paper, the deal looked good: one of the leading streaming platforms for a reasonable discount.
Fast forward a year and a half later, and the partnership between the two companies has resulted in an exceptionally poor experience for the consumer, a shocking departure for T-Mobile, a company that has built its brand on customer service.
There are two main ways this partnership fails, both of which I experienced after giving YTTV a try after using Sling TV exclusively since TVisionâs demise. As someone who tries to use Googleâs services an absolute minimum over privacy concerns, I was lured to try YTTV with a half-price offer for T-Mobile customers that were enrolled in their Magenta MAX plans and used their T-Mobile Home Internet service.
Location-Based TV
Almost immediately, I started getting warnings when watching local channels that I was not in my local area, as defined by the zip code I entered when signing up for YTTV.
I went through the steps to verify my account, but each attempt pinged my location to a city nearly 100 miles away. This wasnât particularly surprising since using internet speed testing services often showed that city as the location of the T-Mobile servers my internet was being routed through.
Ultimately, there was no way to get my computer to properly reflect my location since it was entirely dependent on where T-Mobile was routing my traffic. I was able to get it working by using my mobile phone to verify my location, but itâs an imperfect solution. The steps must be followed for each browser you use, and it is temporary, meaning you have to periodically go through the steps to keep your location accurate.
I reached out to Twitter to get assistance from T-Mobileâs support team, and while the person I dealt with was very helpful, they were unable to fix the issue. Why? Because T-Mobileâs Home Internet does not support TV streaming services that are location-based.
To be perfectly clear: T-Mobile partnered with a TV streaming service that offers localized channels â based on your location â knowing full well that T-Mobile Home Internet was not compatible with that service. Ironically, Sling TV works perfectly with T-Mobile Home Internet despite T-Mobileâs customer support rep saying otherwise.
Whatâs more, the company cannot claim that it did not intend for T-Mobile Home Internet users to use YTTV with the service since it specifically offered a half-off discount for T-Mobile Home Internet users.
To intentionally promote a service that you know is not compatible and wonât work for the very users being targeted is incredibly disappointing at bestâŚunethical at worst.
Billing Issues and Disappearing Discounts
The second issue is disappearing discounts when YTTV is paused for any reason.
This happened to me through a combination of factors. I had YTTV set up on autopay with one of my debit cards. The card expired and I had to activate the new one.
As I mentioned earlier, I try to use Google as little as possible due to the companyâs long history of not respecting user privacy. As a result, while I have a Gmail account, I donât use it and have set up an alternative email in my Google account.
Like many people who use autopay, when it comes time to update my card I often forget exactly what services are set up on that card until I get notified. Despite having an alternate email set up, Google only sent notifications of the cardâs expiration directly to my Gmail accountâŚwhich I rarely if ever check.
While watching TV, I was suddenly presented with a screen saying the service had been paused until I could update my card, which I promptly did. Imagine my surprise when I was charged the full amount, rather than the half-price amount I had been paying.
After messaging and calling Googleâs customer support, I was told that any pause, for any reason, canceled out any promotional deals. Whatâs more, because T-Mobile no longer offers the half-off discount (it abruptly ended shortly after I pointed out to T-Mobile customer support the questionable ethics involved), there was absolutely no way for me to regain the half-off discount.
Conclusion
Taken together, these two issues shine a spotlight on a major failing of T-Mobile and YouTube TVâs partnership: customer service.
A customer support failing of this magnitude is particularly disappointing as a T-Mobile customer. The company built its brand and owes its amazing turnaround to its legendary customer service. To intentionally promote a partnership with, and offer discounts for, a service that doesnât work well for its customers is a rare but inexcusable lapse in its otherwise stellar customer service.
For Googleâs part, as someone who rarely uses the companyâs services, I canât and wonât comment on whether this is in line with the customer service it normally offers.
At the same time, however, itâs not a good look for Google to be jumping at every possible opportunity to negate customersâ promotional discounts, even if they never intentionally paused or canceled their service.
Taken together, T-Mobile and Google provide a perfect example of everything thatâs wrong with the current TV streaming market.
What I wouldn’t give for the old TVision. Short of that, I’d settle for T-Mobile partnering with a service that’s actually compatible with its Home Internet.
YouTube TV announced that Apple TV and Fire TV users can now enjoy Dolby 5.1 surround sound with compatible content.
