| Mike's profileTorres TalkingPhotosBlogLists | Help |
|
|
Moving to Movie MakerAfter some great years working on our web experiences, I realized over my parental leave that it was time for me to try something completely new; to stretch my brain in ways I haven’t before and be intimidated again by just how little I knew about something. I’ve been around these parts since the first beta version of MSN Spaces in mid-2004 – and for a year and a half before that I was working on the underlying platform still in use – and have now seen many our efforts “grow up” into amazing Windows Live functionality like the What’s New feed, our new Profile, and our new People experience (one contact list!) I can actually remember when I was one of just a few people blogging regularly about our online services. While that has taken a backseat recently (we have great marketing and a team blog) the passion to continually improve our online story is stronger than ever. This past year was fantastic. The team is functioning on such a high level and everyone is really, really proud of the work we did. Yet as one wave comes to a close and another begins, it’s a natural time to make a move. Now of course, there really isn’t a better group in the company to work in than Windows Live. So while my #1 priority was to do something different, inspiring, and challenging, a close #1.1 was to make sure that whatever I did was within Windows Live. So effective this week I’ve moved over to lead the Windows Live Movie Maker PM team – now a part of Windows Live as of the latest release. There are so many reasons why I’m excited about this: it’s a v1 product that already has a big following... there are big hard technical, UI, and set of project management challenges… no one has really gotten this stuff “right” yet… the team is rock solid, experienced, and driven… and it’s an opportunity to really play a part in the new excitement around Windows PCs and show how good ol’ software can make a difference. Curious about the new Windows Live Movie Maker? You can learn about it here. In the meantime, please send me your thoughts on Movie Maker – you know how to reach me (email is best). Although if your feedback is about needing to see “time” in the product somehow, we’ve definitely heard this feedback loud and clear :) (Remember, what’s currently out there is a very early beta! There’s a lot of work happening in Redmond) Favorite quotes on the Windows Live updateAs you may have heard, the new and improved Windows Live is coming your way very, very soon. We announced it last night at 9pm and so far, the feedback has been great. This is certainly the most satisfying part of this job: shipping! Shipping something you’re proud of that is. Particularly with a release like this one that was very much a “redefinition” in a lot of ways. Long gone are the days when I was the only one blogging about our release though ;) Check out our Windows Live Wire blog for more information on Windows Live. And check out the video below for more depth: Also – read the quotes below. FUN. Emphasis below is mine. Hall underscored that Microsoft is trying to simplify the Web experience by bringing together people and content scattered all over the Web and across personal computers, phones and other devices. Having one central place to organize and manage information relieves some of the social networking fatigue people are experiencing, he said. To that end, Microsoft formed partnerships with a number of companies including LinkedIn, Photobucket and Twitter. – LA Times blog It could be pretty exciting for Live.com users before the year ends, especially for U.S. users. And this could make or break, Live.com’s relevance to Microsoft’s suite of web products. – Search Engine Journal
This is Big: Overall, these new services represent a major upgrade to the online part of the Windows Live suite. Microsoft is clearly trying to challenge both Yahoo and Google with its new photo application, while the new profiles and groups tie all the Live services together into a very sophisticated social network. – Read/Write Web Microsoft announced Windows Live Profiles today, which takes some lessons from social networking sites and FriendFeed. The new profile page provides a central hub for all your online activities on Windows Live. More interestingly, your profile can also aggregate updates from other services, such as your Twitter account, your blog feed, reviews from Yelp, or photos you have posted on Flickr. You can also feed any standard RSS stream into your profile…You can choose the amount of personal information you want to display in your profile and Microsoft gives you very granular control over what parts of your profile you want to share with others. You can, for example, choose to share your last name and location only with friends, but make information about your relationship status and hometown public. You can also choose to make some items only available to a small sub-set of your friends. – Read/Write Web
In addition to rolling out new services, Microsoft has given Windows Live a facelift. The overall interface is now less crowded with blocks of personalized content. Another nice customization feature is the ability to add a personalized slideshow in the upper right-hand corner of your Windows Live Home page. The slideshow images are pulled from your Windows Live Photo collection. Microsoft makes some serious strides into the future of cloud computing with this update to Windows Live. I like what I see, but if Microsoft is serious about aggregating online services, it should bring in more of the giant services that already have millions of members. Noticeably missing from Microsoft's long list of partners are AOL, Facebook, Google, and MySpace. – PC World
