Hey, Siri! Pause!
date | 2024-07-03 22:17 utc |
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topics | tech; Red Sox |
“Hey, Siri! Pause!” I called, beladen as I was with a dish tray, an iPad, my cased AirPods, socks, and other paraphernalia as I tried to negotiate the screen- and French- doors from our deck into the living room. (Yes, Dr. F., carrying far less than 10 pounds!)
On the iPhone in my shirt pocket, the ball game paused. Then it resumed.
“Hey, Siri! Pause!”
The ball game paused, and then resumed.
Having entered, I closed the screen and French doors as I took my gardening shoes off using my feet.
“Hey, Siri! Pause!”
On the iPhone in my shirt pocket, the ball game paused, and dimly from the HomePods at the other end of the room I heard her respond:
There’s nothing playing here.
In my pocket, the ball game resumed.
I risked a look down at my Apple Watch. As I suspected, it says “Red Sox @ Blue Jays,” and there’s a nice pause button centered at the bottom. Sigh. I hoped the game was disturbing Kanie.
I left the living room with my dishes and socks and entered the kitchen.
“Hey, Siri! Pause!”
On the iPhone in my shirt pocket, the ball game paused, and dimly from the HomePods back in the other room I heard her respond:
There’s nothing playing here.
In my pocket, the ball game resumed.
I walked to the sink and placed my dishes on the counter. I crossed the room and deposited my meds tin on the opposite counter. Now bearing only my iPad and socks, I continued into the playroom.
“Hey, Siri! Pause!”
On the iPhone in my shirt pocket, the ball game paused, and dimly from the HomePods back in the kitchen I heard her respond:
There’s nothing playing here.
In my pocket, the ball game resumed.
Leaving my socks at the base of the stairs for later depositing in the laundry, I walked into my study and placed my iPad on the counter next to my Mac.
“Hey, Siri! Pause!”
On the iPhone in my shirt pocket, the ball game paused. On my iPad, I see Siri’s icon and my transcribed instructions.
In my pocket, the ball game remained paused.
With a sigh of relief and a shake of my head, I sat down at my computer to write this post.
It’s almost enough to make you give up baseball.
Addendum
When I come to the passage about the Apple Watch, I look down again at my watch to see that I was describing the situation properly. No ball game. Fair enough, I’d paused it a full three or four minutes earlier.
So I look at my iPhone. No “Now Playing” widget on the lock screen. Funny.
I unlock the iPhone. The MLB app is no longer showing the Sox game in Gameday Audio. In fact, it’s at their landing page.
I bring up Gameday. It’s displaying today’s games, which haven’t yet begun. Since I was just in the hospital, I’m a couple of days behind, so I navigate back to the proper date . They used to list the Red Sox (my only favorited team in the MLB app) games at the top of each day’s list. Not this year. I find the Sox game, tap on it.
It begins at the beginning of the game, not in the bottom of the 7th. And they’re playing me the opponent’s stream, not Joe Castiglione and Will Flemming on the Shaw’s and Star Market WEEI Red Sox Radio Network.
I tap on WEEI and press play. It (literally) counts to four and starts playing. (In previous years, it just started without counting up. Not this year.)
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
Nothing. It keeps playing.
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
Nothing. It keeps playing.
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
Nothing. It keeps playing.
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
It works.
When I intentionally pause a game, I try to make a note of the hours/minutes/seconds so that I can get back to the same spot in case the app loses track of my place, which it never used to do. But it does this year.
But it doesn’t actually help much to know the numbers, since they don’t update when you scrub: you have to let go of the playhead to see where you are.
I’m in the fifth inning.
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
Nothing. It keeps playing.
I scrub the playhead off to the right, trying to guess where the 7th inning is, without subjecting myself to too much repetition or — worse! — spoilers!.
It works.
Ads.
Since the app’s skip-forward and skip-backward controls will only go 10 seconds at a time (and since they’re now stuffing more than two minutes of ads into even the 60-second pitcher changes), I usually go to the phone’s lock screen, where the same controls magically go 30 seconds instead.
I back out to the lock screen.
No controls in the widget. No title or icon, either — just an enabled “pause” button, and everything else is disabled/grayed out. Sigh.
In my hands, the Kars4Kids jingle begins.
It’s almost enough to make you give up baseball.