YouTube TV is one of the most popular streaming TV services, but has not supported surround sound. After announcing support a year ago, and bringing the feature to Roku and its own Google TV devices in June, YouTube TV has finally added support for the Apple TV and Fire TV.
YouTube TV (YTTV) may be on the verge of gaining one of fuboTV’s biggest advantages, a feature that will allow multiple simultaneous livestreams.
According to Protocol, YTTV is working on “Mosaic Mode,” a feature that will allow up to four simultaneous livestreams. The feature is designed to appeal to sports fans, giving them the ability to watch multiple games or events at the same time.
Rival fuboTV is currently one of the only streaming services that offer a similar feature. The service is geared toward sports fans, but has struggled over the last couple of years to deliver on that promise. For example, fuboTV lost the Turner family of channels, including both TBS and TNT, two channels that many sports fans consider must-haves.
With YTTV preparing to duplicate fuboTV’s signature feature, the latter service may lose what competitive advantage it had â even among its core market.
YouTube TV has finally brought Picture-in-Picture (PiP) support to iOS 15 devices, making it one of the last major streaming apps to do so.
PiP is a feature that allows a user to minimize a video into a smaller, floating window. The iPhone or iPad can then be used for other tasks, while still playing the video in question. While YouTube TV has supported PiP on Android since 2017, the feature has not been available on iOS…at least until now.
YouTube TV announced the new feature in a tweet.
iPhone & iPad users
Weâre happy to share that picture-in-picture is now rolling out to your iOS 15+ devices. Simply select a video to watch and swipe [up] from the bottom of the screen to return to the device’s homepage. The video can scale down and move across your screen.
YouTube TV lost, and quickly regained, Disney-owned channels following issues negotiating a new contract.
YouTube TV warned several days ago that it could lose Disney-owned channels when its current deal expired on Friday. Ultimately, the two companies failed to reach an agreement by the deadline, with Disney-owned channels going dark as of 12:00 AM Saturday morning.
Fortunately for YouTube TV customers, the two companies have managed to hammer out a new agreement, according to a statement provided to WebProNews by Disney Media and Entertainment Distribution Sunday afternoon:
âWe are pleased to announce that after a brief disruption, we have reached a new distribution agreement with Googleâs YouTube TV for continued carriage of our portfolio of networks. We appreciate Googleâs collaboration to reach fair terms that are consistent with the market, and weâre thrilled that our robust lineup of live sports and news plus kids, family and general entertainment programming is in the process of being restored to YouTube TV subscribers across the country.â
DirecTV is raising its streaming and satellite TV packages starting in January.
DirecTV was spun off from AT&T in August, and now competes with the likes YouTube TV, Hulu with Live TV, Sling TV, and fuboTV streaming services, while still competing with Dish Network for the satellite market. Unfortunately for DirecTV customers, the company is planning on raising prices across both of its services in January.
According to The Verge, satellite TV customers will see their plans go up anywhere from $1 to $10. Meanwhile, streaming TV customers will see increases ranging from $4 to $10.
Many providers often give up channels rather than increase prices. YouTube TV recently announced it would drop its price by $15 if it loses Disney-owned channels. In contrast, DirecTV said in a statement seen by The Verge that its prices were increasing because it is committed to offering the most robust packages.
âWhile competitors continue to shrink their offerings, your DirecTV team maintains a steadfast commitment to carrying the most robust channel line-up in the industry and unrivalled [sic] leadership in premium sports and news content,â the company wrote. âIn addition, we continue to invest in providing better customer service, releasing new technology upgrades that will enhance our signal reliability, and launching improved features. We are also delivering greater flexibility to watch what you want, when you want it, from virtually anywhere in the U.S.â
YouTube TV may lose access to Disney-owned channels as the two companies work to hammer out a new deal.
YouTube TV is one of the premier streaming TV services, offering a good blend of channels, price and industry-leading cloud DVR. Unfortunately, for its customers, YouTube TV may be on the verge of losing one of its most appealing channel packages.
The company is warning that it may lose all of Disney-owned channels once the current deal expires on Friday, December 17.
Weâre now in negotiations with Disney to continue distributing their content on YouTube TV so you can continue watching everything from your favorite teams on ESPN to The Bachelor to Good Morning America. Our deal expires on Friday, December 17, and we haven’t been able to reach an equitable agreement yet, so we wanted to give you an early heads up so that you can understand your choices.
If the two companies are unable to reach an agreement, YouTube TV says it will lower its price to reflect the loss of channels.
