Archive for December, 2006

2006 Fantasy Football

So, this year’s season of fantasy football has come to an end, and I placed second in the league I’m commissioner of, Llama Llama Football. Weeks 1 through 14 were the regular season, and 15 and 16 were the playoffs.

I finished the regular season at 9 and 5, despite having to play some of the better-performing teams the last 3 weeks, all of which I won against. Part of the reason I did so well, and only got second place after the playoffs, was because of LaDainian Tomlinson. While I’m not saying that he is the only reason I did so well, he is responsible for a majority of my points in the league. Hell, the way our league scores, LT got 2nd place for the total number of points scored (293), only 11 behind Peyton Manning (304). The next running back, according to fantasy points is Larry Johnson in 12th, who trails LT by 110 points (183) and had just over half as many combined touchdowns (LT:33, LJ: 16). Hell, LT even managed to throw 2 touchdowns this season.

LT didn’t get any touchdowns in the week 16 game, which of course only gave me points (6) for his yardage (123 rushing, 10 passing). One touchdown would have had me down by 9 instead of 15. I also should have played Garrad (10) instead of Hasselback (2). Assuming that an LT touchdown would have resulted in more yardage, that would have possibly been enough to tie or win the game.

I can’t feel too bad about the loss, after all, it’s just fantasy football. However, my brother couldn’t always get his team ready, and much like we did for Meghan’s parents, if we saw one of their players was out or they hadn’t gotten the team ready in the half hour before the game started, we (or me, being the commissioner) made executive decisions to make sure no one was getting screwed because of bye weeks or injuries and that the teams were as good as they could be. I should say that at no point did we purposefully bench or remove players who were going to play. That would have just been wrong. At that point, why even bother playing?

What this meant was that I was able to co-manage a team successfully that didn’t have LT on the rooster. My brother drafted decently enough, using Yahoo’s preselected rankings, and did have QB Steve McNair (168) and RB Steven Jackson (165), who finished, point-wise, in 16th and 17th respectively.

So, when all is said an done, my team lost the game for 1st place 61 to 76, but part of it was me playing against myself. Like I said, I can’t feel too bad about the loss.

If you have a Yahoo account and care, you can see my Yahoo! Sports profile here.

Phat lewt!

I could follow last year’s precedence, but then I might have to do it all the time. Well, here goes nothing. Actually, here goes some words.

  • Children of Mana, which is the latest game set in the World of Mana. Andy, Pete, and I used to play Secret of Mana, and it was great, especially since it was an RPG for the SNES that 3 people could play. That was good, since there are three of us. This version of the game is for the DS Lite. Most of my evening was spent playing Children of Mana, and I expect that’ll be common for the next handful of weeks.
  • Speaking of the DS Lite, I got a boxed set of accessories for it, including a case to store it in, cases for the DS and GBA cartridges, screen covers, and a finger-stylus for the touch screen. That last one has taken some getting used to, it gets the job dne once you get used to it.
  • Futurama Season 1, which I’ve been eying since Drew and I were no longer roommates. From the summer of 03 to the spring of 04, Drew and I shared an apartment. We didn’t have cable, and so we never had much to watch. Drew would rent movies and whatnot, but between us, we owned very little in the way of videotapes and DVDs. Season 1 of Futurama was one of those few things that Drew owned, so I got used to watching it when I had nothing else to do. This also gives me a reason to get the other seasons.
  • A large coffee/hot beverage mug. It looks like it can easily hold 24 ounces.
  • Peppermint infused chocolate flakes (for melting in milk to make hot chocolate).
  • An empty bag from Ryan. Actually, I have some DVDs on the way, including the Comedians of Comedy.
  • Other things I can’t recall now and will list later.

Some additional comments on digg

Hopefully you read, or will read, the article I wrote at the tail end of yesterday, as this is just a quick follow-up.

Browsing the most recent 10 pages of upcoming news in about 10 minutes lead to at least 5 easily noticeable users who were spamming in one manner or another. It’s probably just as well that I saw and buried them, as I have not found much on digg this morning to keep me occupied, aside from the article about Blizzard banning 105,000 accounts and taking 12 million gold out of the WoW economy.

This got me thinking. It would be nice to have an option to mark a user as a spammer. That way, you don’t have to worry about hoping you mark their articles as spam and that enough other people mark them as spam and that hopefully someone in the upper echelons of digg notice and do the same or block the site and or user. Marking a user as a spammer would be a simple way of saying “look, I believe that everything they have submitted is abusing digg and that they should be stopped,” but that’s just me.

While not spammers, there are those who submit duplicate stories. They seem to think that when digg tells them that a story already exists, that digg is obviously wrong. Or they don’t take the time to see if the story actually exists in case the URL is slightly different. Do you know how many times I’ve marked submissions about how “Robots could demand legal rights” or “Title of Harry Potter 7 revealed” over the last day, and most of them from http://news.bbc.co.uk news.bbc.co.uk? In this case, it’s partially due to the fact that the BBC site has multiple different links to the same stories, so all someone has to do is digg a unique url to either bypass digg’s “BTW, someone did this already” system or to justify to themselves why they can or need to submit it themselves. Really though, if it’s important and on a very popular site, like the BBC website, chances are someone already dugg it.

I also realized that what I should have done when I finished writing that article last night was wait until this morning to digg it. As the case is, I would have had more to add to it this morning.

Live, learn, wash, rinse, repeat.

