Millem wrote: » Thank you for your reply. The weird thing is, amazon ship here no problem unlike the fire stick! If I order now tv do I just plug it and register? I don't have a satellite dish or an aerial.
Kristopherus wrote: » The best way of keeping Sky from bothering you is to register with a UK address. There's no way of avoiding the registration as its part of the setup process. If buying, I'd advise buying from Amazon as you can buy it with a package, either Entertainment or Movies. A Sports package is expensive. I won a 1-day Sports Pass last July and activated last Monday. To be honest, the quality of their stream was a disappointment. Have seen better from illegal streams. If you do buy it with a package, make sure you avail of the free 14-day pass the have with the Entertainment & Movies, before activating the pass that comes with the box.
Kristopherus wrote: » The best way of keeping Sky from bothering you is to register with a UK address.
colm_mcm wrote: » Don't eir and Vodafone offer sky sports too?
coylemj wrote: » No, you need to pay Now using a UK credit card. Otherwise, it's not Sky that will bother you, Now will close your account and give you a refund i.e. a polite PFO. The first few digits (I think it's 6) of your credit card tells anyone who wants to know the name of the bank who issued the credit card and Now will cancel your account once they figure out that you are based on the ROI regardless of what address you claim to live at - UK or ROI. That's what happened me last year when I registered with a UK address (but paid with my Irish credit card) to watch the US Open golf, they closed my account by Saturday. Argos Ireland offered the Now box about a year ago, clearly they didn't know that Now doesn't want business from anyone in the ROI and you'd have to suspect that they had to take the boxes back and give refunds after people here had their accounts closed after a couple of days. My guess is that Virgin Media have an exclusive agreement with Sky which states that VM is the only company in the ROI who can offer non-satellite (i.e. cable or internet) access to Sky Sports. In turn, this means that the agreement between Sky and Now in the UK precludes Now from taking any business from customers in the ROI.
Millem wrote: » Thanks for all that info. My credit card is tesco bank. Would that be a uk card or Irish card?
coylemj wrote: » My guess is that Virgin Media have an exclusive agreement with Sky which states that VM is the only company in the ROI who can offer non-satellite (i.e. cable or internet) access to Sky Sports. In turn, this means that the agreement between Sky and Now in the UK precludes Now from taking any business from customers in the ROI.
gerrybbadd wrote: » Been using it well over 12 mths with an Irish card. No problems whatsoever
Nonoperational wrote: » Really not quite sure why people post "advice" as if its fact which is complete nonsense.
coylemj wrote: » I understand your point but I registered with an Irish credit card, they took my money and I was able to access Sky Sports for two days, then they cancelled my account with no explanation and refunded my money. Argos briefly sold the Now box here then withdrew it. And the Now TV website says you have to reside in the UK. See post #8 above.
coylemj wrote: » Is the address on the account in the UK or ROI and what currency is the card denominated in - GBP or EUR?
Kristopherus wrote: » Did you register with a UK address?
coylemj wrote: » Yes I did, I had no choice. Just now I went into their website and started the process of applying for a Sky Sports pass. The 'country' field offers you either 'UK' or 'Channel Islands' and you are required to enter a valid UK postcode. I don't know if the same applies to the other options you can purchase but the only option I would ever want to purchase is a 7 day sports pass to watch the golf majors.
doxy wrote: » Thinking of signing up to this. They have a deal for 3 months entertainment package for £3 at present. So u need to use a UK card and a UK address? Would a revolt card qualify as a UK card?
Schwanz wrote: » Can you apply a pass code bought in the UK to an irish account?