DirecTV just changed our system here, it was poorly done, but we survived. The feed is now over the internet instead of satellite. The picture is better even though I have a 1K TV. We used to lose signal if it was moderately cloudy.
Yep, as I've mentioned several times since I've worked with these various companies, cable/satellite is a major headache. They have fixed bandwidth either within the cable or via a satellite feed, and they have a lot of legacy boxes out there in the world that only support less efficient compression. Which means if they are sending ESPN out there, they probably need to have MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and HEVC compression options so they have three different streams they have to fit into their bandwidth envelope for a single channel.
Which means that they compress the HELL out of everything using settings that strip out a lot of the quality, because they're also trying to provide as many channels as possible.
This tends to also affect streaming companies somewhat, as they have to pay for the bandwidth they use. However, their transmissions are point-to-point, which means that if I'm watching ESPN on Hulu, they don't have to send me 100 other channels 100% of the time. It also means that whatever box I have receiving it (whether it's a Roku, or a native TV app, or whatever) can identify which compression protocol it's capable of decoding, and Hulu only has to send one. So while they are also forced to compress quite a bit to save on bandwidth costs, they don't have the same constraints as cable/satellite... Hence why streaming DirecTV will be higher quality than satellite DirecTV.
And that's also why digital OTA network broadcasts are often the highest picture quality. They don't have to worry much about compression settings because they're not "paying for bandwidth" in any meaningful sense.
Which is funny, because people used to go to cable/satellite for the picture quality vs analog rabbit ears... And now the best picture quality is digital "rabbit ears" while cable/satellite is often the worst picture quality.