If Disney offers us equitable terms, weâll renew our agreement with them. However, if we are unable to reach a deal by Friday, the Disney-owned channels will no longer be available on YouTube TV and we will decrease our monthly price by $15, from $64.99 to $49.99 (while this content remains off our platform).
Given that Disney has its own bundle for $13.99/mo, the price break YouTube TV will give if it looses the channels should be more than enough to offset subscribing to The Disney Bundle. That being said, hereâs to hoping the two companies can reach an agreement instead.
Roku and Google have settled their spat over YouTube TV, agreeing to a multi-year deal that will keep YouTube TV on the platform.
Roku and Google have been at odds since April over terms for renewing their agreement for YouTube TV streaming. Google wanted access to more customer data than Roku was willing to give.
âWe have only asked Google for four simple commitments,â a Roku spokesperson told WebProNews at the time. âFirst, not to manipulate consumer search results. Second, not to require access to data not available to anyone else. Third, not to leverage their YouTube monopoly to force Roku to accept hardware requirements that would increase consumer costs. Fourth, not to act in a discriminatory and anticompetitive manner against Roku.â
Roku ultimately pulled the YouTube TV app from its platform. Google retaliated by including streaming TV in its standard YouTube app for Roku.
Despite the dispute, it appears the two companies have reached a new agreement, as announced by Roku on Twitter.
Itâs unclear at this time which company backed down from its demands.
YouTube TV and NBCUniversal have reached a deal for YouTube TV to continue carrying NBCUniversalâs (NBCU) channels.
YouTube TV warned last week that it was on the verge of losing NBCUâs portfolio of channels over a contract dispute, with the deadline set for September 30. In the eleventh hour, the two companies announced an extension, keeping the channels on YouTube TV while negotiations continued.
It appears the two companies have reached a long-term agreement, ensuring YouTube TV customers wonât lose access to NBCUâs content. The YouTube team made the announcement in a blog post:
Weâre thrilled to share that weâve reached a deal to continue carrying the full NBCUniversal portfolio of channels. That means you wonât lose access to any of their channels, and YouTube TV will continue to offer 85+ networks for $64.99. We appreciate NBCUniversalâs willingness to work toward an agreement, and we also appreciate your patience as we negotiated with them on your behalf.
Roku has officially lost the YouTube TV app, after previously warning its customers of the possibility.
Roku warned customers earlier this week they could lose access to YouTube TV due to a contract dispute. Unlike many contract disputes, money was not the issue. Instead, Google was more interested in customer data than more money.
âWe are disappointed that Google has allowed our agreement for the distribution of YouTube TV to expire,â a Roku spokesperson told WebProNews. âRoku has not asked for one dollar of additional financial consideration from Google to renew YouTube TV.â
Much of the issue hinged around Googleâs data practices, with Roku endeavoring to protect its customers from the search giant.
âWe have only asked Google for four simple commitments,â the spokesperson continued. âFirst, not to manipulate consumer search results. Second, not to require access to data not available to anyone else. Third, not to leverage their YouTube monopoly to force Roku to accept hardware requirements that would increase consumer costs. Fourth, not to act in a discriminatory and anticompetitive manner against Roku.â
Given the scrutiny Google is already under, playing hardball with Roku is not a good look for the company, and may create further problems down the road.
Roku has accused Google of âpredatory, anti-competitive and discriminatoryâ actions regarding its YouTube TV streaming service.
Roku is the number one streaming platform in the US, making it a major factor in the success of TV streaming services. Meanwhile, Googleâs YouTube TV has quickly become one of the most popular cable TV alternatives.
According to Deadline, however, Roku is warning its customers they may not be able to access YouTube TV in the near future. While many disputes in the industry are often the result of money, Roku says Google is not asking for âa single additional dollar in valueâ in the current negotiations.
Instead, Roku says Google is âattempting to use its YouTube monopoly position to force Roku into accepting predatory, anti-competitive and discriminatory terms that will directly harm Roku and our users.â In particular, Deadline reports Roku is accusing Google of trying to âmanipulate the user experience to siphon data and tilt search results in YouTubeâs favor,â with the company more interested in customer data than charging Roku more.
In addition, Google may require Roku to upgrade its devices with more powerful chips to accommodate YouTube TV, something that would be a costly endeavor.
It is not clear when the issue will come to a head and potentially disrupt service, although the end of April is a strong possibility, as it coincides with many media contract deadlines.
