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Wednesday, February 5, 2014

How to Watch and Follow the Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony

Considering that NBC will live stream every second of competition during the Sochi Winter Olympics to those with a pay-TV subscription, it came as a bit of a surprise when the network announced in early January that it will delay airing the opening ceremony for eight and a half hours.
NBC Universal executives explained that streaming the grandiose ceremony so early in the day (U.S. viewers on the East Coast would have seen it at 11 a.m.) would be both confusing and underwhelming.
Watching-olympics
Of course, this poses a problem for Twitter users, as viewers in other countries without restrictions will spoil the event. U.S. viewers hoping to watch BBC or CBC coverage are also out of luck, as those stations are required to restrict streaming access to U.S. viewers due to broadcast rights.
For those keen on watching and following the opening ceremony, we've compiled the following guide.

On Television



Television schedule listing
If you're a viewer in the U.S. who doesn't mind waiting eight and a half hours to watch the ceremony, you can always watch the event on NBC when it begins. Canadian and European viewers will be able to watch the ceremony without a tape delay, so check your providers' schedule to find out when the event will be broadcast.

On Twitter

For a behind-the-scenes look, you can follow the athletes, reporters and attendees who will be at the opening ceremony as it happens. The @Sochi2014 account will cover the event, as well as the major broadcasting corporations outside the U.S., such as the @CBCOlympics account or any number of BBC reporters who will be covering the ceremony from Sochi.
View image on Twitter
Twitter has already compiled a handy list of verified Olympians, and you can watch the stream update in real-time while the ceremony is underway.
View image on Twitter

On Instagram

If the days leading up to the big event are any indication, athletes and reporters will likely take to Instagram to share photos of the ceremony as it happens. The New York Times put together a list of 10 notable olympians who are active on the network and worth a follow leading up to the ceremony.




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How to watch the Winter Olympics online

Live streaming the Winter Olympics online has become as much of a tradition as the torch-lighting ceremony because TV networks haven't been willing to broadcast the games in real-time through normal channels. The 2014 Sochi Olympics in Russia are going to be no different as the host city is half-way around the world for many fans.

In the past, time-zone differences have meant watching tape-delayed events on TV, including some of the most popular sports: figure skating, alpine skiing, snowboarding and hockey. The internet, especially Twitter, has played spoiler to who won the gold medal in each.

But the web has also provided a solution through online streaming more Olympic events than any one network can handle. NBC for one plans to air more than 1,500 hours of Winter Games coverage through its TV networks, websites and apps.

It's a vast amount of content, but finding the more than 1,000 hours that are supposed to be streamed through the web has become an Olympic sport of its own and requires practice, practice, practice.

Live stream the Winter Olympics from a laptop
Watching from a much warmer vantage point

Watch the Games on the web

The Olympics are truly an international sporting event with NBC in the US, BBC in the UK, CBC in Canada, and Network Ten in Australia all promising snow-wall-to-snow-wall coverage on the web.
NBC is putting hard numbers behind that promise, saying it'll stream every single medal-winning performance of all 98 events in all 15 winter sport disciplines through NBCOlympics.com.
That's easier said than done. Users must first pass through NBC's strict authentication methods that require logging in via a cable or satellite account. This means cord cutters and over-the-air antenna watchers are locked out.

Live stream the Winter Olympics from a laptop
Sorry, cord cutters. A cable or satellite account is required in the US.
Once authenticated, it's up to NBC to make good on its promise to competently stream the Games. The #nbcfail hashtag was born two years ago out of users' frustration at buffering times during the Summer Olympic Games in London. It was impossible to faithfully watch a second of some of the most popular streams in real-time; the 100-meter dash consisted of a starting gun and an instant winner thanks to choppy video. This year will hopefully be different.


Canada, through the CBC, has restrictions in place so that non-Canadian geo-tagged IP addresses prevent them from tapping into the network's live Opening Ceremony feed. A VPN workaround is required to watch it in the morning vs its tape-delayed broadcast on NBC.

The BBC will attempt a similar feat in the UK through its BBC Sport website boasting six HD streams with a total of 650 hours of Winter Olympics coverage.
In Australia, the Ten Network has the rights to broadcast the Olympics and a streaming platform to go along with that via its Ten Play website.

