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    September 23

    12th Man: A Day Out Watching The Seahawks

    For the second year running I managed to get tickets to see the Seahawks beat the pretty useless Rams at Quest Field on Sunday.

    For anyone – especially from the UK – who hasn’t been to a game it’s a pretty good day out. After going to watch Newcastle at St. James’s Park a few weeks ago it’s interesting to compare the experiences.

    Plus Points:

    • Before the game – it’s fantastic when the Seahawks come out, with the hawk (yes, a real one) flying out, then fireworks, loud music, it really gets things fired up
    • The 12th Man – you really do feel like the team’s extra man. Raising the 12th man flag before the game, showing how many false starts at Qwest Field caused by the roar (by far the biggest in the NFL) , all good stuff
    • Blue Thunder’s giant drum – I usually hate drummers at games, but this truly is massive. Supposedly it’s the biggest bass drum in the world. And boy does the drummer give it a wallop.
    • Garlic Fries – not as good as at the baseball (no slice of apple!) but still easily the best food I’ve had at a sports stadium
    • “Family friendly” atmosphere – it’s definitely not anaemic, and plenty of beer is drunk, but the mix of young and old, male and female, drunk and sober keeps things raucous and friendly. I guess the lack of away fans helps too (although there were a couple of poor Rams fans in front of me)
    • Half-time entertainment – I’d never seen a marching band before, but they were surprisingly good to watch. Never thought I’d say that. Maybe it was just the pretty patterns they were making and the beer kicking in?

     

    Minus points:

    • Game duration – there’s just too much time spent hanging about waiting for the ad breaks to finish. The stop/start nature of the game isn’t that bad, giving plenty of time for “refreshment” breaks, but sometimes it just breaks up the flow of the game
    • Shouting loudest when the opposition has the ball – I understand why they do it, to make it hard for the opposition to hear audible calls etc. but it’s still too bizarre for me to try to keep quiet when your team has the ball
    • Crap singing – American crowds just can’t do it. When your best chant is “Seahawks clap-clap-clap” repeated about 3 times, you fail dismally compared to a British crowd all spontaneously singing to get behind their team
    • Passionate atmosphere – although keeping things clean and polite is generally a good thing, sometimes you need that buzz of danger, anger, passion to really get things going

    I’m not sure what the conclusion of all this is. Two completely different experiences, one probably a better day out for the neutral, but the other usually a more passionate and engaging atmosphere.

    I guess it really comes down to football being a better game than football – and I think you all know which one is which :-)

    February 14

    Finally got my Zune Social Card working

    I love my Zune but the (currently) US-centric view of the world is a little irritating when I'm back home.
     
    I finally got my Zune Social synching working by setting my regional settings to US - see   - which means my card is now visible! It shows the crap that I've recently been listening too (not including Country Music Radio Smile)
     
    It's cool I can also embed it here...
     
     
      

    July 11

    Tour De France in London

    We went up to London to watch the prologue of the Tour De France last Saturday.
     
    It was an excellent atmosphere, with supposedly a million people on the streets watching (although how they guess these things is beyond me). Well worth the day out, even though it was slightly disappointing David Millar and Bradley Wiggins didn't do a bit better.
     
    I took a few photos although it was pretty hard to take decent shots of the riders as they went past very fast.
    November 20

    Visited Countries

    Check out this really cool site that lets you show where you've been in the world. I'm doing OK, but need to get out a bit more:

    August 11

    A Long Break

    We've just started our long trip over to North America - we're spending a couple of weeks vacation in Vancouver and Lake Chelan, before we stay for 3 weeks in WA. I'll be working during that time whilst Hilary hangs out in Seattle.
     
    I've starting posting some of our photos so you can see what we've been up to. Vancouver is pretty cool, although the weather hasn't been great so far it's supposed to pick up for the rest of our stay here. I'll add more as we go along.
     
