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Seriously, this video is pretty much the ideal response to the whole thing. McCain’s campaign ought to be embarrassed, and the rest of us can laugh at both his campaign and Paris’s response.

(of course it is Paris Hilton, and she gets the details of the energy policy wrong… drilling wouldn’t carry us over because it would take 5-10 years before any of that oil actually entered the market)

11:06 pm | leave a comment
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Lots going on in the Microsoft Office alternative space, with Google leading the charge. IBM has also launched a free Office competitor, though their’s is based on Open Office and is a traditional desktop suite.

9:04 am | leave a comment

In a BS post about Google’s TOS for Google Docs, the founder of Writely, the company acquired by Google for web-based office applications responded in the comments. Part of his response:

To be clear, Google will not use your documents beyond the scope that you and you alone control. Your fantasy football spreadsheets are not going to end up shared with the world unless you want them to be.

Maybe he was reading FatMixx?

And, on the subject of the silly post by Joshua Greenbaum, it sure seems like he’s just making a random controversy up to get traffic. Seriously, Greenbaum omits the key phrase “intended to be available to the members of the public” to fabricate a TOS controversy that Google is trying to own your documents. You know you’ve hit on a serious topic when the longest arguments in the comments thread talks about the proper way to parse the statement according to proper rules of grammar. What is the meaning of “is” anyway?

12:05 pm | 8 comments

Today was draft day for the main Fantasy Football league I play in. Unlike most leagues, we do an in-person auction draft with a salary cap to fill rosters rather than the traditional snake draft. This format is great, but the downside is that it eliminates a lot of software out there to help on draft day. Granted, there are commercial packages out there that can help you out, but this year we found a simple, free solution that gets even better if you have an Internet connection and multiple computers where you draft.

One of the owners in the league created a simple Microsoft Excel spreadsheet containing all the teams with all of their roster slots along with a simple set of formulas to record total cap spent and remaining. This way, he just needed to record it as the draft went on and it could be emailed out.

That worked well, but put a lot of pressure on him. Most years, I also ran the big draft board with stickers, which at least meant two people aside from the commish were logging all the picks and points. With my recent departure from ESPN, though, I didn’t have a free source for the board and forgot to order it. My bad! So, to help out this year, I tried taking the spreadsheet and sharing it with Google Docs. Since we had Internet access at the draft location, and three people with laptops, plus 1 remote user, we were able to collaboratively share entry responsibilities among two of us with another 2 verifying the data as we entered it.

This solution worked amazingly well. The other folks that had the spreadsheet open would see the changes as I typed them, within a second or two, and we were able to even invite “spectators” into our draft to watch along. The spectators only had read-only access, which I was able to control as I invited people into the document.

Couple of thoughts: This is literally how simple a day-of-draft tool needs to be. No fancy analysis, no extra features. Just tally up the spending, record the picks, and know the teams and roster layouts. All it needed was a list of players with autocomplete and that would be it. Oh, and did I mention that Google Docs can import Excel and Word documents along with a number of other formats. It also exports the same for those folks who would rather have an offline copy.

You can check out our draft spreadsheet on Google Docs, and see if you can make one for your league.

And a note to the peeps back at ESPN: This is the easiest way to build this! No need for anything fancy, and combined with Google Gears, you’d have a simple offline/online application with just the browser.

12:48 am | 2 comments