Baseball has been in my family since the game was invented. My grandfather played and then managed. My dad was the neighborhood star pitcher. Me? I played in high school a long time ago. I once led my Summer league in triples. Never hit a home run though.
I blame the Devil’s invention – The Wiffle ball.
I grew up in the city. I loved urban life a lot, but we lived miles from the nearest ball field. We’d put in the effort to get to the park for a game or two a week, but it was almost impossible to make the trip more often than that.
Outside of a formal game, we kids rarely saw live pitching. We loved the game so much and wanted to excel, but how could we practice and get better if we could not experience pitches?
Then it happened — someone went out and bought a Wiffle ball set.
Hmmm. It was baseball-like. There was a ball and a bat. The ball was city safe – wouldn’t break a window or even scratch a car. The plastic bat would hurt if you walked into it while someone was swinging, but it was otherwise pretty safe; so we spent hours every day pitching and swinging. 
The pitches were amazingly cartoony, whizzing in like a rocket and yet moving as unpredictably as a butterfly. I can still imagine Bugs Bunny winding up and hurling an impossible physics defying pitch.
We had fun though.
We saw hundreds of those Looney Tunes pitches every day. The bat was so light we could start our swing when the pitch was just inches in front of the plate and still make contact.
We thought we were training ourselves to be great baseball players…we were so wrong.
With every Wiffle ball pitch we devolved as ballplayers. The Wiffle pitch trajectories were absurd, with no
connection to real life. Maybe we were improving ourselves for games like badminton or ping pong, but certainly not for baseball.
To become a good baseball player you need to train as a baseball player.
It is widely known that hitter development in baseball requires that the player see pitch-after-pitch-after-pitch thrown by a good hurler. It is how you learn to recognize the type and location of the pitch being thrown.
Whether you are a high school student or a seasoned pro you need to practice repeatedly against realistic pitching. You can’t just practice against a robotic pitching machine. You can’t learn to recognize pitch type or location hitting with a tee, or with soft toss batting practice. And you can’t expect a live pitcher to throw to you for very long periods of time per session.
So what should you do?
Well, if you are a serious ball player, don’t run out and buy a Wiffle ball. Honestly, it ruined me. If it weren’t for Wiffle ball hurting my timing, recognition, and swing, I’d be getting ready for Hall of Fame induction by this point in my life – if not MLB, at least for my neighborhood.
Check out PITCHvr™ Vision, where you can enter a virtual reality ballpark and face all types of pitchers throwing all types of pitches – for as long as you like. It is an affordable, one-time cost with no subscription involved. Do your future fans a favor, and make it to the Hall!
Will Virtual Reality ever become something real? 
ll us: don’t be afraid to fail; fail
The Internet of Things (IoT) is predicted by some to be the next technical revolution — a potential trillion dollar market. It may seem silly to expect your cell phone to be working with your refrigerator to automatically call in a grocery store order, but it’s gonna happen. They might use bar code readers, NFC tags, Bluetooth, micro-location and/or RF Id tags, but before you know it, you’ll get just in time deliveries of cat food.
When we finish a product development brainstorming session, the cats at Novation usually have hundreds of ideas in the form of a haystack of sticky notes. Each note has a single idea on it. It feels like we went from no ideas, to too many ideas. How do we dig only the best ideas out of the stack?
The facilitator can and ideally will participate too. The facilitator should encourage everyone present to participate and produce lots of ideas. Now and then the facilitator should toss in a stimulus word for people to think about like “football”, or “insects”, or “bread pudding”; such odd words often trigger new thoughts.
Once we’ve found a potential business opportunity, an idea we think may have a market, the next thing we need is a vision. As engineers and designers, our instinct is to go right to a solution and prototype, and skip the vision. But here at Novation Tech, we take the time to do it right and look into the future to define our vision.
Several readers have asked how we get our ideas for products. We have several creative minds working on our team, each with their own interests and views. If left on their own, the ideas and projects would wander wildly. They would be fun and interesting – two of our goals – but we are a business and need to ensure that our research and development resources are spent wisely. So how do we herd this bunch of cats?
erson to have the idea. For example, you might have had a great idea for an invention months ago, but for one reason or another, you did not file for the patent yet. If at a later date, another person independently had the same or similar idea, but put in an application before you did, the law will favor them. Even though you had the idea first. Wow, it seems so unfair…whoever gets to the patent office first wins.