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To: slacker711 who wrote (124058)9/18/2002 8:56:18 AM
From: slacker711  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
Heads should be rolling somewhere in Schaumburg....this is really a royal screwup.

theregister.co.uk

Motorola plugs mother of all roadmap leaks
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco
Posted: 17/09/2002 at 18:25 GMT

Ashen-faced Motorola supremos have confirmed that the phone giant is acting to plug one of the most spectacular leaks of product information in recent times, after the publication of a long-range handset roadmap spilled most of next year's phones onto the web.

High-end showstoppers include 'Paragon II' (available Q4 2003, a 3G SymbianOS phone with 'haptics' - sound and light sensors - and an SD card); and the A835, a video/cameraphone designed for two-way video conferencing, which features "Bell Keypad Mode and AV mode"…. whatever that means. It's functionally similar to Nokia's 7650 cameraphone, doesn't have pen input, and no release date is given for the device.

In the mid-range, Motorola has gone nuts on digital imaging: two of the phones have built-in cameras, while the others are all capable of receiving and viewing picture messages.

The camera phones listed are the T725 triband/GPRS flip phone with a 120x169 screen, sladed for Q2, and the E360R with a 128x96 screen slated for Q3.

Slated for European/Asian markets in Q1 is the C370 (a 900/1800Mhz/GPRS) model with USB and a 96x65 screen; while the V600, scheduled for Q3, will be the major US model next year for the US market. This is a triband GSM model with the addition of the 850Mhz frequency - a concoction to help TDMA networks transition to proper GSM/GPRS, that was devised for US carriers.

Two more models complete the line-up: the V70i, a hideous colorized version of the beautiful V70 watch phone, and the V300, a successor to the curvy blue model aimed at the youth market and pay-as-you-go tariffs. This has USB and a camera accessory is "under evaluation", according to the blurb.

Wireless to go
Paragon is interesting because it uses the same user interface as SonyEricsson's P800. Applications should be able to run on both devices unmodified. Motorola designed Paragon for Hutchison's 3G network (called simply '3'), and the appearance of a successor indicates that this project is more than a one-off. (The existence of Paragon was first revealed at The Register here, last year.Paragon II looks particularly interesting because the specification lists 802.11 support as an SD card accessory.

Carriers have overcome their wariness of 802.11, and this could be the first device that gives you the option of roaming between cellular networks and wireless Ethernet hotspots. Wouldn't that be nice?

If you're quick, you can see for yourself here but don't shout at us if this has been lawyered out of sight.®



To: slacker711 who wrote (124058)9/24/2002 4:29:49 AM
From: Wyätt Gwyön  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
hi slacker,

re: Tennis has improved?

emphatically, yes. the tennis players of today are so much better than the ones of 50 years ago, that the difference is on par with comparing today's "dream team" basketball players against an all-white team from the early 1950s. but unlike basketball, today's tennis is even better than it was five years ago, and ten years ago, and fifteen years ago...

i should mention, i am only talking about men's tennis. women's tennis is not even worth talking about since it is so unevolved (it will be interesting in about 30 years, but i digress...)

most casual tennis watchers in the US have absolutely no idea about tennis today, because they only care about US athletes, and US athletes are a pretty minor part of the men's game today. therefore, they only watch men's tennis if it's Pete Sampras vs. Agassi or whatever. this is of course boring if it involves Sampras, because he is no longer a dominant force (despite winning the US Open) who is a retro serve-centric player. his style cannot win consistently against the players that dominate today.