    Update: Now we're back home I've made my holiday video. I've uploaded it to the new MSN video service (http://soapbox.msn.com) which hopefully you can see by clicking on the picture below:
     
    If that didn't work, you'll have to wait for Soapbox to come out of beta
    June 09

    I'm on MSDN!

    I'm very excited about the fact that I have something published on the MSDN site. How cool is that?
     
    I've been working on the Windows Live Expo Beta API, and we've recently gone public with our first release (note the "Beta" part!). A few days in we've got our first mashup, and generally it's gone reasonably well.
     
    We've got lots of plans to improve the API, but as ever with our small team it's really hard to do everything we want to do immediately.
     
    From a personal point of view, having the documentation on MSDN with my name on it is very satisfying - I'm not sure exactly why (other than vanity I guess!) but it does make it seem you're doing something worthwhile.
     
    You should check out the Expo Team Blog for more details on the API if you're interested.
    May 27

    More fun with maps

    I love Windows Live Local, and I love the new features they've recently added - in particular the way it's much easier to setup and share points of interest.
     
    For example, here's a view of all the Southern League grounds the mighty Yeltz will be playing at next year. Plus a list of places I go when staying in Redmond.
     
    What's also great is the Bird's Eye view of various places in the UK, including around where I live in Hove. The Bird's Eye view has been extremely useful when I'm over in Redmond in finding my ay around. It's a hell of a lot easier to remember where to go when you've seem landmarks on the route already.
    April 26

    Training for the Great North Run (updated)

    For some strange reason I've decided to run in this year's Great North Run, a half-marathon in October.
     
    I thought it was about time I did some sort of exercise, and I used to love running when I was a youngster. Whether my creaky old knees will be up to it is another matter, but there's only one way to find out.
     
    To try to encourage myself to keep going, I'm keeping a list of all my training runs (on the home page) plus a link to a map on the brilliant Windows Live Local on where the run was - mainly to calculate the distances but also because it's cool.
     
    Update: It's all over - my aging knees weren't up to the training, and after doing pretty well (up to 4 miles every other day) they gave way and I haven't been able to train for weeks. I officially pulled out of the race today, and now realise I just can't run that far. Not very happy about that, but it wasn't totally unexpected.
    March 23

    Paris In The Spring

    Just got back from a trip to France over a long weekend. It was absolutely freezing for most of the trip, but other than that it was a great few days.
     
    We started off in Lille for Andy P.Ratt's stag weekend, and then Ada, Cobb and me joined Michelle, Liz and Hilary in Paris for a few days - check out the Paris 2006 pictures in the photos section.
     
    Back at home now waiting for Spring to arrive and it to get a bit warmer.
    February 28

    Windows Live Expo Live

    You can all see now what my new job is all about. Windows Live Expo has now moved into it's first public beta - US only for the moment I'm afraid, but everyone can have a look.
     
    Yesterday was a pretty hectic day as we switched the site over to the latest release, but it all seems to have gone OK so far. We're very happy to receive feedback, which you can leave on the site.
     
    It's been a great few weeks working with my new team - check out our picture on the Team Expo Space - but I must admit I'm looking forward to getting back home on Friday.
     
    New bit: We also had some dancers around Microsoft's Red West campus to celebrate the launch - again see the team site.
    February 27

    Starting over

    I thought it was a good time to actually fix up my Space, and the old one was such a mess that it was easier to start anew.
     
    So what's this all about? Well, it's just my personal area where I'll be sharing personal photos etc., maybe a few rants every now and then, but probably not much!
     
    I've just started on a new team at Microsoft - working on Windows Live Expo (http://expo.live.com). It's an exciting project and my new colleagues have been very welcoming! I've been spending a few weeks over in Redmond getting up to speed on things, but I'll soon be back in the UK mainly working from home. Hurrah!
     
    I won't be talking about work on here in general - any technical talk will be over on my MSDN blog at http://blogs.msdn.com/john_pollard/
     
    To get things going, I've uploaded a few pictures from the trip me, Rob and Jodie made to Port Townsend - here's a map (made using the fantastic Windows Live Maps) if you don't know where that is.