Sunday, August 26, 2007

YouBeQB - Next Gen Fantasy Football

First, great name. I'm in the process of naming our new thing, and boy is it hard. This is a great one.

But second, YouBeQB is a PHENOMENALLY good idea. It really is the next gen for fantasy football, in that you actually MUST be pinned to the screen in order to predict the next play. Most important part for them is figuring out a gaming system where if I'm 10 minutes late to a game, that doesn't put me out of the running for whatever "prestige" is possible in the game.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Wow, That's Some Bad SEO

I saw an interesting clip on Sportscenter while feeding Henry at 6:10 in the morning (a completely unreasonable hour, btw) and thought I would go look it up. It was about the top 10 rules for drafting on Fantasy Day and I found the analysis and use of the correct set of statistics quite good. This particular rule was to never take a kicker efore the last round, because the different between the 1st best kicker (who was undrafted last season) and the 12th best one was less than 35 points, which equates to less than 3 points a game and is basically a complete wash. This is something overlooked in a lot of analysis... rather than guessing about eventual performance of one player vs. another, instead look at the entire field and study the difference between players currently remaining. I feel so much of the time is spent on finding the perfect person for your team, but I think the key to drafting is just finding who is RELATIVELY right (meaning the best of what's left) because you never know what's going to happen on draft day. In this respect, I quite like a tool I've been using for a while to track draft day action, because it's extremely easy to see not only who is left, but how they compare relatively to the rest of the remaining field, both within their category and outside of their category. So if you are in a 8 team league and are currently debating between (for example) a WR and a TE, in my opinion the right thing to do is look at the difference between the 8th best WR and the 8th best TE rather than the top two. This tells you the richness of the field remaining and what would happen if you took one and were stuck with the alternative next round. YMMV.

Any how, I'm generally an interested student of fantasy football, so I'm always reading suggestions. In this case, doing a search for "last round kicker fantasy football espn sportscenter" yielded nothing valuable, so I thought I'd start with the main page and work down from there.  Search result for "espn sportscenter"?

  1. #1: Wikipedia for SportsCenter - ok, but not great
  2. #2: Wikipedia for ESPN - still ok, but not great
  3. #3: Go.com home page for ESPN from ~3 years ago (!?!?!)

Nowhere in the top 10 is there ESPN's sportscenter home page. Don't blame Live.com either, the Google results look the exact same. Wow, that's bad web design / marketing.

FYI, this Sportscenter page is what I'm expecting to be first. Hopefully, this link will help out in the future.

[Update] ACK! It's even worse than I suspected. That page is to the excellent ad campaign "this is Sportscenter". From what I can tell, they don't even HAVE a page dedicated to the content shown on that episode of Sportscenter. WTF?

Blog, You Idiot, Blog!

I was browsing through my RSS reader of choice, and came upon this blog by Naydne:

The taps in a shower are a really bad user experience. They're not standardized at all. The taps in this hotel room at the Westin in Bellevue, Washington, are nothing like the taps in a hotel room at the W in San Francisco. Every time I encounter a hotel room, I have to determine how to take a hot (not cold, not burning) shower. The taps don't give me an indication of how to work them. I have to figure out which way to turn them.

 

[...]

 

Wouldn't it be nice if there were a button near your shower that you could push and it would automatically give you a shower of the right water temperature? My car remembers where I like the seats, why can't my shower remember how hot I like the water to be?

Well spoken!

My thought was "didn't I say something about this before"? Then, after a quick search, I find nothing, which means it's one of many topics I wanted to blog about but did not, mostly because I'm lazy. I suppose there's no problem with two people talking about something like this, but the blog world does seem like first come = most insightful, no? Gaping Void must have some great drawing about this phenomenon... I wonder what keyword I would use to find it.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Too Much Information

So I don't know if you're familiar with this Internets thingy, but apparently there's a lot of great stuff out there. Case in point - DayTipper... what an incredibly useful set of stuff. The problem is that many if not all of the items are very specific. For example, getting a splinter out with no pain. The problem with this is that it's so specific, that it's almost silly to bookmark. I only need this bit of information when I actually need it. And considering I can barely keep important bits of info in there, like the address of my wife's blog, I can hardly expect to have this kind of stuff in my CPU registers, my second level cache, or even stored on disk... it's likely to be the kind of thing on tape backup. My question is what is the best way to maintain an index of this stuff, either in my head or my computer so that it can be readily accessible? Right now, it's a mix of my email inbox in a folder (and then just search), my favorites and my rss feeds. None of these are particularly good. Del.ico.us?

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Hilarious Un-Expected Data

One of the interesting things about consumer electronics is that the defaults tend to always be very obvious and well known. So all alarm clocks go off at 12 AM (much to Joel's disappointment), people's hard drives are open for the viewing (because the web server is on on their desktop machines, directory browsing is on and firewalls are off (or missing)), and apparently, one of the most common first pictures for new cameras are boobies. The only flaw with this analysis is that it doesn't look at what the next 100 pictures are either... I'd suspect it's pretty close to what the first one is. Actually, I'd be that as number of pictures per camera increase, likelihood of pornography also increases, considering pornographers just happen to take so many pictures.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Speaking of Deep Expertise

Anyone out there want to tell me how to get the rest of the Ben and Jerry's pint to taste as good as the first bite? I know it has to do with the thawing and refreezing of the contents, but come on! Scientists, I don't know what the hell you're working on, but it's lower priority than this.

My Brain is Exploding!

Chooky, Ph.D. of Chemical Engineering, pointed out this sick video:

UM... holy crap.

I'm constantly fascinated by people who are incredibly deep in certain areas and you never know about it until you're wandering along talking about whatever, and happen upon this area of expertise.

First time it happened for me with Chooky was discussing the best way to have my FoodSaver marinate the meat I was cooking (small aside: if a company capitalizes a word half way through, such as FoodSaver, does that mean it's actually two words?). He described in depth the use of vacuums to move liquid through solid mass (rocks) and the nature of the container I was storing it in in order to get the marinade to work properly.

I had a similar experience with my wife and the Beatles. I think it was nothing more than listening to some promo on the radio with a fairly obscure Beatles song which she not only sang along to, but also named a whole set of facts about the background of the song.

General philosophy point? There's a lot of information out there... make sure to tap into as much as you can.

Um, Sorry for the Radio Silence

Yeah, so like I have little if any excuse for not writing much over the past month, since I was basically sitting at home doing nothing during the entire time. Well, not EXACTLY nothing:

DSC_0315

Above, observe one Henry Peter Aronchick, born 2007-07-08. Apparently, these baby things need some care and feeding, which has taken up some of my time. And while I have neither the biological equipment nor the genetic predisposition to help out, I've tried to do my best.

One thing that's always surprising is how much this blogging things feels like hurling meaningless crap into the ether, until you start to hear people complaining about you never blogging any more. Anyhow, thanks for all your patience... I'm back on full time duty (as it were).