Monday, June 12, 2006

This sometimes happens to us...

Thanks to my sister for this link - we’re both web designers and can appreciate the time involved in creating something like this. Sometimes our clients ask us to animate things in Flash and this will give you an idea of what’s involved… kind of…

Flash takes over

More importantly, it’s boiling today and I am sweating a fair bit. 

Gawker falls short of UK copyright law

Gawker, the celeb gossip blog, has been forced to block access to UK visitors after it was judged to have breached UK copyright laws. (read about more on the guardian website http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1794995,00.html).

This has sparked debate about the differences in IP laws on each side of the pond but I think there is a more interesting issue here. We all know the threat that online editorial poses to traditional print media but gossip blogs such as Gawker and perezhilton.com are possibly the best example of an online medium’s ability to out-do its print counterpart. By their very nature, blogs are up-to-date and straight from the horse’s mouth - exactly how we want our gossip.

BBC World Cup let-down

Working in a male dominated office has obvious implications at this time of year. Firstly, boys tend to complain more than girls about heat and what temperature the air conditioning should be set at. Secondly, and more importantly, the World Cup is here and we all want to watch as much football as possible. As the person with ultimate responsibility for the company’s bottom line it should fall to me to tell everyone that they can’t watch the footie during working hours. For those that have met me, however, it is quite clear that this would never happen. The way I see it, so long as everyone gets their job done and deadlines are hit, I’m happy for the footie to be on. In most cases, matches are played in the late afternoon / evening so there is little impact on working time and for the few games that do kick off at 2pm I have no issue with the match being part of the office background soundtrack.

This leads me onto the main issue - how to watch the World Cup when you’re in the office. The BBC have been promising us a live stream of “at least 256kbps” for every World Cup Match they are showing online but on Friday (Germany v Costa Rica) we couldn’t see a thing. We tried to get this going several times but failed miserably. For the “lucky” few that did manage to get through the 20 minute “buffering” zone the footage didn’t exceed 225kbps (which is pretty poor at the best of times).

On Sunday I read an interesting article in the Sunday Times explaining the issues in more detail: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,176-2220041,00.html.

The good news for the Score Comms office is that we have a TV. This doesn’t however do anything to help the poor buggers out there that are trying desperately to stay under the radar and catch the game on their PC without the boss finding out. Perhaps by the next World Cup in 2010, the BBC will have worked out a way to deliver what they promise…

Friday, June 09, 2006

SI World Cup feed

If your boss has you chained to the desk during the world cup here’s a tip. Sports Illustrated have a great feed for Google with live scores, group tables and a games schedule.

image

Welcome to Scoreblog!

Hi all,

This is a momentous occasion - the first official entry in the Score Comms blog. To get started, I’ve found a clip from The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (of which we are big fans in this office) about the power of blogging (plus reasons you may want to change your name if it’s Ted Hitler)…

The Daily Show


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