In many respects, Live Photos clearly competes directly with Yahoo's Flickr, though while it has a lot of Flickr's features, its focus is more on sharing pictures with a small group of friends or family than with the whole Internet. We have been using Live Photos for about two months now, and our overall impression is extremely positive. – Read/Write Web On the whole, the overhaul's quite impressive. The layout encourages people to create (and/or flesh out) user profiles, and then offers the sort of Friend Feed-style updates to which we've become accustomed. Profiles will also be useful when it comes to tagging and sorting photos, or creating groups… What's more: it's done all this in a timely manner. The new Windows Live will be available to everyone by early 2009, with U.S. customers seeing it rather sooner. This should put Microsoft ahead of Yahoo, which is bucket testing a similar sort of upgraded homepage… Chris Jones, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Windows Live Experience Program Management, tried to sum up the accomplishment in a statement. He explained, "Our customers have friends across the Web. They communicate through many unconnected Web services and want access to it all from a single location - without worrying about how it's done. Now Windows Live takes care of that, with an integrated personal communication service that works across the Web with optimized experiences on the PC and mobile phone." -- WebProNews Windows Live Wave 3 BetaThe new beta is here! If you're wondering why I've been so quiet this year, this is a big part of the reason. The other one is an 11-month old squirt who likes to open dresser drawers and pull everything out over and over. This beta release is significant for a number of reasons, but I think the thing you'll really start to notice (especially as we rollout Wave 3 final with the "rest of it") is that Windows Live really stands for something now. There's just so much cool stuff happening now.
Go to http://download.live.com/ and get the newest Messenger, Mail, Photo Gallery, Movie Maker, Writer, Toolbar, and Family Safety. Photo Gallery is probably the app I use the most outside of Messenger. Just a couple weeks ago I created my first panoramic stitch out of photos of the Washington coast (yes, I know this feature has been around for a year - but I just started taking decent photos!) This feature alone is worth the price of admission (well... it's free!) But this was ONE click to create. Windows Live Writer Technical PreviewHello? Anyone out there? ;) I know it’s been a while since I’ve posted anything of substance. Certainly longer than I’ve gone with respect to blogging since late 2004. Again, I expect I’ll be posting just as sporadically in the future as I am now given my “life priorities” and how they’ve expanded since welcoming a baby girl into the world back in October. I did want to spend a minute or two giving folks an FYI post on the latest release of Windows Live Writer (Tech Preview). If you’re a blogger and you’re NOT using Writer… well, you should be. The new features include new formatting for photos, inline videos, word count, auto linking, and more. It’s really a solid, solid product and one that makes the life of a blogger a lot easier. Check out this pic of Stella using the new tilt + “reflection” features of Writer for photos: Cool. Interested in doing this yourself? Get the Technical Preview of Windows Live Writer Live MeshNot too long ago (Jan 07) I blogged about wanting an Exchange Server for the rest of my life. This week, something similar was announced called Live Mesh. Yes, I know I'm days late to the party - but participating in blog chatter isn't top of mind for me anymore ;) If you haven't been following the buzz around Live Mesh, here are some links to catch-up: In short: this is one of the most ambitious platforms I've seen come from Microsoft since Silverlight or the original .NET Framework. It has serious, serious potential to redefine computing. The concepts resonate with me in a way few things do, particularly because they aren't an either-or approach (cloud vs. client). Only time will tell. How I use Windows LiveUpdate (11/23): I somehow left out Windows Live Photo Gallery which I use just about everyday. So I added it below. This post started out as an idea for a screencast months ago in preparation for our release, and I'd still love to do that someday, but I'd probably need a lot more dedicated time to do that how I'd want to. I plan to take paternity leave sometime next year so I'm bunching up a few projects (some involving screencasting) to tackle during that time. Naturally, I'm going to spend the vast majority of that time with my daughter who is the most incredible human being ever. Really, I wanted to document how I use Windows Live because, as you might expect, I do try and use it to its fullest. In fact, my PC at home could easily be the "reference machine" for the Microsoft lifestyle since I run mostly Microsoft software on it. I do still use my Mac quite a bit too, and while I still use non-Microsoft software on my PC, I do my absolute best to "eat the Microsoft dogfood" when I can. It gives me a good split between using the competition's products (Google, Firefox, Mac OS X, iPhoto, etc.) and using ours. Aside from the Windows Live client suite, I'm also running Media Center (as part of Vista Ultimate), Zune, Office 2007, Visual Studio, Office Communicator, Expression Studio, and Money 2007. The only non-Microsoft software I'm running regularly: Mozy for online backup, SyncBack for local backup, Firefox for the occasional browsing outside of IE7, and Paint.NET - which is built on the .NET