Google has announced it is ending support for its Play Movies & TV app on Roku and smart TVs by LG, Samsung and Vizio.
Google has been moving away from its Play Movies & TV app, with the eventual goal being to replace it with Google TV, which the company unveiled in September 2020. In the meantime, the company is steering users toward its YouTube TV streaming service.
Starting 6/15/2021, the Google Play Movies & TV app will no longer be available on Roku, Samsung, LG, and Vizio smart TVs. The YouTube app will be your new home for movies and shows. Just log in with your Google account in the YouTube app today, youâll have access to all of your past purchases, and will be able to browse, purchase, and rent new content.
Google says past purchases will be available in YouTube, Google Play credits can be used in YouTube and Play Family Library purchases can be viewed on YouTube. Watchlists will not make the transition, however.
As 9to5Google points out, one disadvantage of of this approach is that YouTube TV doesnât offer the wide range of 4K support as a dedicated app, like Play Movies & TV app.
T-Mobile expanded its partnership with Google, becoming the first US carrier to make Messages by Google the default SMS choice on its Android phones.
Messages by Google is the companyâs attempt to grow beyond basic text messaging. Messages implements the RCS protocol, bringing SMS more on par with Appleâs iMessage or Facebookâs WhatsApp. RCS allows for group chats, read receipts, file attachments, encryption and more.
Unfortunately for Google, the company has had difficulty getting carriers to make the jump to the new protocol. T-Mobile has now become the first carrier to make Messages the default SMS app on Android and Pixel phones the carrier ships.
âThis is a win for Android users and an even greater win for the Android ecosystem,â said Hiroshi Lockheimer, Senior Vice President of Platforms and Ecosystems at Google. âT-Mobile and Google have been working together to champion Android since the very beginning with the launch of the T-Mobile G1 in 2008. Weâre taking what has already been a long and very successful relationship, and building on it to bring Android customers even more features and services.â
The news follows T-Mobileâs announcement it would be ending its in-house TVision streaming TV service, in favor of its customers receiving a $10 per month discount on YouTube TV.
âWeâre building on our decade-long relationship with Google to give customers an even better experience with the worldâs very best products and services offered by Android, Pixel and YouTube,â said Mike Sievert, CEO of T-Mobile. âThe worldâs most popular smartphone platform with Android, a broad range of premium Pixel devices, an upgraded, modern messaging experience on Android and a robust entertainment offering with YouTube TV â itâs the best of Google, combined with the nationâs largest and fastest 5G network on T-Mobile.â
T-Mobile has announced it is effectively killing off its TVision streaming service, less than a year after its debut, steering customers towards YouTube TV.
T-Mobile unveiled TVision in October 2020, promising to revolutionize the streaming TV industry. The companyâs foray into television, while not quite as revolutionary as T-Mobile promised, was nonetheless a competitive offering. TVision offered a wealth of channels at a price that was among the cheapest options available.
Unfortunately, T-Mobileâs efforts to offer customers what they want quickly raised the ire of its broadcasting partners, especially with its cheapest Vibe package. Vibe included over 30 lifestyle and entertainment channels for $10 per month. As a result of the disputes, T-Mobile decided to bundle all 30+ of its Vibe channels with its more expensive Live packages for free.
The resistance T-Mobile faced forced the company to reconsider its entire position in the streaming TV industry, and it appears a graceful exit is what it has decided on, effective April 29. The company has partnered with Google and Philo to give its customers a $10 per month discount.
That means T-Mobile customers get exclusive access to the best pricing on the highest-rated streaming service, YouTube TV, starting at just $54.99 per month. And, access to streaming TV through Philo starting at just $10 per month for a limited time.
The company emphasized that, in many ways, this is an upgrade over TVision. YouTube currently offers more than twice as many channels as TVision, while Philo has some of the most popular entertainment and lifestyle channels, much like the Vibe package. Customers who purchased the TVision Hub streaming device will be able to access both services on it.
The company acknowledges this is an unexpected change of direction, saying âinnovation seldom follows a straight line.â However, T-Mobile emphasizes it will continue to advocate for customers in the TV industry, an industry that is widely viewed as one of the most hated and consumer-unfriendly in America.