basically, the serve-centric game was dominant following the introduction of graphite rackets. those with booming serves just cleaned up. this is of course very boring to watch, and that seems to be your impression of what men's tennis is. but that is the wrong impression. or rather, that kind of tennis is not what most of the game is about anymore. (if booming serves were all tennis consisted of these days, i'd totally agree with you that it hadn't evolved at all, but i'm going to tell you why that's wrong, in perhaps mindnumbing detail :)

take a look at the men's top 10. the list is at atptour.com. Hewitt is number 1. he's 5'11" and weighs only 150 lbs. the guy is a soccer player, basically: he runs everything down. but unlike the "retrievers" of yesteryear (like Michael Chang), Hewitt actually has power (thanks in part to more powerful rackets, and in part to better conditioning, and in part to better biomechanics) to hit winners from any part of the court. he also comes to net.

number 2 is Agassi. this guy does not have a big serve. he deserves a lot of credit because he has evolved his game to fit the times. he had great natural talent (hand-eye coordination), and he added strength (he can bench close to 300, which is pretty good for a guy weighing 170 lbs) and great aerobic conditioning. this is why Agassi has been a great success whereas Sampras has become a has-been (Sampras was too complacent to train hard [do you remember him puking at the Open in 96? quite dramatic! but not an indication of the best fitness] and just relied on his big serve...he got lucky, basically, when he served unconscious for 2 weeks at the Open, but he can't do that consistently, which is why it's the first tournament he's won in over 2 years, and why he's not in the top 10 now and probably won't be at this time next year, either).

number 3 is Safin. even though he's Russian by nationality, he's Spanish as a player. that is because he trained in Spain on clay from the age of 14.

number 4 is Henman, who is a classic serve and volleyer. he has a great net game (and you said the volley was dead!) and a decent serve, but his ground game is not good enough to hang with the "soccer players". it is really, really hard to be a serve and volleyer these days, because the soccer players have such good returns. they will take a full swing at a 125 mph serve and hit it right by you (Sampras won the Open not because of his serve speed, but because he can hit both corners, and his toss is unreadable [meaning you don't know which corner he's going to; you can ace anybody at 90 mph if you hit the corner at a good angle; the hard part is doing it consistently through a long match; basically, it is hard enough to do through a set, extremely hard to do through a match, mindboggling hard to do through a whole tournament {which is why even Sampras can only win one tournament every 3 years with this game plan} and probably impossible to do for a year {which is why a soccer player is number 1, and not a serve and volleyer}. to get an idea of just how incredible these soccer-style players are, you should watch the match where Hewitt killed Henman at Wimbledon this year. that was on Henman's best surface, on his home turf (literally), and he had been playing well. but Hewitt was just so fast and his reflexes so quick, he left Henman in the dust. it was just amazing to watch. like seeing a mongoose kill a cobra. after the match, Henman said, "that's why Hewitt's the best player in the world." after watching that match, i don't see how anybody can call the hypertrophic steroid abusers of conventional American sports "athletes".

numbers 4, 5, and 6 are Costa, Ferrero, and Moya. these players are all Spaniards. add in Safin (who is effectively a Spaniard in his training, which is to say his origin as far as tennis goes), and 4 of the top ten players are Spaniards. what can you say about Spanish tennis? i guarantee you it is not at all about "watching two guys blast 120 mph serves and one or two returns".

their native surface is clay. clay is slow. you slip and slide. points are long and fought from the baseline, till somebody can put away a volley (yes, claycourters hit volleys these days) or a baseline winner.

imo red clay is the best surface for the men's game, because it limits the impact of serves. the best tournament in tennis is the Roland Garros, the French Open. what the hell has Sampras or any other big server ever done there? Sampras has never made the finals. somebody who's never made the finals of Roland Garros has no business being called "the greatest ever" (except by the US centric media).

number 8 is Tommy Haas, a German (although trained at Bollitieri's Academy in FLA since age 12, so American in style). his game, and the game of number 10 Roger Federer (Swiss) is basically all court. more power than the smaller Hewitt, but not as fast.

number 9, Roddick, is really the only one in the top 10 with a monster serve (perhaps the fastest in the game). but this has not enabled him to have anything like the success of number 1 Hewitt, who is nearly the same age and doesn't blow people off the court with speed.

