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Le téléphone ESPN: un échec dont nous avions besoin?



Rejoignez la chaîne, Access Perks ✅ http://brodie.bz/join mobile ESPN était un opérateur de réseau virtuel mobile (MVNO) géré par la Walt Disney Company en utilisant le réseau sans fil EVDO de Sprint à partir du 25 novembre 2005, jusqu’en décembre 2006. Le service a été largement considéré comme un prix excessif et un échec,[1] Bien que rétrospectivement, les données réelles et l’épine dorsale et les logiciels audiovisuelles derrière le service seraient réadaptés avec succès pour l’âge du smartphone plusieurs années plus tard, détruit à un opérateur. Bien que le service MVNO ait été globalement un échec, le logiciel, les composants audio / vidéo, le flux de données et d’autres API qui étaient l’épine dorsale du service ont été salués et facilement réadaptés pour répondre aux besoins de ce qui allait devenir le smartphone. ESPN lancerait sa première application iPhone, alors appelée ScoreCenter, sur l’App Store le 12 juin 2008, sa journée de lancement. Avec la dorsale mobile d’ESPN déjà construite, contenant du contenu audiovisuel conçu pour un combiné mobile beaucoup plus compétent, il s’avérerait beaucoup plus efficace. L’application a rapidement été lancée pour Android et a montré que l’investissement du réseau dans les communications mobiles en valait la peine malgré le revers précédent de la tentative MVNO avec du matériel de qualité inférieure. * Abonnez-vous maintenant, obtenez plus * 📺 http://brodie.bz/youtube

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29 Comments

  1. My friends dad had that phone, it was the coolest thing in theory. The cell service was too shotty for Northern and Central Michigan. But when the SportsCenter jingle hit… it was legendary. Stay RAD BB!

  2. I had this. It actually was a pretty good phone. I remember I called and asked if the phone wasn’t going to make it and the customer service agent pretended to be shocked.

    The phone actually came in a nice box and the speaker was powerful and compact. It didn’t have a keyboard but no one did in 2005-06.

    The one very cool feature that it did have was that you could ask the experts a question about anything at all. As a test I asked what the count on Vic Wertz was when Willie Mays made That Catch in the 1954 World Series (two balls and a strike)

    PS: 6:06

  3. Man waking up from a 20 year coma: Can’t wait to go to Circuit City at the local mall to buy an ESPN phone, then enjoy an Oakland Athletic’s game at the Coliseum with a refreshing can of Coca-Cola C2!

  4. I wish we could bring back flip-phones like that, I'd love to own a cooler looking flip-phone in the 2020's, also would have been easier if you were either cool or buisness to get the keyboard phones.

  5. Brodie, don't assume that all your listeners are teens and early 20s youngsters. Some of us are GenXers who remember before people had any kind of cell phones and had to use land lines.

  6. Cool, but not as cool at the Sports Illustrated football phone. Though you couldn’t T9 on the football phone.

  7. before the phone, there was the ESPNet To Go pager & service that my Motorola group offered back in the mid-90s – it provided around 12 different "mail drops" (info categories), such as NFL scoreboard, MLB news, etc. Score updates every 5 minutes, it was amazing…we placed them in lots of sports bars, including the ESPNZone on the Boardwalk at Walt Disney World. Great times back then.

  8. Yes I remember texting on those old phones. Could take 10 minutes just to type in one word. Probably why I still prefer calling people over texting.

  9. Im 35, so i vaguely remember the pre smart phone era. I cant imagine how expensive it would have been and how much data would be needed to stream a game on a phone pre 2010

  10. ESPN took inspiration from the Saturday Evening Post telegraph machine launched back in 1842. (Don't look it up. I kid)

  11. Texting with those old flips was like a weird game. Haha I remember thinking I was so cool with my Razor. My dad and his BlackBerry. Lol Having that keyboard was a big deal.

  12. I think that way of texting was called T9. I didn't think it was that bad, I could text without looking at the phone

  13. In the 90's I had something called Sports Trax. It was a pager that had baseball updates/scores with real-time alerts to HR's, score changes, final scores, etc. I think it was made by Motorola. It's still in it's original box somewhere in my place.

  14. I remember getting ESPN News and Scores via AvantGo in my Palm Pilot and (later) various Handspring devices.

    Those devices, dear children, walked so your beloved smartphones could run 😊

  15. DID YOU HAVE THE ESPN PHONE? GETTING THEIR NEW APP TODAY?

    Some other videos you might like:

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    📺 https://youtu.be/o7ZLXn8Yo_I

    Here's How I'd REALIGN 32 MLB teams…
    📺 https://youtu.be/UhwIjcVdnpE

  16. While the original idea was a failure, ESPN learned much from it in eventually creating the ESPN app for Android and iOS. Indeed, the new ESPN app expansion for streaming all ESPN channels is an outgrowth of that app effort.

  17. 5:34 “it wasn’t called content back then; it was called journalism back then” . . . explains so much about the dystopian sci-fi story we’re living in

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