Archive for June, 2005

It’s Google’s World; We Only Live in It

Tuesday, June 28th, 2005

Google Earth

Google Video Launches

Monday, June 27th, 2005

I am never going to leave my computer again.

Rubbing Bats and Scuffing Balls

Monday, June 27th, 2005

TJTodd Jones is having a hell of a season. The journeyman pitcher is now closing for the Florida Marlins and has 13 saves so far. (I bet he was even a free agent in your fantasy baseball league when the season started!)

Jones has written short, honest articles for The Sporting News (they’re also carried on Yahoo) for some time now. The latest, however, is something of a departure, at least in terms of content: it details and defends the widespread cheating that goes on in the game of baseball today.

As long as I’ve been around the game — and as long as there has been baseball — people have bent the rules to gain an advantage.

Not only that, but Jones, who, despite the moustache, comes across as a really nice and upright guy [update: I take this back; see comments], goes on to catalog his own rule-breaking (don’t call it cheating!).

I pitched in Denver for two years, and at a mile above sea level, I used pine tar every time I pitched at home. My thinking was that I was more than 5,000 feet in the air and was entitled to at least do that much. I never thought one thing about it. Was it cheating? My numbers say no, given that my career ERA at Coors Field is 7.64 in 59 games. It’s very dry in Denver, and that makes the baseball slippery. I needed the tar to hold onto the ball. I didn’t want the ball to slip and hit a hitter. At least, that was my thinking. I never considered it cheating; I was breaking even.

I find this fascinating in light of all the hoopla surrounding steroids. If this is really the way the game is, who can blame players for juicing up, despite what the rules say? Baseball’s biggest mistake has been in not drawing a line in the sand; it has a double standard that’s allowed to stick because the team owners and the commissioner have no balls of their own.

RSS - It’s What’s for Dinner

Friday, June 24th, 2005

Wow, is this the same Microsoft I grew up with?

They’re going to integrate RSS into their next browser release to an unprecedented extent.

They are playing by the rules, instead of forming their own proprietary version of RSS. Their own addition to the format, Simple List Extensions, will be licensed via Creative Commons.

They even have a positive quote from Lawrence Lessig–who was instrumental in the anti-trust case against Microsoft–in the press release!

Is seemed to me a few years ago that the explosion of sites designed with CSS signified some drastic split between content and design. Is this just the next step? Is it the death of HTML? Or is it just another buzzword that companies use to prop up their stock prices when everyone gets bored with whatever was hot yesterday?

Knock knock!

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005

Is this thing on?!