so what you'll notice about the top 10 is that it is not full of your 10-year-old cliche of big servers. it is also not full of Americans. it is full of Europeans, mainly. and almost everybody has an all-court style of play. they are thin and fast, and have great endurance. they don't have rallies of "one or two balls" as you seem to think.

there are only 6 Americans in the top 50; only 9 in the top 100. Spaniards and South Americans dominate. they do not play the type of game you imagine tennis to be based on channel surfing through some boring Sampras match. i urge you to recognize that the tennis you have been presented on TV is a very skewed (very Americanized) animal. the real tennis happens on the red stuff (clay) in Europe and, to a lesser extent, in South America.

next year, check out the French Open (it is in May or June). prior to the French, there will be several warmup tournaments on clay in Europe which will be televised on ESPN2 or USA Network. check these out to get an idea of what the game really is. the game Sampras could never handle.



To: slacker711 who wrote (124058)9/25/2002 3:50:15 AM
From: Wyätt Gwyön  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Also....if you are blasting baseball for steroids, have you seen Serena lately?

you are not the only one who has wondered about her physique. but like i said, i don't even follow the women's game because it is so unevolved compared to the men's game (i could give you another 1500 word post explaining why but i'm sure we'd both rather not go there...).

because i don't follow the women's game much, i am not sure how closely their governing body--the Women's Tennis Association (WTA)--monitors for substance abuse.

the men's game is governed by a totally different entity: the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). the ATP does monitor for substance abuse. i think they follow the IOC rules among other things. active players using steroids have been caught in the past and suspended for appreciable lengths of time. one of them who has recently made a strong comeback is Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina atptour.com
for some reason, there are a lot of strong players from Argentina, and from South America generally. e.g., there are 4 Argentinians in the top 21, compared to only 3 Americans (two of whom are over 30 and are close to the ends of their careers).
(some have speculated that the incredible amount of talent from South America reflects the difficult conditions in many of those countries, which gives people a lot of incentive on the tour, where conditions are incredibly tough. in fact, there are strong players from all sorts of messed up countries, like Russia and former Soviet-bloc countries.)

in any case, the use of steroids in men's tennis, to the extent that it exists, would not be to become beefcake, but to achieve faster recovery times since there is basically no off season in tennis. the load on the body is tremendous, and many promising players are sidelined in their prime. viz., Kuerten, who was the dominant claycourt player before suffering hip trouble (he had hip surgery in Tennessee last year) and isn't quite up to his old stuff. and Moya (now in the top 10) was out of sorts for a couple years due to back trouble or something after hitting number 1 in his very early 20s.

so while Serena may appear incredibly muscular compared to the other women, she is also incredibly muscular compared to 99% of the guys as well. something tells me that if anabolic steroids were really that common on the men's tour, Serena wouldn't make all the men look like the stick figures they are (if you follow the Chela link, you'll see that free of steroids, he's now 6'3", 165 lbs, which is exactly the same as Kuerten when he was number 1 in the world). and as i mentioned, Hewitt is 5'11" and a whopping 150 lbs. quite a difference from the NFL, where the average team today has 11 players weighing over 300 lbs (compared to only two or three prior to 1987, when the NFL's "steroid policing" joke was introduced).

but just because tennis players are clearly better athletes than American football players doesn't mean they're any more moral. i'm sure they'd use steroids if they could without getting caught and if it made a difference. but based on their physiques, it doesn't seem like it makes a difference (at least the eye-catching kind). and obviously you don't need to be a muscle man to hit the ball hard.

probably the drug issues for men tennis players are more in line with those confronting cyclists and other endurance athletes than those confronting conventional American-sport athletes. the ATP has announced plans to test for EPO, for example. insidedenver.com

perhaps the stereotypical steroid "beefcaking" might be more advantageous in women's tennis, because it is still at a point in its evolution where the dominant players win in large part because they are physically stronger than everybody else.