The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Baseball season essentials for iOS and Macintosh

By | March 31, 2011, 11:31pm PDT

Summary: With the start of the MLB season, it’s time to integrate the iPhone, iPad and Macintosh into your baseball experience. Some of these products have become essentials to my enjoyment of games at home and on the road.

[Updated April 8 with unhappy information about the Radio Shark. See below.]

With the start of the MLB season, it’s time to integrate the iPhone, iPad and Macintosh into your baseball experience. Some of these products have become essentials to my enjoyment of games at home and on the road.

Most important is the coordination of the television game broadcast and the local radio broadcast. These streams are never synced up and that can be a big problem.

For example, watching Thursday’s opening game between the Giants and Dodgers, I couldn’t believe my ears listening to the ESPN television team of Dan Shulman, Orel Hershiser and Bobby Valentine. They couldn’t shut up! And besides, they spent much of the game talking about things other than the game in question. It was maddening.

Thankfully, I last year purchased Griffin’s $49.99 Radio Shark 2 Radio Recorder, which is a USB-powered AM/FM radio receiver that leverages either a Mac OS X or Windows computer. The software lets you easily time shift the radio audio to sync with the television broadcast. This lets me listen to the excellent KNBR radio team. The Shark software may require a bit of tweaking to sync the audio and video streams but it works perfectly.

Check Out: Review: Radio Shark saves the World Series

In addition, the Shark can record the radio broadcast, so if you’re recording the game on a DVR, you still won’t have to suffer the television audio.

Update: Readers pointed out that Griffin decided to discontinue the Radio Shark 2. I asked the company whether they had plans for Version 3 and they said no, sorry to say. However, I continue to see units available online. We can hope that some other company will pick up the technology. Thanks, David Morgenstern.

Next in the essentials department is MLB’s At Bat 11, which costs $14.99 for either the iPad or iPhone. These are separate purchases. I chose the version for the iPhone, which can be used on the iPad but pint-sized. This app is great for when you’re away from home or on the road.

I find that the paid version is well worth the expense, offering live play-by-play stats, and best of all, radio broadcasts of both teams. It’s fantastic to toggle to a different perspective of the game. I also enjoy the video clip highlights.

Of course, it would be nice to make sure that your Tivo will record the game, if you are running late (yes, I could set up a Season Pass but that takes too much planning). However, I’m sorry to report that the Tivo iPad app released in late February only supports the latest models: the Tivo Premiere and Premiere XL. My Tivo HD isn’t supported. Sigh.

In the non-essential category, I would point to a few apps:

GameChanger is a free scorekeeping and league tracking app for a number of mobile platforms including iOS. I haven’t used it but it looks interesting.  It connects with a service that tracks most amateur leagues in the country and high schools. For an extra fee, its Premium Alert service can send live, in-game SMS updates to your phone.

The Baseball & Softball Rule Books HD app is what it says. And it’s free.

Steve Varga’s Pennant. I recently purchased this interesting app for the iPad that takes unusual views of the vast amount of data from games spanning the last 60 years. Now, I would expect that people who are real baseball number crunchers and gamblers won’t grok its playful and semi-productive visualizations. But it’s a lot of fun. And it has all the games and seasons. It’s only $4.99

Below you can see the creative way that Pennant shows the standings on a given game in the season. Here the Giants were down in the standings following a terrible run in June. Big balls good, small bad.

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Topics

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years.

Disclosure

David Morgenstern

Freelance journalist/blogger David Morgenstern has nothing to disclose.

Biography

David Morgenstern

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years. In the recent past, he founded Ziff-Davis' Storage Supersite, served as news editor for Ziff Davis Internet and held several executive editorial positions at eWEEK. In the 1990s, David was editor of Ziff Davis' award-winning MacWEEK news publication as well as its successor title, eMediaWEEKly, which focused on multiplatform professional content creation. His byline can be found online and in print publications including CreativePro.com, Peachpit Press' Mac Bible and Popular Photography.

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RE: Baseball season essentials for iOS and Macintosh
lyncarmel Updated - 17th Oct
Thanks! This is cool too bad it's discontinued. But it's always nice to watch baseball with family at home or with friends in apartments over easy appetizers . I even prefer watching baseball than going to ski Toronto.
The MLB At Bat is essential to me, push notification on starts and scoring and plays are great and that I can hear my favorite team anywhere is the reason I bought it.
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Thanks (sarcasm) for telling us about Radio Shark II. It is the exact solution I'm looking for. Too bad it's discontinued. Don't you check to see if a product actually exists first?
Message has been deleted.
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Contributr
Discontinued
davidmorgenstern Updated - 3rd Apr 2011
Guido:

I'm sorry that I missed that flag on the Griffin site. I just made sure the page was still there and it was. Again sorry.

However, I just did a quick search and saw a number of them still in stock at various stores. So, if you want one now ... Or perhaps this shortage is due to a forthcoming update? No idea.
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MLB at Bat strikes out
bob@... Updated - 12th Apr 2011
Well, here in Boston, I am UNABLE to watch home OR away games, as MLB has a blackout rule on the Red Sox- doesn't matter if a game is being televised locally, or if they are playing away... you need to shell out $99+ to MLB.com to watch. Occasionally the App will show a "Live Look" and you get to stream maybe 1/2 an inning... Or you need to subscribe to NESN on cable... wish I'd known this before I spent $15!!
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Great!!! thanks for sharing this information to us!
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RE: Baseball season essentials for iOS and Macintosh
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 10th Oct
Let us hope this just mulberry bag disappears totally. On the other hand, that should want the Vikings to start out out attaining and I do not like that both equally.
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Thanks! This is cool too bad it's discontinued. But it's always nice to watch baseball with family at home or with friends in apartments over easy appetizers . I even prefer watching baseball than going to ski Toronto.

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