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MLB.com: America’s pastime is higher tech than you think

Baseball, with its passion for tradition, is higher tech than you think. MLB.com CEO Bob Bowman discusses live streaming and baseball's mobile strategy.

Baseball, with its passion for tradition, is more tech-savvy than you think. Major League Baseball is now working with wireless engineering company Qualcomm to let people have a better smartphone experience while crammed together at the ballpark. The company has also worked over the last decade to insure that things go smoothly for people who pay to watch games online.

MLB.com CEO Bob Bowman says things were different in the early, herky-jerky days of streaming.

“Way back when in 2002 when we first started streaming, our fans got herky-jerky, buffering, dark minutes, and they were paying subscriptions so they weren’t really happy about that,” Bowman says.

Thanks to breakthroughs in the years since, fans can now stream live baseball on their computer, cellphone, or tablet without all the bumps and breaks.

“It look[s] just like a High-Def game that you get through your cable operator,” Bowman says.

To hear more about MLB.com’s mobile strategy and plans for the off-season, click on the audio player above.

 

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