Unfortunately, DISH's sats sit too low for me to get a shot at them from my heavily wooded lot. And taking down trees isn't an option. Besides, that just trades one ball and chain for another.
That doesn't make much sense. If you're on the east coast, Dish's satellites are higher, since they are farther east, on their newer "Eastern Arc" service at 61.5/72.5/77. If you are farther west, you'd use Western Arc, which is at 110/119/129. Older setups in the east use 110/119 for the main programming, and a wing dish on 61.5 for locals, BUT they cannot receive all the programming, as newer HD channels on Top200 and up are on 72.5 and 129, NOT 61.5. For DirecTV, you have to be able to see 99/101/103 in all markets, and in some markets, you also have to be able to see 110/119.
The biggest dishes with the biggest satellite fleet out there is the DirecTV Slimline 5-LNB, which hits 99/101/103/110/119. It's possible that you can barely see DirecTV's sats, but if you have a decently clear shot at DirecTV, you can get Dish. The only likely situation where you can get one not the other is if you are in the east, and can hit Dish Eastern Arc but not DirecTV.
That's pretty much what I'm seeing. Although I haven't explored what's available on Torrents yet.
Everything. And more. eztv.it is a good starting point. I download Colbert and Stewart off of there. The quality is between SD and HD, but let me say, the encoding is incredible. Since they are downloads, not streams, they throw a lot of CPU power at the xViD encoding, and they look gorgeous. There is some stuff available in 720p, which is really the sweet spot for file size vs. quality, and the SD stuff that is ripped from HDTV is usually around 540p, which looks fantastic, even though it's not HD.
Just be aware that ones that have HDTV in the filename mean they were ripped from HDTV, not that they are HDTV. They are the 540pish ones, if they say 720p in the filename, THEN they are HD.
If you are downloading network shows, I'm sure the content providers have cooked the law books to figure out some way to make it illegal, even though it shouldn't be since it's freely available. I don't know the exact status, but I consider downloading Comedy Central to be legal for me, since my parents subscribe to it at home, as does my university on our craptasic cable system. It's unquestionably illegal if you don't subscribe to the channel in the first place.
The big issue here is that torrents will not get you live events (sports). Some sports are on the networks, but a lot of it isn't, like most baseball games, which are RSN territory.
Torrents are useful even if you have a subscription service, it's a lot easier to torrent a show than to suck it off of a TiVo or whatnot if you want to watch it on a computer, and there is a lot of foreign, recent archive, limited reach, etc content out there, plus its a nice recovery for when your DVR has a brain fart and doesn't record something, or its gets deleted or whatever.
Given the way that they have operated in the mobile phone space, Apple could be just as bad as the cable / satellite providers.
The problem is that they still aren't likely to handle live streaming. AT&T's U-Verse is the closest we have gotten to a full TV service over IPTV, but you could argue it doesn't count, since it runs on a closed, private network, and cannot roam off of that network. If you're going to subscribe to a full video service for your RSN, you've already subscribed to everything else, so that pretty much kills an Apple TV subscription.