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  • ESPN coming to Xbox One, NFL.com fantasy football on Xbox 360 now

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    09.03.2013

    ESPN on Xbox Live was Microsoft's first network partner on the Xbox 360 back in 2010 and the network has signed a new deal to stream content on the Xbox One. ESPN.com clips, ESPN 3 live content and everything streamed through WatchESPN, which requires a cable-authenticated package, are all presented in the app. "Sports fans know what they like. We're just trying to give them better ways to access that content in a more quickly and more user-friendly format," David Jurenka, Director of Sports at Xbox Entertainment Studios, says. Within the app, users can create a specific channel for their favorite team, and the app will even pull in their personalized data from ESPN's ScoreCenter app. In addition to ESPN, Microsoft's new partnership with the NFL has spurned development of an NFL app for Xbox One – with NFL Network content, including Thursday Night Football and NFL Red Zone – and a fantasy football app for Xbox 360. The latter app, which allows players to log into their NFL.com fantasy teams and do just about everything they could on a computer or smartphone, should be available today. Users can adjust their lineups and watch NFL.com highlights through their Xbox 360 console. The NFL app is also coming to Xbox One in November.

  • ESPN brings new interface to ScoreCenter for Android and iOS

    by 
    Mark Hearn
    Mark Hearn
    12.19.2012

    Attention all sports fans and degenerate gamblers: earlier today ESPN released an update for its Android and iOS ScoreCenter apps. Version 3.0 introduces a new user interface, iPhone 5 support, live scoring alerts, video sharing and additional game coverage. Keeping sports fans in the know, the update also adds calendar support, which allows users to check scores and stats from previous games, as well as preview the upcoming schedules of their favorite teams and athletes. You can download the latest version of ScoreCenter directly through your device, or by pointing and clicking on your platform's respective source link below.

  • LG Spectrum gets ESPN ScoreCenter App, Exclusive 720p video

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    01.09.2012

    We're here at the LG press conference at CES and ESPN's Michael Bayle's just dropped the HD bomb. The LG Spectrum will come with the broadcaster's ScoreCenter app and will broadcast exclusive 720p HD content, whilst all other phones will pump out those field goals in SD only. The Spectrum launches on January 19th on Verizon, for all your Stewart Scott needs.

  • ESPN launches ScoreCenter for connected TVs on Samsung's App Store - Update: Better screenshots

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    12.20.2010

    ESPN's ScoreCenter app has been a popular one on Android and iOS devices, but today the broadcaster has taken another step by bringing it to connected TVs. Samsung enabled TVs will be the first to see it in the Samsung App Store, and use it to pull up scoreboards, schedules and live game details along the top, bottom or sides of the screen. According to AdAge, it had planned to bring TV apps using EBIF to market years ago, but delays mean this is the first one to see the light of day. No word on which connected TV will see ScoreCenter next, but for now you can check out a demo video at the source link. Update: and now we have some higher res screenshots courtesy of ESPN, check out the first above and another one after the break.

  • Disney CEO calls iPad "a game changer"

    by 
    Dave Caolo
    Dave Caolo
    02.10.2010

    While discussing the iPad with the Associated Press on Tuesday, Disney CEO Bob Iger hinted at his company's plans for the iPad, and called it "a game changer." He gave brief examples of ideas they're throwing around for the iPad, including ESPN ScoreCenter and an interactive app for the ABC drama "Lost." ESPN ScoreCenter is currently an iPhone and iPod touch app that provides real-time scores and updates from the world of sports. Iger says that the iPad gives them an opportunity to "...really make the scores come to life." I think of the demo of Major League Baseball's At Bat for the iPad and see how the ESPN app could do the same -- provide gorgeous, full-screen video and stats plus chat and trash talk with other fans during the game of your choice. Multiple camera angles, locker room interviews, fantasy leagues, and so on, could all enhance the fun of watching the big game. Likewise, a Lost app could provide a similar experience. "When you think about ABC," Iger said, "you think about a program like Lost and not just being able to watch the program, but all the other things that viewers like to do with that program." As a leisure content device, the iPad could be a killer with the right apps in place. Iger went on to say, "We think [the iPad] could be a game changer in terms of enabling us to create essentially new forms of content." No, it's not the same as watching your favorite show on that big, shiny HD TV, but the iPad might further synthesize the TV and computer into a single device. [Via MacDailyNews]