Framework, so that may be sort of cheating. I love this PC; it's the Velocity Micro Cinemagix Grand Theater I blogged about back when I discovered the evils of CableCard. One of the things that's become incredibly apparent to me since setting up this machine is that when the OEM wants to, they can make one hell of a Vista machine. This box didn't come with a single byte of crapware code on it, so everything runs exactly how it should. Smooth, fast, and reliable. Vista auto-updates overnight and reports back any failures to Microsoft (so it can get smarter and smarter like the sentient machine it is) and Windows Live OneCare tunes up the disks and keeps the machine free of malware. I feel like a corporate shill saying all this, but the reality is that it's really impressive when you can have an experience like this - it just feels so "buttoned up". Back to the point: Windows Live. I've been working on it since it was codenamed "Longhorn Live" years ago and I think all things considered, it's the best solution out there for me. Windows Live to me is truly what brings Windows to life; it helps me roam and access my files, stay in touch with friends and family, and keep my machine running smoothly. Windows without Live on it feels plain these days - sort of like how Xbox must feel without Xbox LIVE. So how exactly do I use it? Hotmail for personal email with Windows Live Mail as my front door. I store all my personal email with Hotmail and Windows Live Mail provides an "Exchange like experience" on multiple PCs; it connects to my mailbox and keeps it in sync with the service. I keep all my Sent items and I archive everything I receive in a folder aptly named Archive. That's it, it's as simple as that. When I'm away from my desk, I use Windows Live for Windows Mobile to keep the inbox on my phone in sync with the service - and if I have a screen handy, I use the Hotmail web interface to check-in. Messenger for personal IM (and work IM too). Messenger and I go way back; I remember installing the first version the day it came out (I think it was in 1999) - my contact list now numbers in the mid-hundreds. I've turned off all the annoying chimes and pop-ups, but old faithful is still my preferred way to keep in touch with friends and our family on the east coast and California. I also love using Sharing Folders to transfer full-res photos back and forth with family. FolderShare to roam my Favorites, OneCare notebook, and files I'm currently working on across 4 PCs. One of the greatest inventions of all time; every time I notice that my files have synchronized automatically (usually because I'm in a panic and I need to find something) I love FolderShare even more. I've talked a lot about FolderShare over the last year; it's one of my all-time favorite pieces of technology. Windows Live Photo Gallery to organize and edit my photos. Before upgrading to WLPG I was using Windows Vista's Photo Gallery, and I was using Picasa before that (long before Google gobbled it up). I'm still working through a tagging scheme that I like (it's a LOT of work to do it right) but the fact that WLPG lets me also organize by folder, which is how I primarily organize my photos anyway, is great. I also use WLPG to organize my videos - although I have to admit that 99.9% of my videos are still on miniDV tapes. One feature I don't use much yet is "publish to Spaces/Flickr" even though I think it's elegantly designed. I like sharing photos through Messenger Sharing Folders or email (using Windows Live Mail's photo e-mail) and I'm using SmugMug to power a photo site for my daughter (long story on this one - I hope to use Windows Live someday). I'm toying with the idea of using Adobe Photoshop Lightroom for more advanced manipulations, but I haven't been able to justify the steep price tag. OneCare for virus scanning, spyware scanning (with Defender), and tune-ups. I just installed 2.0 yesterday and so far, I'm impressed with how elegant it is. I always have this sense that OneCare is working for me while I'm sleeping - and I love that. Writer for blogging efficiency. Another one of my favorite apps - this thing has kept me blogging over the years. It just works so well! SkyDrive for sharing large files (like video) with people. Spaces for projecting the online "me" - mostly through my blog... but with the latest release, I'm using Spaces more and more to catch up with friends who use it for blogging and photo sharing. Spaces Home gives me a quick summary of what's going on with my friends, and as silly as I think blogging is, I can't keep myself from writing long (pointless?) posts like this one. Having a soapbox as customizable as Spaces is something that was sorely missing for me pre-December 2004. I haven't used Windows Live Events for a real event yet - that's what happens when you have a baby, I guess - but I absolutely plan to ditch Evite for this. I've set up hundreds of test events this year while we were building it, so I can't wait to have a "real" event! And there you have it... Of course, all is available from http://get.live.com if you want to try it out for yourself. Windows Live Events and Windows Live Spaces updatesTalk about a lot of updates! Last night we finished the deployment of a bunch of new features including Windows Live Events, a new service for "party planning". I've been working on this for most of the year, so it's only appropriate that it ships on my first born's due date (the 11th!) Still no sign of the baby though. Check out the Space Craft entry for all the details. Below is just some of the event specific fun. Rob and Dare have been posting more about the specifics of the release and what to expect; if you're interested, you should check it out.