Watch the Games on a mobile device

Live streaming through smartphones and tablets is more prevalent at the Sochi Winter Olympics compared to four years ago when the Vancouver Games were held. After all, the iPad hadn't even been announced at the time.

Networks are no longer turning a cold shoulder to tiny screens, with apps available on all three major platforms: iOS, Android and Windows Phone 8.

Live stream the Winter Olympics apps
iOS, Android, Windows Phone: A triple appxel
In fact, NBC has two apps dedicated to its 1,000-plus hours of mobile streaming content. NBC Sports Live Extra and its second-screen NBC Olympics Highlights and Results. Live Extra is obviously the more desired app of the two due to its live streaming capabilities, but like the NBCOlympics.com website, it too requires account authentication.


The official CBC Sochi 2014 app is the best way for Canadian viewers to watch the games on the go from an iOS, Android and Windows Phone 8 device.

The BBC Sport app works on iOS and Android smartphones and tablets, and while we haven't found a way for Windows Phone 8 users to enjoy the games in the UK, the network is catering to owners of Amazon's Kindle Fire tablets.

Australia's Ten Network has live mobile feed has eight simultaneous streams available on both iOS and Android devices.

How to stream to a TV

Appreciating the frozen landscape of Sochi, Russia by watching the Winter Olympics on a normal-sized TV without a cable box or a satellite dish requires some extra gadgets.
The easiest way is to beam the streaming picture from an Apple computer, smartphone or tablet to an Apple TV via AirPlay mirroring. This wireless connection beats having to run wires from a device to the television, and Google's Chromecast doesn't have similar mirroring just yet.
This is as long as NBC doesn't disable AirPlay mirroring like Fox Sports Go did for the English version of its Super Bowl live streaming app earlier this week. For some reason, the Spanish-language feed worked just fine.

Live stream the Winter Olympics on an HDTV
Apple TV or a regular old HDMI cord can do the trick
Alternatively, you can always run an HDMI or Mini DisplayPort cable from a computer or laptop to the TV for the hardwired method of porting the small-screen picture to an HDTV.
Finally, folks in Australia will be able to download the Xbox One and Xbox 360 Ten Play app to conveniently stream coverage of the Olympics to their HDTVs via Microsoft's consoles.

How to watch the Opening Ceremony

Online streaming of the Winter Olympics starts off with a whimper rather a starting pistol bang because several TV networks won't be streaming the elaborate Opening Ceremony. Most time zones would have to air the choreographed spectacle in the morning.
The Opening Ceremony will be tape-delayed to 7:30 p.m. EST in the United States, but America's neighbor to the north will be streaming it live.

The problem is that geo-tagged IP addresses are sure to turn away US viewers wanting to tap. Setting up a VPN ahead of time could give you a nine hour jump on the Opening Ceremony.
Seeing this four-hour live stream, including the seemingly endless parade of athletes, at 11:30 EST may come down to whether or not your IP address is turned away at the border.




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Winter Olympics Live Streaming — Where Can You Watch Online

With the 2014 Sochi Olympics finally kicking off on Feb. 6, many of you will be wondering where to watch the Games — live — 24/7. Get the scoop on where and when to watch your favorite events below!

2014 Winter Olympics Livestream

NBC has finally embraced Olympic livestreaming, and we at HollywoodLife.com couldn’t be more thrilled.

Winter Olympics Live Stream — Where To Watch The 2014 Sochi Olympic Games Online

With 15 sports, 18 days, and 95 medal events to cover, NBC certainly has a lot of Sochi to cover! Luckily, the Peacock has decided to embrace the modern age and livestream everything directly online. Those who want to watch their favorite events — like figure skating and hockey — in primetime can still check in with Bob Costas and the gang, but those of us who need our 24/7 fix can get it at the link below, essentially eliminating that pesky nine-hour time difference (from Eastern Standard Time) that has made Olympics viewing so difficult in the past:

Click Here To Stream The 2014 Sochi Olympics

Beginning on Thursday, Feb. 6, with preliminary rounds of Snowboarding, Freestyle Skiing and Figure Skating, every phase of every competition from all 15 sports will be streamed on the site AND via mobile app.
Television coverage will also expand to 18 days for the first time in Winter Games history, with the addition of a Thursday night NBC Primetime show on Feb. 6, before the Opening Ceremonies on Friday, Feb. 7. Live daytime broadcasts begin Saturday, Feb. 8, on the NBC Sports Network.




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