April 2009
Success, according to MLB Advanced Media
A little update for y’all, after yesterday’s catastrophe of an opening night. Mark Newman’s article is now updated a little, under the title: “MLB.TV, season off to flying starts“.
Yeah.
Now, maybe I’m judging harshly. So, to be fair, here is a random selection from the dozens of comments on that article:
“I am very disgusted with what I am getting from this today. If Opening Day is an indication of what this year is going to be like, we are screwed. MLB should b much better at this.”
“my reception kept freezing the pictures at crucial times during the mets reds game. very diappointed. same thing happening during the yankee oriole game on now!! what’s the problem??”
“I don’t think MLB is paying any attention to the problems. On the “help” blog, the responses they give all sound like canned answers that are very basic and do not address the real issues people are having. The problem is NOT in our sets, it’s on their end whether they want to admit it or not.”
“Maybe some of these deep pocketed executives can come and tell my 12 year old son why he can’t watch his favorite team. WHAT A SCAM!!”
“12:05 and I’m still getting errors. . . . clearly they are having serious technical difficulties. You know what would make it less annoying? Freaking admit it. Put a message up acknowledging the problems and apologizing. Instead I look to see what the heck is happening and I find this article on how awesome they say they are. It’s an insult to those of us who have paid a bunch of money to not be able to watch opening day.”
“I’ve been an MLB.tv subscriber since they first launched the service years ago. Today was one of the very few times I have been unable to watch a game — the Texas / Cleveland feed was down almost the entire game.”
Ok, there are a few (a very few) positive comments. But this article is just the tip of the iceberg. There are comments galore on the MLB.tv blog, and the support forums are almost overflowing with complaints and problems. With the usual reply being along the lines of, “its your hardware”. Um, no it isn’t. Its your problem.
Its your problem, and it needs sorting. And it needs apologising for. It doesn’t need a bragging article, front and centre on the MLB.com homepage, slapping yourself on the back for your service. That is arrogant beyond belief, and an insult to every single customer who hasn’t received the service that they paid a lot of money for you.
An MLB.tv joke
Opening Day is a time for the players to step up and perform for real, and
the same is expected of the best technology in sports today. MLB.TV Premium has
gone through its own Spring Training, being carefully fine-tuned with the
assistance of the many fans who beta-tested it beginning with the World Baseball
Classic and on through Grapefruit and Cactus League exhibitions. Major League
Baseball Advanced Media developed this amazing technology with the fans and for
the fans, allowing them to follow the live action in a fashion previously
unimagined.MLB.TV Premium is available for $109.99 for the entire year, a $10 drop
from 2008 despite multiple upgrades in features, quality and performance.
Highlights include dazzling HD picture quality (where HD is available), adaptive
bit-rate determination to ensure clarity along with manual override capability;
home and away broadcasts allowing you to choose which team’s broadcast you
watch; a Live Radio Option that allow you to choose between TV or radio booth
feeds; a live game DVR and jump-to-inning navigation; picture-in-picture, which
will be huge when you need to follow other games that impact your team’s pennant
race; a built-in live scoreboard of the day’s games; game summaries and box
score widgets; full-screen and multi-view switching; a user preference setting
that can show/hide score spoilers; archived games and more.

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