AT&T is using its DirecTV Now streaming TV service to test the limitations of 5G technology.
If you haven’t had a chance sign up for DirecTV Now’s streaming TV service, you may want to do that now.- otherwise you’ll miss out on DirecTV's $35 promotional offer.
Cord cutters were excited to try out AT&T's new streaming service DirecTV Now, but the launch was plagued with problems that made it nearly unusable.
Two days after its announcement, AT&T’s new streaming service DirecTV Now has officially launched on the App Store and Google Play Store as a free download.
“Our new customer-centric offers show that mobility and entertainment are better together,” said AT&T Entertainment Group CEO John Stankey.
Chinese tech company LeEco had its major US launch last month, with most of its smartphones and TVS available via its LeMall website. Starting Dec. 1, you’ll be able to buy them from US-based retailers, including Amazon, Best Buy and Target.
AT&T has officially announced DirecTV Now as its new streaming TV service at an event held in New York City.
After teasing its DirectTV Now for months, AT&T sent out invites for an event in New York City on Nov. 28, where we’ll get to hear all about the new streaming service.
AT&T's DirectTV Now online TV service is set to launch next month.
AT&T's proposed merger with Time Warner Cable awaits regulatory scrutiny, but if the deal is a success, what will that mean for consumers?
Thanks to better customer service and a nifty new cable system, pay TV’s biggest provider keeps growing.
The satellite TV company still has 13.9 million TV customers, but the exodus likely won't stop anytime soon.
The FCC is repackaging and selling the rights to airwaves mobile companies will use to beef up network speed and capacity.
TWC won back customers thanks to better customer service, but sky-high programming costs remain a concern.
The new plans start at $100 a month and include unlimited talk text, data and video streaming.
Cable companies and networks are pointing fingers at one another over impending rate hikes in 2016. As usual, it’s the consumers who lose.
The problem for pay TV companies isn’t that current subscribers are abandoning ship but that new customers are harder to come by.
Nearly 200,000 people cutting the cord sounds like a lot but actually represents one of the better third quarters for cable and satellite companies.
Even as cord-cutting slowed for some cable operators, satellite TV giant Dish Network lost more subscribers in the third quarter than it did in the year-earlier quarter.
The acquisition of DirecTV dragged AT&T's revenue lower than Wall Street was expecting.
Why would a European telecom giant want a struggling U.S. cable operator? It's all about scale and synergy.
The deal, which will see European telecoms group Altice acquire the U.S. media company will likely face scrutiny from regulators, as communications firms continue to consolidate.