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football posts

Filed under: Fun, Internet, Blogging

Free localized sports--in realtime

One of the toughest things about being a local online sports fan is getting up-to-the-minute scores and play-by-play action on your favorite sports teams. Sure, you could watch the game on local TV coverage. But if you're a frequent traveler or just somebody who spends a lot of nights out, it's not easy to catch third-and-long every time it happens, especially when the team you follow is a high school football team, or worse still, a pro hockey team, whose games aren't often broadcast on the radio.

The answer? Your WiFi-enabled laptop, of course. Most large sports organizations like Major League Baseball and the National Football League now offer play-by-play game charts that are updated just seconds after each play. MLB's free online coverage (called "game-day" on your favorite team's home page) even gives you an animated field diagram with pitch-by-pitch updates, so even if you're in Timbuktu, you'll still get the realtime nittygritty on your favorite team.

Liveblogging has recently become a prevalent online outlet for local sports coverage, too. With many high school football games not being publicized until the next day, it's good to know some folks are liveblogging them. In the cab of your big rig on the way to Idaho on a Friday night, find a WiFi connection and you can still keep up on what happened in your kid's division II high school action. You'll be able to catch box scores updated in realtime if you know where to look.

Filed under: Fun, Internet, Windows Mobile, Web services

Get the game while you're on the go

It's been a cruel, cruel summer without our beloved NFL football, and pre-season games don't really cut it. Fortunately, kickoff is tomorrow (not a moment too soon for the rabid fans around here) and we'll able to get our fill of long punt returns, bone-crunching tackles, and (hopefully) more hilarious MasterCard commercials.

If despite your best intentions to stay on the couch and catch all the games, you end up needing to be out being, you know, social or something, you can always avail yourself of the latest technology and take the games with you.

Mike Spitalieri over at Laptop Magazine takes a look at five ways to make your football games follow you wherever you go. Unfortunately, only one option is (almost) free, but that's mainly a symptom of a sports league trying to squeeze every last nickel out of fans.

If you need something to keep you occupied between games, be sure to add AOL's FanHouse blog to your RSS feed. Go Bears!

Filed under: Internet, Blogging, Web services

Grab NFL data as it happens via RSS

get nfl updates via rssWhat do the NFL and RSS have in common besides three letters? Nothing, except for the fact they have just tackled each other into providing as-it-happens news, headlines, and summaries of NFL action.

The team behind the NFL website has just made grabbing NFL data both faster and easier. Forget about checking out and scanning NFL.com all day waiting for something to happen, just read it via RSS feeds. Users can select teams, events, authors to receive news updates as they happen. Don't feel much like reading? NFL has also dropped in a video RSS reader. Select a team, event and a show and you will get instant notification when a video is uploaded.

Signing up is so simple any armchair quarterback can do it. Almost any that is.

Filed under: Fun, Internet, Video, Web services, Google

Super Bowl commercials, re-run on YouTube

superbowl ads, care of youtubeIf you missed any of the Super Bowl commercials last night, or got caught with your head in the fridge when a good one was on, you still have the chance to watch them again. YouTube has a listing of 35 commercials that ran last night during the Super Bowl's U.S. broadcast that you can watch over and over til your heart's content. Not only that, users can also rate the commercials through the "SuperVote" to decide what the number one commercial of the evening was. Or, if you're not into voting, you can always just view the gallery of ads that the folks over at YouTube have so nicely compiled.

UPDATE: Marshall has informed us that SplashCast has all the commercials in one easy player over at SplashCast.

Filed under: Fun, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Mozilla, Freeware, Browser Tips

FootieFox: Firefox extension to feed your World Cup obsession

FootieFox

Yesterday I mentioned Microsoft's Soccer Scoreboard. If you prefer to take your sports scores in the form of a Firefox extension, there's FootieFox, an extension that will give you up-to-the-minute scores for today's matches. You can configure it for your preferred teams and leagues, and it will sit quietly in your Firefox statusbar displaying the most recent score, or all matches at the click of a mouse. It even has visual or audio notifications for when your team scores a goal.

Filed under: Fun, Windows, Microsoft, Freeware

Microsoft's World Cup scoreboard

Soccer ScoreboardI'll admit, I'm pretty sports agnostic, but Microsoft apparently isn't: It's released Soccer Scoreboard for World Cup 2006, a little Windows app that will show you the score of the current match, a schedule of upcoming matches, and the current standings. You can also add a custom RSS feed to be shown in a ticker at the bottom, and adjust the transparency level. Before you install the Soccer (Football, whatever) Scoreboard you'll have to jump through Microsoft's Windows validation hoops, but otherwise the app is free.

[Via jkOnTheRun]

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Graveyard Shift - zombie-busting Time Waster

With Halloween fast approaching, it's a great time to get in some practice defending your territory against zombies. In Graveyard Shift, you take aim at zombies and other creepy-crawlies, blasting them into splatters of cartoony green guts. It's a casual first-person shooter, and it's very easy to get the hang of - use the mouse to aim, click to fire. Graveyard Shift has at least 15 levels, and it might even have some secret stages I haven't unlocked yet. They key to getting good at Graveyard Shift is learning to use ...

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