Did Microsoft Just Make It Easy For Xbox One Owners To Drop Cable?

One of the biggest challenges facing cord cutters is that while there are lots of ways to get low-cost and even free video to replace cable organizing those options has never been easy.

Microsoft has attempted to solve that by making its Xbox One console a hub for organizing programming of all types. The device has always made it relatively easy to switch between gaming, on-demand content apps, and pay television through a cable or satellite box.

Now, however, Microsoft is going a step further and partnering with an experienced industry leader to offer access to over-the-air television programming.

What is Microsoft doing?The Windows-maker has partnered withHauppauge, a 23-year veteran in the over-the-air TV space, to offer Xbox One users an easy way to get free television through their console. Microsoft explained the deal in a blog post.

The company also pointed out that if you pair over-the-air TV withDISH Network's $20 a month Sling TV service, you would have access to both local networks and cable's most popular channels.

What Microsoft does not point out is that pairing OTA TV and Sling gives potential cord cutters an easy way to dropComcast,Time Warner Cable,AT&T,Verizon,DirecTV, or any other provider. Yes, expanded basic cable offers more channels than Sling TV plus OTA channels, but $20 a month is a lot less than the $64.41 the average American paid for cable as of 2013, according to the FCC.

By making switching from OTA channels to Sling (and other streaming services likeNetflix or Hulu Plus) closer to a traditional channel flipping experience Microsoft has turned Xbox One into a viable solution for cord cutters.

A look at the Xbox One channel interface Source: Microsoft

How it works?Getting free OTA TV on an Xbox is not quite free as console owners will have to buy a tuner made by Hauppauge (the WinTV-955Q which sells for $79.99 at most retailers and an HDTV antenna ($24.99) for anAmazonBasics model). Microsoft does plan to bring that cost down a little bit as it said it "will be partnering with Hauppauge to release a lower cost version of this tuner, the Hauppauge TV Tuner for Xbox One, retailing for MSRP $59.99, and available to everyone in the U.S. and Canada," in the future.

Microsoft did caution is customers in the blog post that OTA offerings can vary greatly by market.

Once an Xbox One owner decides to take the plunge and buy aHauppauge tuner and an HDTV antenna, the process of using it to watch TV is pretty simple.

Will it matter?When Microsoft first launched the Xbox One the kickoff press conference focused largely on how he device works as an entertainment hub, not just a gaming machine. Consumers widely rejected that functionality though that may have been at least partly because it was heavily tied to the Kinect motion-sensor device.

Now, Microsoft has created a compelling package for cord cutters -- at least the ones who own or were on the fence about buying an Xbox One. With the console and the required add-ons, it's now possible to have a very cable-like experience without needing to pay for cable.

That's a huge plus which should win Xbox some converts and give some existing owners a reason to cancel their cable subscriptions.

The article Did Microsoft Just Make It Easy For Xbox One Owners To Drop Cable? originally appeared on Fool.com.

Daniel Kline owns shares of Microsoft. He has an Xbox One but has mostly used it to play games (badly). The Motley Fool recommends Amazon.com, Netflix, and Verizon Communications. The Motley Fool owns shares of Amazon.com and Netflix. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright 1995 - 2015 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.