From: Laurence Smith on

When checking the scoreboard at ESPN.com I occ'ly try to follow a game
using the MLB gamecast feature. But I find that when I hit the tab for
a particular team's stats that the only columns visible are AB and R
for hitters and IP and H for pitchers.
I assume that the full screen should be showing more columns (like Hits
for the batters). But changing my monitor settings from a screen
resolution of 800x600 to a different one doesn't solve the problem.

My question is whether any of you follow games using gamecast and
whether there is a monitor setting that will make the screen fully
visible.

I have three browsers on my PC (Opera, IE, and Firefox) all in their
latest versions.

TIA
--
Larry Smith

From: DaveW on
On 10 May 2007 19:31:48 GMT, "Laurence Smith" <dr4sight(a)hvi.net>
wrote:

>
>When checking the scoreboard at ESPN.com I occ'ly try to follow a game
>using the MLB gamecast feature. But I find that when I hit the tab for
>a particular team's stats that the only columns visible are AB and R
>for hitters and IP and H for pitchers.
>I assume that the full screen should be showing more columns (like Hits
>for the batters). But changing my monitor settings from a screen
>resolution of 800x600 to a different one doesn't solve the problem.
>
>My question is whether any of you follow games using gamecast and
>whether there is a monitor setting that will make the screen fully
>visible.
>
>I have three browsers on my PC (Opera, IE, and Firefox) all in their
>latest versions.

FWIW, I prefer Yahoo's gamechannel (I use Firefox). It's a simpler
interface and goes quickly back and forth between games, with all
stats easily visible.

I'm running an older PC with windows Me, and Yahoo gamechannel seems
to use less resources also - MLB's gamecast seems to slow it down a
lot.