Paul Thurrott's Windows Live Suite PreviewPaul has a good write-up on the Windows Live suite beta. I always enjoy reading what Paul has to say because he just gets Microsoft so well; I guess that's his "gift" for covering the company as long as he has. Some call him a Microsoft apologist but I don't see it that way. He calls it like it is; when he thinks we do something stupid, he's the first to say so. Good thing he likes the suite ;)
Read more -> Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows: Windows Live Suite Preview Microsoft opening up on the Web - CNETThis is from an article on CNET News.com:
This is an interesting and fair write-up of some of our online initiatives. If you read the whole thing, you'll get a feel for where Windows Live is headed. The direction is exciting, and it's the first time since November 2005 (the launch) that I think it's being clearly articulated. I'm also happy to say that I see Windows Live working for Internet "enthusiasts" like me more and more, and that's a huge relief. There's nothing worse than saying "I don't use it, but I recommend that you do." I see myself slowly migrating to a bunch of our services - and for those I don't want to use, I know Windows Live will work well with many of them too. Exciting stuff. Updates to Windows Live SpacesYes, I know I'm way late on this one. I was out of the country when the rollout finished, so I wasn't able to jump online and post about it. For the past couple years I have been lucky... I was always around during release windows, but this time it just didn't work out. As you can probably see if you're an active user, there have been a number of updates to Spaces including:
You can read more about all of the updates on The Space Craft: Three months of new updates to Windows Live Spaces. Windows Live Writer and FolderShareI can imagine that when people talk about Windows Live, it probably means different things to different people. To some, it's Messenger and a way to talk to their friends around the world. To others, it's Spaces and it's all about blogging, photo sharing, and catching up with friends. But to power users, I think it's something else. I think Windows Live today represents two truly standout applications to the digerati: FolderShare and Writer. These two applications are best in class and when judged by blog chatter alone, seem to have really captured the imaginations of people. It's not a surprise to anyone who has used them - they both pass the "it just works" test with flying colors, and they both make something that was previously a chore into something that's joyful. That's no small task. And it shows when you do a quick search (using Technorati or... ahem... Google Blog Search). Check it out: On Windows Live FolderShare:
On Windows Live Writer:
In a conversation earlier today, I was explaining to someone what makes Writer so appealing to me over every other desktop or web-based blogging app. It's the little things that show the team cares about bloggers; one example is the "auto-fill" feature from your browsing history when you insert a hyperlink into a blog post. Clever. Another, of course, is the extensibility. Don't like something about Writer? Chances are you can install a plug-in to improve upon it. And let's not leave out the (cool) WYSIWYG editing that shows you exactly what your blog entry will look like before posting it. And the new glass effects in Vista! Of course, like Windows Live Mail which supports POP and IMAP, Writer is also standards compliant and can post to the most popular blogging engines. If you don't like Spaces, shame on you - but you can swap that out too. Misinformed reviewers like Joe Wilcox - who I unsubscribed from long ago - recently gave Microsoft flack for not supporting other photo services in Windows Live Photo Gallery. What he failed to mention: Mail and Writer both support industry standards out of the box, and we'd love to hook Photo Gallery up to other photo hosts - unfortunately every single one supports their own proprietary API so it couldn't get done in the first rev. Back to the point: What does this appreciation for Writer & FolderShare say to me? It says that we need to do a better job across the rest of Windows Live. We need to learn from FolderShare and Writer; why do people love these things so much? Why are people still using and talking about FolderShare after two years? What is it that appeals to folks? There's a lot to gain here and I expect you'll see more Live services all the time striving to be as essential, easy to use, and fun as these apps. I'd love to hear people's thoughts on this if interested in commenting. Windows Live betas - Writer, Messenger, MailThree applications I use on a daily basis just got updated today:
All three of them are rock-solid in terms of stability (of course, they're still betas!) and come highly recommended by yours truly. Writer and Mail weren't part of my daily workflow last year at this time but they're now two apps that I use all the time. More on Hotmail...There's a lot of discussion about the new Windows Live Hotmail on the web today. Everything ranging from "this thing is great!" to "Microsoft is still chasing taillights in Web 2.0". Some of the criticisms and critiques of Hotmail are actually misinformed though, so I figured I would take 10 minutes to point some of them out. If only to be that guy. Hotmail is still trailing Gmail. While I can see how people could jump to this conclusion given that Gmail had both large storage and a responsive AJAX-based interface before Yahoo Mail and Hotmail did, you might want to check the ComScore usage numbers posted on News.com (graph posted below). Hotmail isn't trailing Gmail despite the fact that Gmail has solid adoption amongst tech influentials. Note that this is something I really hope Hotmail can do over time as there's no reason it can't be a great mail service for geeks and normal folk alike - but in the meantime, it's actually doing quite well out there. Also interesting to note is that Windows Live Hotmail is the first large-scale web mail service to come out of beta and make this type of interactive experience available to ALL of its users. It isn't a limited beta anymore, it's available in 36 languages! Hotmail doesn't work in Firefox. Sure it does! I use it in Firefox every single day. On my Mac no less. Don't believe the hype here, Firefox is treated as a Tier 1 browser across all of Windows Live (including Spaces). People around here take Firefox very seriously. Hotmail should have been built with Silverlight. I hear you on this one but the reality of Silverlight is that it's in beta (the .NET enabled version is a week old alpha) and the new version of Hotmail has been in development for over two years. Redesigning Hotmail is a Herculean task - hundreds of people have worked on it. And when you have 280 million users, even the smallest changes can have massive impact. So while no one is ruling out great Silverlight-based experiences in the future, it just wouldn't have been possible to turn around this much complex code on top of a (still alpha/beta) platform. If you're interested in a lightweight client version of Hotmail (it's not based on Silverlight, but that doesn't really matter) you should check out Windows Live Mail, the replacement for Windows Mail and Outlook Express. A final version of this is coming very soon, but the beta is still fun. --- Is the new Hotmail perfect? Nope - there are still things that bug me about it. Omar knows what those things are... But it's a huge step forward and I strongly prefer it to both Yahoo Mail and Gmail, especially with the just announced free Outlook synchronization (note: this isn't just POP3 or IMAP access, this is FULL sync!) and improved spam, virus, and phishing protection. Hotmail is HOT Again!Here comes the new, improved, faster, slicker, better looking, and just much, much cooler version of Hotmail:
And for those Outlook fans, you'll definitely appreciate this:
This experience is Hotmail on the Desktop. There will be more announcements around Hotmail on your desktop coming shortly, so stay tuned. And hey, there's also a fun "history of Hotmail" video available! If you haven't tried Hotmail in a while, you might want to give it a whirl again. Read more here: It's Here and the Fun Has Only Just Begun RSS: Categories, sub-feeds, and the "minimal" feed (favorite #2)RSS is one of my favorite technologies on the web, bar none. I spend at least an hour each day reading tons of RSS feeds, so feed granularity is definitely important to me. We've made a TON of updates to RSS feeds in this current release - most of which can't be detected by the human eye, but are important for power-users and developers. Here's the list of my favorites: Blog category feeds are here, and they're easy to find Want to subscribe to just my Windows Live category? You can do that now. Or just interested in my Personal life (psycho!)? You can just subscribe to my Personal category. It's super-easy too - just click through to the Blog page by clicking Blog and both IE and Firefox auto-discovery will show you all categories from my blog that you can subscribe to. This is what it looks like for me: You can also find the feed at http://mike.spaces.live.com/category/Productivity/feed.rss (where the category you are interested in is Productivity - just swap it out for the others). RSS auto-discovery works for all sub-feeds This is an extension of the last item. No matter where you are in spaces, you can auto-discover any feed on the fly with IE or Firefox (and maybe Safari, haven't checked) and subscribe to individual sub-feeds like a single photo album or someone's book list. Sure this isn't a common scenario for people, but it's great fun. Here's an example of this working for photo albums on Jay's space. "All albums" and "All lists" feeds Developers wanting to enumerate all the photo albums and all the lists on a space can now do this with "uber-feeds" of