There's been a ton of responses already, but I'm a little different, so I thought I'd contribute. I have a pretty nice home AV setup from working in the industry for a while, and I ditched Comcast last August when I moved into a new place, and I haven't really missed it. I get all I really want from over-the-air, Hulu and the network sites and in some cases in better quality. The one thing I do miss is digital audio from the Internet sites... but I haven't looked much into whether I can get that or not. The Comcast guide here in the DC area is an antiquated pile of buggy poo and my TV experience is better without it. The HD quality is also much better over the air in 100% unadulterated ASTC. I got a number of comments at the superbowl party I hosted on how good the picture was on my 5 year old mid-range plasma (i.e. not a killer TV, but decent) because people were used to the crappy Comcast HD (which is compressed to go over their network and reconstituted into ASTC by the box at the consumer). Honestly, if FIOS was available here, I'd jump on that bad wagon because a) their HD compression is less aggressive and b) their interface is quite wonderful and adds, not detracts, from the viewing experience. IF Comcast a) got better hardware and improved their interface instead of wasting money on a rebranding campaign (Infinity??? really???) and b) had better up-time in the DC area (the Internet goes wonky most days for some time between 5 and 8pm, I assume due to over-saturation, or when it rained), I'd go back, but I'm not paying $80 a month for sketchy Internet and a 1990-era interface. I don't mind paying for cable (as I did for TimeWarner in Milwaukee), but I do mind paying for something that's actually worse than what I can get for free.