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Call to the bullpen

ESPN's phone strikes out
By RYAN STEWART  |  April 25, 2006

While the year is still young, you could make a fair argument that ESPN’s mobile service is likely to be remembered as one of the biggest bombs of 2006. Witness: the handset compatible with the service, the Sanyo MVP, has seen its price fall from $500 at the time of the trial launch in November, all the way down to $99 at the start of baseball’s regular season.

The main problem with the ESPN Mobile phone is cost — it requires users to switch to Sprint, and to purchase the Sanyo handset and expensive calling plans (none of which feature unlimited calls or data.) Is the ability to watch Sportscenter on your phone worth close to $500 when it’s all tallied? Add to that the fact that the ESPN mobile virtual network operator restricts Web access to ESPN-approved sites. And while the interface has impressed many reviewers, the phone doesn’t really offer anything all that out-of-the-ordinary. Sports scores are available from the Internet, which many people can get through their cell phones these days for a cost of around $6 a month.

While sales figures haven’t come in, Will Leitch of the sports blog Deadspin took an informal poll of how many readers owned — or knew someone who owned — the phone, and only got back one email in the affirmative.
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  Topics: Gadgets , Will Leitch, Deadspin.com
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Comments
Call to the bullpen
In reports, the phone performed very well at core functions -- making and receiving calls, sending and receiving text messages, and saving contact information. But go to the instant-messaging and email features, and you will be greeted by a screen that said "coming soon." Even worse, ESPN has crippled the phone's Web browser by blocking access to some sites. When you go to several sites, including those of competitors like Sports Illustrated, you get a screen that said ESPN only allows you to go to "reviewed" sites it believes "work well on your ESPN phone." That's an outrageous level of control, in my view. You can get around this iron fist by doing a Google search in the Web browser and then clicking on one of the links Google produces, but that shouldn't be necessary. ESPN concedes it allows users to access only those Web sites it has approved, but it says this is a temporary measure designed to protect its software from the "corruption" that it says can be introduced if users download programs from certain sites. The company says the restriction on visiting unapproved sites will be lifted later this year, though the phone will still prevent the download of unapproved software.
By yo momma on 04/25/2006 at 5:43:36

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