Stop lying to me NBC
I don't really care that much about the Olympics, but I honestly thought the opening ceremonies advertised for this evening were going to be live, in the evening, for us and tomorrow morning in Beijing. That just didn't seem too far fetched to me.
This morning I am online, with the TV on in the background as usual, and I am reading about the Opening ceremonies while NBC is pretending they haven't happened yet. I think most Americans are aware of Time Zones, and it's acceptable to show events in the middle of the night (online or on one of your several cable television channels) to at least give us the opportunity to watch it live. I have a feeling this is going to be a theme this year: Read the scores before you see the games.
An
article in the NY Times gave a live report of the events in the early morning, here are a few reader comments:
Tape delay is becoming annoying in this day and age. We trade stocks 24/7 across time zones, we get news as it breaks, etc. NBC has got seven TV and cable channels, this ain’t 1988 anymore.
— Posted by Tom
This is really weird, and there really is no good excuse. Either NBC is technologically incapable of offering live feeds online, or they are not business-minded enough to figure out advertisers will still pay to advertise in the middle of the night, then they will pay again when you re-play the bigger events in primetime.
Focus on the user and all else will follow. Go Team USA.
Labels: sports, tech, TV
The real championship game is today

The Universities of Kansas and North Carolina
play today in what should be the college basketball national title game. Today's game pits Roy Williams against his old team for the first time since he left KU five years ago for UNC. When the
two-time defending National Champion Florida Gators get knocked out of the tournament (or
don't make it in the first place) I tend to root for Kansas, since I partially grew up in Jayhawk country. You see, my introduction to college basketball was at
Phog Allen Field House in Lawrence, Kansas and I spent summers at the Roy Williams Basketball Camp (see photo). Of course, height prevented me from becoming the next Danny Manning.
Labels: sports