Spotlights

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Duel AR.Drone: AR.Pursuit the 1st augmented reality video game (Short ve...



Okay now I know what I want for Christmas.
Watche this really sick flying video game that apparently was made for budding young drone pilots.
It starts with dogfights in a hangar ...
and ends with 16-year-old pilotless drones in iraq.
Strap it in and feel the rush ... yáll.


Monday, December 13, 2010

The roof is falling ... the roof is falling

Snow FootballImage by william couch via Flickr
Piss on this .. we need a dome!
By Terrance Gavan
Okay so who builds a roof out of Teflon and why can't Minneapolis find a way to clear snow off of it even during seminal weather events?
I just came back from the Grey Cup in Edmonton.
Hand and Toe warmers de rigueur.
I watched a farce play out in Chicago yesterday.
When are the NFL and CFL going to realize that football was never meant to be played in the dead of winter.
It spoils the game.
It denudes an otherwise stunning ballet of its essential attributes.
Players hate it.
Coaches hate it.
Fans hate it.
And bull shit to dem dat say oh well, IT ADDS TO THE CACHET.
BULL SHIT!
We, the fans, mostly watch at home.
So we are snuggled from the freezing temps and the ridiculous sightlines.
But we get treated to the end result.
Unabashedly boring football.
If I was payin' 250 large to watch a catastrophe on snow I'd bloody well be asking for my money back.
We are playing the next two Grey Cups in BC and Toronna.
Domed sites.
The last two were played under gray skies on the frostbitten cusps of the prairies.
Bull shit!
We need this all to change.
Super Bowls in january are okay as long as they're played indoors.
But the playoffs are played on frozen tundras in Green Bay, Chicago, New York and New England.
It's piss poor football.
It's football redux.
Fumbles and interceptions and dropped passes.
It is not football guaranteed to provide the best matchup for the seminal Super Bowl event.
So I call crap.
Begin in the spring and end it on Thanksgiving.
College Football .. go figure it out.
They don't play off so who gives a shit.
Let em have at it in Hawaii on Christmas Day for all I give a shit.
Will I watch Oregon and Auburn?
Of course.
I'm addicted.
Thus the rant.
Next year I will be sitting in shirtsleeves in BC Place watching the Grey Cup play out in the pleasant confines of a temperate 22 degrees Celsius.
Three days before that I will be skiing my ass off in Whistler.
Lovely.
This year I had a bag of winter clothes, jackets, mitts, boots, gloves and mittens.
Air Canada charged me $35 for the extra bag.
I was frozen cloddish by the second half.
Let's get it together.
Play football in the sunshine.
Warm weather days.
Watch that flowing ballet break its pastiche across that lovely panorama of verdant green.
Pardon the Eruption.
But shit it's cold up north.


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Friday, December 10, 2010

Whose afraid of whom - anyway?


How Pat Summitt Ruined The Best Thing About Women's Basketball

How Pat Summitt Ruined The Best Thing About Women's BasketballFor girls of the late 1990s and early 2000s, UConn-Tennessee was very often the only game that mattered — the ponytail Super Bowl. Then Pat Summitt screwed it all up. Emma Carmichael explains.
In a kinder world, Geno 'n' Pat would be a sitcom about a bumbling male-female cop duo. Geno would cause trouble, and Pat would be very serious and by-the-book, and she'd occasionally trip on things. Alas, women's basketball is not that world.
It has been nearly four years since the two most successful programs in women's basketball, UConn and Tennessee, last played each other. For that, we can thank two most successful coaches in women's basketball, Geno Auriemma and Pat Summitt. They've kept up a selfish and self-defeating feud that's deprived their sport of a rivalry with enough cultural cachet to warrant its very own Wikipedia entry. Imagine if Federer refused to play Nadal, and you'll have some idea of the hole that's been left in the sport — one that is perpetually struggling for relevance. On its surface, the coaches' bickering is about Auriemma's allegedly relaxed approach to NCAA rules. That's just pretext, though. What really happened is that women's basketball adjusted with time and television contracts, and Pat Summitt never did.

Crazy as Batshit - nothing more need be said!


Wrestling Confronts The "Finger Up The Ass" Menace

Wrestling Confronts The "Finger Up The Ass" Menace

 A perfectly legal move has landed a high school wrestler in court, charged with a sex crime. What exactly constitutes the feared but misunderstood "butt drag?"
In theory, it involves grabbing an opponent's behind to gain leverage when in a ground position. In practice, it often involves a finger or two slipping into the anus.
It's in the news because a California wrestler has been charged with sexual battery after using the move on a teammate during practice. (Three years ago, another wrestler was charged with rape after doing it to six opponents. He was convicted and sentenced to probation.)
The controversy has led to a number of matter-of-fact quotes that are giggle-inducing, like one coach who says the "checking the oil" part of the move isn't encouraged.
To think I'd ever instruct my guys to get on the mat and practice sticking their fingers in their teammates' rear end, it's stupid and ridiculous," longtime Fresno State wrestling coach Dennis DeLiddo said. "A butt drag isn't sticking your finger up a guy's [rectum]. That'd be illegal. That'd be counterproductive."
Then there's the executive director of the National Wrestling Coaches Association, who clarifies "it is never acceptable to insert fingers into the opponent's anus (regardless of duration)."
It's quite the dark, brown cloud hanging over wrestling. They've really got to knuckle down and come up with a solution before the competitors take matters into their own hands. Fisting joke.
Send an email to Barry Petchesky, the author of this post, atbarryp@deadspin.com.
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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Shut up and play the game - the N-word and trash talk


