1-5 of 5 Answers
A lot of channels all ober the world, just need to install Kodi.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.In practice sky is the limit
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.You don't really get channels, you get content providers. They are adding providers all the time. Fire probably gets a lot more providers than Chromecast or Apple TV, but less than Roku. Roku gets 1000's (many are junk, but many are not). Amazon probably gets 1000 or less. Keep in mind that many providers will not let you see their programming unless you are a cable subscriber. Others (NFL, MLB, Netflix, Hulu, etc) allow you to subscribe directly. Many others are free (especially networks also on broadcast TV like TBN, Daystar, Univision) but a large portion of free content is junk (large, poorly managed collections of old horror movies and westerns, for example). If you want the big three or four broadcast networks (local news and weather, etc.) you'll probably have to put up an antenna. In the city, this could be as easy as a small antenna connected to the coax adapter on your TV. If you're distant (20 - 60 miles), you'll probably need an outdoor antenna and possibly an amplifier. My house was using coax for the existing cable service, so I just tied my antenna to the current coax drops going to rooms in my house. If you're interested in more info, you can comment and it's supposed to email me.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.You can get anything you want. Check out YouTube and it will tell you what you need to know about the Amazon firestick.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.There are several content options on the product plus you can upload/download your own apps that you may like or want on it such as WatchESPN app or other content apps or games, etc.
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