Nearly all of the major satellite, local cable and telco TV providers in the country appear to be on board for deep integration into Apple’s groundbreaking TV app come fall, according to a beta of the iOS 11 operating system that Apple provided Monday to developers.

Dish Network, DirecTV and a handful of local cable companies are already on board with Apple’s system-level feature called Single Sign-On that launched in December 2016 and allows iPhone, iPad and Apple TV users to automatically authenticate to a long list of TV Everywhere apps. The feature turns Apple’s TV app, which also launched in December 2016, into a one-stop shop for keeping up with and launching TV shows.

The new beta of Apple’s iPhone and iPad operating system — called iOS 11 beta 3 — that Apple provided to app developers on Monday lists a slew of new TV providers, including AT&T U-verse, Cable One, CenturyLink, Charter Spectrum, Comcast Xfinity, Cox, Mediacom, TWC Spectrum and Verizon Fios. The new beta for the Apple TV operating system — called tvOS beta 3 — also launched on Monday, but it’s not clear yet whether the new providers are included in that beta.

System-level authentication with Single Sign-On is the killer feature of Apple’s TV app for iPhone, iPad and Apple TV. The app, which was bug-ridden and only worked with 20 or so apps at launch, is now running smoothly and works with a long list of broadcast (ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, The CW and PBS), cable (AMC, HGTV, FX, etc.), premium (HBO, Showtime and STARZ) and streaming (Netflix, Hulu, Crackle, etc.) apps. The TV app presents all of the shows you’re watching from different apps onto a single screen and lets you know when new episodes are available.

Apple announced at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June that Amazon Prime Video, which was already available on iPhone and iPad but is the only major SVOD service that does not have an Apple TV app, would come to Apple TV sometime this fall and hinted at the conference that it would have more TV-related announcements in the fall.

Scott Porch writes about the streaming-media industry for Decider and is also a contributing writer for Playboy. You can follow him on Twitter @ScottPorch.