From past conversations, you all know that I use "alternative methods" for acquiring some of my television content. Sometimes it is episodes of TV that got garbled on my DVR due to bad weather. Sometimes it is the odd show that I cannot get from either OTA or my streaming services (and very well may buy on disc later). Either way, I use a fairly elaborate setup to safely acquire the content I want when I want it. I feel no particular moral or ethical qualms since it is mostly stuff I can get OTA or will buy later anyway, but there is a very practical set of circumstances that are making me seriously reconsider doing this at all.
1. It ain't cheap.
That may seem counter-intuitive, but it isn't. I added up all the money I spend per year on proxy services, VPN services, Usenet indexers, Usenet accounts, etc. and it came out to about $323. That is about $27/month, which is more than I spend on Netflix, Hulu and Amazon combined. This might make economic sense if I pirated everything I watch like most other people I know who have this setup, but I don't. I pay for the overwhelming majority of what I watch. That means I am spending $27/mo to pick up a half dozen shows and fill in the odd broadcast TV gap. Honestly, that does not make a whole lot of economic sense. I could literally buy more seasons of TV shows ala carte than I am getting buy spending all this money.
2. It ain't that easy.
Have you ever tried to install and configure nzbGet, SickRage and Transmission on a NAS with an Indexer and Proxies? I have spent hours and hours on this stuff. It is great once you set it all up. All you have to do is log into SickRage, tell it what show you want, tell it whether you want the backlog of past episodes and you are done. It will download the backlog, auto-download every new episode as it appears, rename the files, download the metadata and move it into your file structure in a well ordered manner. It will even tell Plex that the new files are there, so that Plex will automatically refresh. The problem is getting to that point. What a nuisance!
So basically, it is a somewhat expensive and difficult way of getting instant gratification on a handful of shows I'm going to buy later anyway. I pay for most of my services on an annual basis, so I may keep this running for awhile, but now that the streaming options are getting better and better and so much content is available for purchase even during the current TV season, I cannot see myself bothering in the long term.
1. It ain't cheap.
That may seem counter-intuitive, but it isn't. I added up all the money I spend per year on proxy services, VPN services, Usenet indexers, Usenet accounts, etc. and it came out to about $323. That is about $27/month, which is more than I spend on Netflix, Hulu and Amazon combined. This might make economic sense if I pirated everything I watch like most other people I know who have this setup, but I don't. I pay for the overwhelming majority of what I watch. That means I am spending $27/mo to pick up a half dozen shows and fill in the odd broadcast TV gap. Honestly, that does not make a whole lot of economic sense. I could literally buy more seasons of TV shows ala carte than I am getting buy spending all this money.
2. It ain't that easy.
Have you ever tried to install and configure nzbGet, SickRage and Transmission on a NAS with an Indexer and Proxies? I have spent hours and hours on this stuff. It is great once you set it all up. All you have to do is log into SickRage, tell it what show you want, tell it whether you want the backlog of past episodes and you are done. It will download the backlog, auto-download every new episode as it appears, rename the files, download the metadata and move it into your file structure in a well ordered manner. It will even tell Plex that the new files are there, so that Plex will automatically refresh. The problem is getting to that point. What a nuisance!
So basically, it is a somewhat expensive and difficult way of getting instant gratification on a handful of shows I'm going to buy later anyway. I pay for most of my services on an annual basis, so I may keep this running for awhile, but now that the streaming options are getting better and better and so much content is available for purchase even during the current TV season, I cannot see myself bothering in the long term.