deskamess 2 minutes ago
mjd 4 minutes ago
MLB crushed them with a copyright infringement lawsuit, claiming copyright over the plain factual description of the play-by-play. It was bullshit, of course, since simple factual descriptions aren't protected by copyright. But website guy couldn't fight MLB in federal court.
Sorry I don't remember the name of the site. I hope it turns out better for you than it did for them.
TheGoodBarn 34 minutes ago
I am a big fan of the ESPN CDN data api and have made a few "scoreboards" of my own. Recently I polished a simple html one at: https://mlb.ope.cool/
But I will most definitely be reaching for yours and tossing it up on the TV's in the office, this is so cool
vitorbaptistaa an hour ago
I wonder if some kind of filter would work or we would need some data source. Looks much harder given the fast-paced nature of the game.
rickyyean 7 minutes ago
e28eta an hour ago
IDK if there’s an easy way for the average person to get a live audio broadcast feed from games, so maybe your target market would be listening to that instead.
I’m thinking it could use some sound effects, for balls, strikes, hits, etc. I only tuned in for a couple pitches and then it was between innings, so maybe the more significant events already have something, and I just wasn’t patient enough to experience them.
I was looking away when the last out of the inning happened (or maybe changing views?). Is there a display of what caused the out, and maybe an animation of the fielders coming into the dugout, or does it flash up the “between innings” screen pretty quickly?
It might be nice to have a significant event summary available somewhere. It feels hard to believe that this would catch someone’s attention well enough that they’re watching the whole thing, and without audio cues / replays, I know I wouldn’t be interested in watching it for any length of time.
glenstein 44 minutes ago
I know when it comes to historical data, projects like the Sean Lahman Database have to go through quite a bit of trouble to reproduce "clean room" versions of historical data that are legally fine to use. I have to imagine there's a lot of complications when it comes to live data for anything that even has a hint of being more than a hobby project.
mysterydip 11 days ago
One comment is, during “in between innings” when it was showing around the league and other stats, the text was really small on my phone. If possible I’d rather have it scrolling or switching between pages of data than trying to fit it on one screen. I get that on a tv or pc it’s probably the right size, so not sure if you’d want to spend the effort to have a separate view for small screens.
Urgo 11 days ago
Either way though, great job on this!
austinallegro an hour ago
cm11 2 hours ago
germanrabbit 2 hours ago
fitsumbelay an hour ago
Something about the way baseball itself is played seems to make recreations really satisfying -- like, more accurate? -- and fun compared to say, soccer hilights of matches on Youtube made with what looks like an EA soccer video game
I also really like the idea of recreating any type of event in this format. It's almost like photogrammetry but with as much creative intention as you have documentary. very awesome, very inspirational really
ecommerceguy an hour ago
edit- First 2 plays I watched are back to back homers. Go Royals!
unstruktured an hour ago
uludag 41 minutes ago
devrundown 2 hours ago
ninju 2 hours ago
ishjoh 34 minutes ago
kridsdale3 an hour ago
This is clearly 16 bit.
matv 30 minutes ago
JMiao an hour ago
SubiculumCode 2 hours ago
k8o5 39 minutes ago
tiahura an hour ago
do the mlb streams flag a challenge?
sdsdfsdfdfssdf 20 minutes ago
vrtnis an hour ago
apollo_orbit 2 hours ago
Comment deleted