Think on this phrase “World of Warcraft Accounts Closed Worldwide”

In our continued efforts to combat cheating in World of Warcraft, more than 105,000 accounts were closed and over 12 million gold was removed from the game economies in Europe, Korea, and the US in the month of November.

For those who don’t know, gold is hard to come by in WoW. There are also probably millions of accounts, so this may only affect between 3% and 8% of all WoW users directly, and quite possibly less than that.

Now sure, this is just a game, or more than just a game to some. Imagine though, a world where all records, accounts, and other information is digital. What happens when there is that shadow government, that many have always claimed exists, and they decide that there are people that are abusing the system? All information about them is gone in the blink of an eye. And what happens if someone who isn’t at fault is swept away in the process? Sure, in the case of WoW, they can argue to get their account back. But if the government did it, what then? “We have no record that the person you’re talking about existed.” What about the economy? Debt could be eliminated or created instantly. Financial hardship could come and go as the wind.

I just wanted to put that out there. Think on it.

read more | digg story

Some comments on burying on Digg

I like digg, but I found out today that trying to be a good community member left me feeling like Sisyphus.

I browse digg on average three times a day: morning, afternoon, and evening. I don’t submit too many stories, but I read a chunk of articles at any given time, digg things that I find interesting, comment if I absolutely feel the need, and bury when I must. Don’t take that last one the wrong way; I bury articles when they are one of the following:

  • a “testing digg” post,
  • the wrong topic,
  • obviously spam, or
  • blatant self-digging.

The first is pretty easy to find. Typically it’s a title is something like “Just a test” with a description of “Testing the Digg Submission System”. These just baffle me make think, and occasionally comment, “Trust me, the digg submission system works. Did you miss the fact that other people can get it to work?” You know their just up to no good and will probably lead to number 3 shortly.

The second thing I bury are posts in the wrong topics. These are also easy to spot, with titles like “Hot Job” and description “He’s got a great job!” being put in the category “Design.” Considering that “Design” is surrounded by “Apple” above and “Gadgets” below, it’s not like they mis-selected the category. Surprisingly, if you follow the link, you see a not-at-all-funny picture. Items in the wrong category also tend to lead to spam.

The thing about items posted under the wrong topics is that it didn’t fit in any of the available topics. Guess what? If it doesn’t fit in a topic, don’t digg it, it’s that simple. I’ve come across a couple articles online and thought “This’ll be a great digg!” only to find out that it didn’t fit in a given category. On a side note, the Charisma 20 shirt over at Real Life was one such item.

They say “all roads lead to Rome,” and that’s the case in regards to things I tend to bury on digg. While I haven’t spent the time to track those who do test posts, as the only two I do know of haven’t done anything lately, and that looking up “test” doesn’t get you very much, I can’t say for certain that testing leads to spamming. But given the fact that you don’t need to test the fact that digg works, you could actually try to digg a real article first, or if this is on a personal site, make a post and try digging it as if you know it works.

Wrong topics almost always make me think spam, since most digg spammers are just going to skim the topics and randomly pick something. The real dastardly thing they do is then give it a fake title and/or description so that it fits in the category, and before you know it, you’re looking at an article that has nothing to do with the description you just read on digg.

There are also those spammers who promote things in the right categories and dot all the i’s and cross all the t’s. Their list of dugg and submitted sites however typically only rotate between a handful of different sites. While they are putting things in the right places, it’s an abuse of digg in my opinion. I’m not against them and their attempt at making money. I’m just upset that they focusing on the money first and the digging is jsut a means to an end.

Real abuse is sometimes due to the ability to have a site added to digg with the click of a link on a site or the simple submission of an article. I have seen quite a lot of Hubpages on digg, and almost every single one has been a wrong topic. I think that if one wasn’t a wrong topic it was completely by accident or someone is really trying. However, when you see a title of “Stick weaving for a quick homemade gift” and a description of “As weaving goes, this is the fastest way to do hand weaving I’ve ever seen. Come see my photos and learn how to do it” listed as “Offbeat News”, you don’t even have to click the link to know it is not news, let alone offbeat. If you check on the user profile of the person that submitted it, you’ll probably find pages upon pages of dugg articles. However, those dugg articles will all be self-submitted articles, which is item four, which follows.

While I understand that depending on a particular site’s presence in the web, it may not get dugg unless the site owner or a dedicated, regular visitor diggs an article. So I’m not against self digging. However, I am against people who do 50% or more self digging. Typically, the real culprits have one or two stories dugg that were submitted by someone else, but every other article listed in their list of dugg stories is all from the same site, which matches their username.

Things can always change though. If more topics are added and some of those sites I (almost) automatically mark as spam have a proper place to go, I won’t care as much. IF asked, I would suggest a top-level “Blog” category with possibly items like “Personal” and “Professional”. Once the automated moderation algorithm has had more practice, it’ll catch more of the user spam, so they’ll actually have to try to be real diggers. Even the bury system can be cleaned up. Even though it tries to be generic, there are some items it can’t accurately categroize, such as outdated news and articles.

Am I going to self-digg this article? Probably. I’m gonna try my hardest to find a category that fits, but I already believe there won’t be one. The standard, though, appears to be to put any digg news in the “Tech Industry News” category.

“When in Rome” and all that.

I’ll post it and if it gets buried, it gets buried. If I get flamed, I get flamed. If some actually choose to read the article, perhaps they’ll see where I’m coming from and leave it be.




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