Our mission hasnât changed and is more relevant and important than ever. This TVision initiative is only getting stronger with these changes, and our new TVision partner offerings will give customers more choices as we wind down TVision LIVE and VIBE services on April 29. Our experience has shown us consumers need an advocate in this space. They donât want more streaming services â they want help buying and navigating the services that already exist. And they want exclusive deals and special access. Weâll continue to play that role, giving our customers the best value with the best streaming services. So millions can cut the cord with the Cableopoly once and for all.
With this latest flexing of its muscles, the TV broadcasting industry has given customers another big reason to hate it. Hopefully, T-Mobile will be able to deliver on its promise to continue fighting for the consumer…even if it no longer has its own TV service.
AT&T has announced it will start counting HBO Max against wireless data plans, ending a previous exemption.
Streaming HBO Max did not previously count against an individualâs data plan. No matter how much a person streamed the service on their phone or tablet, it had no bearing on their wireless planâs data limits. In contrast, competing services such as Netflix, YouTube, Hulu, fuboTV and others counted.
AT&T is now ending that exemption, beginning March 25, citing Californiaâs net neutrality law.
âA state-by-state approach to ânet neutralityâ is unworkable,â AT&T said in a statement, according to CNBC. âA patchwork of state regulations, many of them overly restrictive, creates roadblocks to creative and pro-consumer solutions.â
Net neutrality laws are designed to make sure all services are treated fairly, with no service being given an unfair advantage. Although the FCC reversed the Obama-era net neutrality rules, a court ruled that individual states could enact their own.
YouTube TV is adding some big new features, including 4K video, unlimited concurrent streams and offline viewing.
YouTube TV is one of the premier TV streaming services. The service is often compared with Hulu + Live TV, with the two duking it out for the top spot. One of YouTube TVâs biggest advantages is the power of Google behind it. As a result, the service has features, such as unlimited DVR space, that other services struggle to compete with.
The service is preparing to add additional features that will widen the gap even more.
âAfter just a few years, YouTube TV now has more than 3 million paid subscribers, 85+ networks, and offers unlimited DVR,â writes Neal Mohan, Chief Product Officer, YouTube. âSports fans can even enjoy their favorite games with the ability to view key plays, hide spoilers, and check out real-time stats. And thereâs more to come, including a new add-on option that lets viewers watch available shows in 4K or download them to their DVR to watch later offline. Plus, this option will add unlimited concurrent streams at home, so the whole family can enjoy YouTube TV on different screens at once.
With a starting price of $64.99, one of the most expensive options on the market, it remains to be seen if customers will want to pay more for another add-on package. 4K content and unlimited streams, however, may be enough to get customers to bite.
One of the best deals in streaming is getting a bit more expensive, as Sling TV is announcing a price hike combined with larger DVR options.
Streaming TV services have been raising prices across the board. YouTube TV announced increases in July, Hulu in November and fuboTV announced a pricing bump when it struck a deal to carry Disneyâs catalog. In fact, price increases among streaming providers have become so common that T-Mobile specifically advertised âno exploding plansâ when it unveiled its TVision streaming service.
Long considered one of the cheapest streaming options available, Sling TV is joining the ranks of its competitors in raising prices. The company has announced that new customers will be charged $35 for either the Sling Orange or Sling Blue plans, up $5/mo over previous pricing. When bundled together, the two packages will cost $50 per month, also an increase of $5.
Many of the companyâs various extra packages are also increasing $1 or $2 per month. Existing customers will not seen any price increases through July 2021, as part of the companyâs 1-Year Price Guarantee.
“Unfortunately, we are forced to raise prices because the television networks keep charging us more, but we fight hard to get the best deal for our customers. The proof of our commitment is apparent, as SLING TV is still the best deal in the market, keeping our prices much lower than cable and other live streaming services. SLING TV customers can rest assured that we’ll continue to offer the best combination of live news, sports and entertainment cable channels at the best value,” said Michael Schwimmer, group president, SLING TV.
Fortunately, the company is also addressing one of its biggest pain points, namely the size of its included DVR service. Previously Sling only offered 10 GB for free, with 50 GB available for $5 extra. With other services starting at 100 GB and going up to 1,000 GB, or even unlimited, Slingâs DVR options were anemic, to put it mildly. With the new plans, all customers will now have 50 GB of DVR storage for free, with $5 bringing that up to 200 GB.
âA robust DVR feature is a must-have for a premium entertainment experience â customers have told us they want more, and we delivered,” said Schwimmer. “By more than quadrupling DVR for all customers at no charge, SLING TV continues to provide the best value for pay-TV in the industry.”