all albums and all lists! You can reference these from the main feed and you can auto-discover these in IE7 or Firefox from the all albums page and the lists page. Try it out with my lists: http://mike.spaces.live.com/lists/, the feed for all lists is located here: http://mike.spaces.live.com/lists/feed.rss. Profile feed You can even subscribe to someone's profile using RSS. Cool, huh? This is what my profile looks like in IE7 - I used auto-discovery on the Profile page. This is mostly for programmatic access to the profile - but cool nonetheless. You can find it where you would expect to find it: http://mike.spaces.live.com/profile/feed.rss. Comment feeds Something I've wanted FOREVER. You can subscribe to individual feeds of comments per blog entry. To do this, just go to the permalink page and the RSS icon in IE7 or Firefox will light up. One of the options will be comments and voila, you are subscribed to comment updates! Also a great thing for a developer to take advantage of. Friends feed You can now enumerate your friends list using RSS! Here's mine in IE7: "Minimal" feed Primarily for developers, this will give you a "north star" to finding all the sub-feeds of the space without all of the content. For example, you don't need to retrieve all the blog entries if you are just using this minimal feed in an application that uses photos. You would query the minimal feed, find the itemRSS for the photo album feed, and continue on down the tree! For example, my minimal feed is: http://mike.spaces.live.com/minimal/feed.rss ---- There's a lot more in this release for developers and enthusiasts that hasn't been talked about yet. Bruno alludes to some of the things on the Spaces Platform space. Things like simple URL-based APIs for adding friends, adding modules, sending private messages, and perhaps even changing your theme. Great stuff. He also talks about the exact URL formats for all of these feeds. If you add all this stuff up - there are some serious applications you can create on top of all of this. I think you can see that we are using RSS as a simple way to access content on Spaces programmatically instead of building out a more complex set of interfaces. Smuga on new features in mobile spacesMike Smuga covers all the cool new features in Mobile Spaces - one of the hidden gems of the entire Spaces experience. For those of you NOT using mobile spaces on your web-enabled phone, you totally need to be. It's truly great and in my opinion, second to none. There's a "what's new" feed type experience which is broken out into Recent Updates (for things your network is up to) and Recent Comments on your space. And there's an entire friend management experience - so you can add friends, remove them, accept/decline requests, and view people's profiles. Head on over to http://mobile.spaces.live.com on your phone. Microsoft Photography Blog : Getting SpaceyJordan Schwartz has a great overview of the changes to Photos on Spaces in our latest release to make the whole experience easier to use! Below are some of his before and after shots or the experience along with the "all albums" page - and make sure to go to the Photography blog (not on Spaces, ahem) to read all about the changes! What's New: full page view (favorite #1)With the latest release of spaces, you can see updates from your Windows Live Messenger contacts on the Spaces Home page - which you can access by clicking "Home" in the upper-right corner of all spaces. In the What's New area, you can see a reverse chronological list of updates from your contacts with their profile photo. But what's even cooler is that you can click the "More" link to get a massively huge page of all your Messenger contacts in order. And then you can use your mouse pointer to hover on their profile photo to see exactly what's changed on their space - whether they added photos, a blog entry, or updated their profile. Since I have hundreds of Messenger contacts, this page is incredibly useful to me. I would show a screenshot but then I would be exposing my Messenger list to the world, which people may not appreciate. So you'll either have to take my word for it or go to this page directly by clicking "More" in the What's New section of Spaces Home, or by going directly to this URL: http://[your_alias].home.services.spaces.live.com/whatsnew/?_c02_owner=1 (you have to replace [your_alias] with your space alias - mine is 'mike') New features - The Space CraftCheck out the post from The Space Craft about all the cool new features on Spaces. I'm going to go deeper on some of my favorite little things (think: crazy new RSS support) but for now, check it out! Quote When you speak, we listen. New features launched today! LiveSide notices somethingCheck it out. There's some stuff about a guestbook, private messages, background images, RSS feeds, and more. Watch The Space Craft and this spot right here early in the morning for the deets. Or just navigate around like an Easter egg hunt. |
|
|