Ideapad

Blogging since 1998. By David Wertheimer

Page 117 of 130

Staying away

Like a jilted lover ignoring the phone when it rings, I am slowly but surely losing my baseball fanaticism.

Bill Simmons of ESPN proposes a fans’ strike against baseball. Technically, it would be a boycott, not a strike. But he’s right.

I have been offered Yankee tickets twice this month and turned down both offers. Normally, I’d make room for a ballgame; lately, my alternate plans have become more important, and not because they’re big, pressing engagements.

I would rather not go to Yankee Stadium right now. I don’t want to give Major League Baseball my money.

Take this for what it is. I’m not protesting; I’m not making noise. I have posted lots of baseball-related links this season. I remain a fan in my heart, and I still love the game.

What I don’t love is the business of baseball, the looming deadlines and the worthless negativity. In the labor talks, I don’t care who’s arguing about what; I am an avowed reader of sports business columns, yet I can’t bring myself to follow the strike news.

I no longer know who I think is right, and I no longer care. All I know is that the yapping has drained my interest in the season. I have stopped reading box scores. I rarely turn on a ballgame when I’m watching TV. I don’t know any Yankee pitcher’s ERA. And I’m not all that concerned.

Baseball is far and away my favorite sport. But it’s no longer the focus of my sports life. I have golf and NBA free-agent deals right now; in a few weeks I’ll have football and hockey games on TV.

Like a jilted lover ignoring the phone when it rings, I am slowly but surely losing my baseball fanaticism. It makes me sad, but it also makes things easier. If and when the strike hits, I will say, “Well, there you go,” instead of, “Oh, no.” Either way, I’m not giving the sport my money or my marketing-ready eyes and ears.

Maybe someday baseball will matter to me again. I hope it does. And I hope for Baseball’s sake the average fan’s disillusionment is somewhat less than mine.

Contingency design

Making Mistakes Well in New Architect. Smart, sensible, obvious, and essential. Even simple solutions, like the standard 404 error page I developed for Economist.com, reduces confusion and aggravation, making the user experience more pleasant (and likely more successful). The more a site can customize and fix a user’s mistakes, the better the user will respond.

Gone starfishing

My weekend to come: driving to Rockland County; driving to Foxwoods; gambling; driving to Rockport, Mass., on Cape Ann; checking into the Yankee Clipper Inn with my family and my to-be-betrothed; eating seafood; meandering/shopping; buynig penny candy; climbing on rocks; swimming; blowing bubbles; and wading thigh-deep in a tide pool looking for starfish (to look at) and crabs (to race).

See y’all Monday.

Nor can you ignore Netscape 4.7

“Web standards? You can’t afford to ignore them anymore,” writes Paul Boutin in Webmonkey (via bBlog, as I didn’t know Webmonkey was still breathing).

I agree, but essays like this ignore mitigating factors: Man-hours, revenue-generating issues, time allotments, legacy code, browser stats. I’m knee-deep in a push for standards at Economist.com, but I am required to advocate a long-term solution, which will take a year or more to fully implement.

Last I saw, too, the 4.x browser usage on my employer’s site was still a lofty 15%, which complicates things. Every “compliant” markup I see has all sorts of level-4 browser contingency workarounds which, while “clean” in the purest sense, are no more useful than the old table-and-font model.

In short: Baby steps. I want standard code as much as the next plastic-bespectacled usability expert, but I want it without sacrifice.

Maddied!

Amy and I set a date last night: August 23, 2003, at the Essex House in Manhattan. We have our band lined up too. Progress!

Amy didn’t want me to set up a Web page about our wedding but I did anyway. Nothing mushy in there, I promise.

Genealogy

Added this site to BlogTree today—I was curious to see who my “sibling blogs” were.

Ideapad BlogTree

Feels nice to give credit to the sites that inspired me to start this site (although it was more of a journal than a weblog, as it often is today). Humbling to admit today, but I used Jason Kottke’s “steal this website” iniative to get mine started.

If you’re wondering, I got online in December 1987 (yes, ’87), began my Internet career in October 1995, started Web design full-time in August 1996, launched the Ideapad in November 1998, and bought netwert.com in July 2000.

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