Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Sportsline Offers Fantasy Player Updates by RSS
I must have missed an announcement, or maybe there wasn’t any, but anyone using Sportsline for fantasy baseball can now get their player updates via RSS.
I was getting mine by email, but found it a bit rough to keep up with or pay attention to. Subscribing to a feed is much nicer than email updates for me as I can let them sit there a bit without cluttering my inbox.
I found it by seeing the little RSS icon appear in Firefox while browsing in my fantasy leagues’ websites. I was wondering if they offered the standard Sportsline feeds, or if it was something more. Turns out it was a little of both.
If you’re wondering what your feed for player updates is, the url would look something like this:
LEAGUEABBREVIATION.baseball.sportsline.com/xml/rss/updates/TEAMID
You can find your team id by mousing over your team name on the “Teams & Owners” page and seeing what that last number is.
Update before I even hit submit on this post: I went to my hockey league, and of course the feed is active for that too. Simply replace the word “baseball” with “hockey” in the url above and that’s it. Have an update for my football pool as well, but I’m not sure what I’d get out of that since I don’t actually pick players - it’s a big feed, perhaps it’s just a lot of them. Goes back to mid-March.
Tech • Sports • Baseball • 1 Comment • Permalink
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Non-Existant MLB.tv Support
Shortly after I signed up for MLB.tv I realized I wanted the All Access package. I tried calling that day, but the offices were closed.
So on Monday I tried calling again and received a busy signal over and over again. I filled out the contact form on MLB.com. I hope it went through, but after I hit send the page just sorta refreshed. No confirmation message.
On Tuesday I received an email (two actually) with the subject “Information regarding your MLB Subscription”. It was a bulk email and had this lovely paragraph inside it:
RENEWALS: For your convenience, your 2007 MLB.TV subscription will automatically renew, without interruption, before the start of each subsequent MLB season at the rate then in effect unless you cancel your subscription by sending an email requesting cancellation to customerservice@... or by calling Customer Service at (866) 800-1275 before the first game of the applicable MLB regular season (subscriptions cannot be canceled, refunded, or credited (in part or in whole) after the season starts).
Great to know that the day after the season started.
I tried calling the number again. More busy signals until, finally, I get through! Awesome! Now I can change my subscription (hopefully). I figure at worst they will cancel my subscription and I just sign up all over for All Access. I’ll even do it reverse order if necessary. All I have to do is talk to somebody now. I’m on hold 10 minutes, then 20. 20 minutes turns into an hour. Then another hour goes by. Good thing I can work during this, huh? A third hour goes by and I barely notice the fourth. Five and a half hours go by and it’s time for me to leave the office. I hang up and go home. I’m not staying late to remain on hold.
I am absolutely shocked that I was on hold for five and a half hours. What sort of customer service allows this to happen? Where was the option to leave a message? Why wasn’t I ever given any sort of time estimate? What I heard was a random mix of music interrupted by this message every so often:
All agents are still assisting other customers. Please remain on the line and the next available representative will be with you shortly.
“Shortly” apparently equals more than five and a half hours according to MLB.com.
MLB Advanced Media is listed as being on 9th Avenue. I could have walked over there and settled this in a fraction of the time, but I’m assuming they don’t take walk-ins. Perhaps I could call up from my cell phone and put it on speaker and just sit in the office so they find out how their customers feel.
There are others going through something similar, so I know I’m not alone. Major League Baseball isn’t a BBB member, but there is a page on the BBB website for them if you’re interested.
As I wasn’t sure my first email, sent through the website, was actually delievered, I sent another using good ole fashioned “normal” email. I didn’t use the address above, as this was also in the bulk email I received from them:
Thank you for your order. If you have any questions about your order or about the MLB.TV subscription service, please contact the MLB.com Customer Service Team at Customerservice2@...
I used the “2” address as that segment was about support while the first seemed to be for cancellations. I’m sure they’re receiving many because they porn-website-scam-like automatically renew it every year. No option for you.
I’ve received no response yet. No auto-responder even. I’m extremely bitter. Obviously, I’m not in the mood to give my money to MLB right now, but the original reason I wanted this was to enjoy the product and I’d still like to do so… at least for now.
Tech • Sports • Baseball • 4 Comments • Permalink
Saturday, April 01, 2006
MLB.TV Leaves Me Confused
Baseball’s a great game to focus on, or simply leave on in the background. Some like to work to music, as do I, but I like to have a game on in the background as well (when I can).
So I purchased a season pass from MLB.TV. My first complaint - right off the bat - the only subscriptions I could find, a monthly ($14.95) or season-long ($79.95) pass, are both automatic renewal subscriptions. They’re good about making it clear, but it’d be a hell of a lot nicer if that was an option.
So I start clicking around and test out a few streams. They look pretty nice. It looks like they’re using Windows Media version 9 and have a good 350k/sec feed (after initially buffering, I haven’t had it stutter again). I can use it in FireFox, which is nice too. CNN tells me I don’t have Windows Media 9, glad to see that’s not on my end. Hopefully the picture quality will continue once the season starts. I’m sure there’s less traffic on these preseason games. There’s a simple linescore next to the video. MLB.com has some nice gamecasts (they call it MLB Gameday, like the video game), why not have a miniversion of that next to the video, so I can easily go through stats from that game? I realize there could be some syncing issues, but if the data is available let’s get some in there, I don’t want to have to open yet another window (that might have to go over the video).
I decided to test out a radio feed and I see that’s a completely separate package. Another $14.95 for the season of radio. I thought perhaps they’d throw that into season TV passes, and if not, maybe there’d be a combo package option, even if it’s just a few bucks off.
Some might wonder why I’d want radio feeds since I already get the TV feed. The answer is just one of connection strength. If my connection goes to crap the radio stream has a much better chance of coming in clearly. I’m assuming it’s much less k/sec, if someone out there can let me know, that’d be great.
What they do have is a package called All Access. You get both TV and radio plus condensed games and searchable video. MLB.com advertises it as “The Best of Both Worlds”. The price is $99.95 - both worlds plus $5. I didn’t find this package until after my purchase, and I would have gotten it, because despite the fact that it’s not the best deal, I’m still after all access, I’m still after convenience. I’ll call support and see if they’re good about switching my plan. My recommendation is to list this on the page you land on after clicking the link titled “subscribe to live TV” on MLB.com’s home page. I’d think their most complete package would be listed everywhere.
Something else I’m completely confused about: local blackouts. What’s the point? Any feed I watched, I still saw commericals - is this really to protect local cable company (or sattelite company) subscriptions? Do they think they’re going to lose customers because I’m buying the MLB.TV package instead of basic cable (plus the sports network, if necessary)? What’s really ridiculous is there’s no override. You could purchase the highest possible cable package plus MLB Extra Innings (out of area games on TV) and it wouldn’t make a difference.
I still feel like they’re pushing this as some form of TV-alternative instead of something that could complement it. I’m sure I’m not the only one who’s just looking for a way to grab a game on the go or watch an at-bat when the TV is already being used. The Extra Innings package is currently $159 for the season. Why not have some real All-Access package, even if it’s just tacking on current online prices, where I could get MLB Extra Innings and the internet features and then give me access to local games online? Then they know no one’s “losing” my money and I’m finally getting closer to real all access.
MLB is coming out with mobile features soon. I’m curious as to how that will be priced and if it’ll be packaged with anything else.