Dish Sling TV includes ESPN for $20-a-month. A better deal than cable?

Dish Network announced a $20-a-month Internet-based streaming service this week that includes access to ESPN, CNN, Food Network, and the Travel Channel. But combined with other streaming options, Dish's Sling TV could push fees close to cable levels anyway. 

Vivek Khemka, senior vice president of product management at Dish, speaks during a news conference at the International CES, Monday, Jan. 5, 2015, in Las Vegas. Standout features in many of the TV sets out this year will be more useful for streaming Internet video than watching broadcast or cable channels. In addition, satellite TV provider Dish Network Corp. will offer a package of channels, including ESPN and CNN, for delivery entirely over the Internet, starting at $20 a month.

Jae C. Hong/AP/File

January 6, 2015

Dish Network announced an Internet-based streaming service this week, and the big news is that it includes access to ESPN. But the $20-a-month price tag could push user's streaming fees closer to cable levels anyway.

According to Re/code, Dish's Sling TV will allow subscribers to stream content from ESPN, as well as CNN, Food Network, and the Travel Channel, to computers, tablets, and phones. It will also support some streaming devices for television, like Amazon Fire TV, Roku, and select smart TVs, but notably, not Apple TV. No release date has been announced, although Dish stated it should be available in the first quarter of 2015.

Overcoming a Big Hurdle to Cord-Cutting

Just this past summer, we cited live sports broadcasts as one of the top obstacles to cutting the cable cord. (Note that ESPN has a free app for streaming, but users must also have cable subscriptions.) At the time, our own Marcy Bonebright noted that the pro sports leagues generally sell streaming subscriptions for out-of-market broadcasts, but that does nothing for those who want to watch home games without cable; she went as far as to call sports "the Achilles heel for cord-cutters."

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But with Sling TV and ESPN, cord-cutters may turn this Achilles heel into... whatever the opposite is. Hercules' elbow?

The Numbers Might Not Add Up Yet... But Are Close

In the same article, we noted that cutting cable might not necessarily save you big bucks, depending on how much you pay to replace it. Re/code points out that with a Netflix and Hulu Plus subscription and paying for broadband, Sling TV could push your streaming services to $50 — and that's not counting the one-time costs of a digital antenna (to pick up local broadcast stations) and a streaming device (varies, from $35 for a Google Chromecast to $400 for a gaming console with streaming capabilities, or even more for a smart TV). Also, don't forget the recently-announced Internet-only HBO package, which does not yet have a price point.

For some, that will all add up to streaming subscriptions equal to or even more expensive than a basic cable subscription with HBO ($30 a month at TimeWarner). For others, especially those who would still pay for broadband, Netflix, and other services while subscribing to cable, Sling may be the chance to cut out some of the fat.

Any Other Catches?

Price isn't the only thing to consider when paying for a subscription. Re/code points out that Sling will only work for one user at a time, so there will be no sharing passwords or watching one thing on TV and another on a tablet in the next room. Also, users might find the quality of streaming live events lacking or even failed, as providers still struggle with this new technology.

What do you think, reader? Will you buy Sling and then finally cut the cable cord? Let us know in the comments below.

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Benjamin Glaser is a features editor for DealNews.com, where this article first appeared.