Pardon the Eruption – Gav Sports Column

By Terrance Gavan
Trash talk.
Greg Walsh kudos! 
   I don’t think it was around when I was growing up.
   Trash talk is imbued with a certain efficacy today.
   It’s subtle as a jackhammer.
   It’s unpleasant.
   It’s the antithesis of sportsmanship.
   It’s schadenfreude taken beyond reasonable bounds.
   I’m not a big fan … even though my number one hero, Boston Celtics legend Larry Bird was apparently one of its most vile and loathsome practitioners.
   Peterborough hockey coach Greg Walsh is paying the price right now for his bold and singular stand against trash talk emanating from a game on Nov. 15.
   Walsh is sitting out an as yet undetermined suspension for pulling his team off the ice during a hockey game a few weeks back.
   Walsh is sitting because he wouldn’t sit still.
   He’s sitting because the trash talk aimed at one of his teenage players clearly overstepped the bounds of good taste.
   He’s sitting because of a racist taunt aimed at one of his players.
   A player from an opposing team called Walsh’s player, 16-year-old Andrew McCullum: “Nigger.” (Writer’s note: If we continue to use the N-word – as most publications do - as a replacement for what was really said it does a disservice to the process and the reader. It’s an ugly word. When it’s uttered in anger it should be exposed for what it is: Gutless, spineless, mealy-mouthed racism.)
   The word was directed at McCullum while both players were sitting in the penalty box during a Peterborough Minor Hockey Association league encounter.
   McCullum told the Toronto Star that both players “were chirping at each other,” when the opposing player upped the ante.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Birds of a feather - Cherry and Rob Ford

Rob Ford with puppetImage by Shaun Merritt via Flickr
By Seamus O'Bradaigh - Contributing Editor
I'm back in Cottage Country just in time to watch Toronto sell its soul to mass, crass, and wise ass commercialism - Christmas or new mayor Rob Ford; pick 'em - to a public much too concerned with the bottom line to notice that  Mayor Rob Ford is a few screws loose of a shelf.
Now we hear from Joe Fiorito over atTor Star that Ford - a football coach who apparently never ran a manmaker in his life (see rotund) - has asked our national joke Don Cherry to hang the chain of the city around one of his many necks in the official swearing in ceremony.

"So the mayor wants Don Cherry to hang the chain of office around his neck; what of it? Here’s what of it: The Clamshell is not Coach’s Corner.
Rob Ford is the chief magistrate of the corporation of the city of Toronto. He demeans his office — our office — if he turns the investiture into a sideshow.
The symbolism of these things is such that, if anyone is going to hang anything around the mayor’s neck, it ought to be someone who represents the people of the city. Cherry may be a fine fellow, but he doesn’t live in Toronto, shovels no snow in this city, pays no taxes here. His only currency is his chippy celebrity. 
Joey Fiorito a Toronto Star columnist with the pop and the cohones to call a freak show just what it is: a wild ride down the rabbit hole. 
When you get right to the nitty gritty these guys match up fundamentally.
They're both self-seeking, self-aggrandizing semi-literate goofballs.
Rob Ford is shady and Cherry is a failed coach turned ebullient jackass.
Ford campaigned on a dubious platform.
Cherry remains a dubious spouter of nebbish rhetoric, xenophobic balderdash and some very unsavory views on women.
Ford is a bully.

Hey Santa - what the hell is wrong with you

Memories of Christmas - Dad's favorite time of year
BY Terrance Gavan
Me old Da loved Christmas.
Trouble is.
Christmas was not overmuch fond of me old Da.
Chip and sway your way through the following video.
It's a short epic detailing the travails of a drunken Santa who's been celebrating the end of a long shift in an English shopping mall.
Santa Claus with a little girlImage via Wikipedia
Yes look at the nose and tell me please ... does this Santa like
a wee dram every now and then? Of course ...
but catch the video at the end of the blog for funny drunk Kris.
It's caught on CCTV and is apparently a short dally-dilly day in the life of a store Santa after a long long long day.
It reminded me of my dad.
Old Da worked in the civil service in Ottawa.
But he was jovial enough to play Santa.
And he did possess enough of an advanced beer belly to jiggle in all the right places.
He loved kids almost as much as he loved beer, Drambuie and several brands of vodka.
I took a look at this video and was immediately struck with a notion that if Da had been a Santa at Billings Bridge shopping centre ... who knows.
Dad died on Christmas Day in 1973.
People often ask how that Christmas Day was for me.
And I'm almost embarassed to tell them.
For 18 years I never knew where my dad was or if he would get home in time for supper.
"Where's Phil?" The question would elicit a veritable shower of response.
"He was at the Bytown Tavern this morning," "I heard he was in Queon visiting Lennox at the Gavan's Hotel." "Gordie phoned and they had a few at Angie's"
He usually made it home on time. But the excitement was always palpable.
So I tell people that the thing I remember most about that Christmas when Dad died on a bed in intensive care from liver failure.
That I knew exactly where he was.
He was resting comfortably in a coffin down at McEvoy and Shields.
he wasn't late for dinner.
But he was missed.
For you Da.
And in the spirit of altruism, love and bonhomie.
We present:
Party on Santa ... Safe home tonight!



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Thursday, December 2, 2010

Another disappointing Grey Cup – Jimbo Daley loses again

The Grey CupImage via Wikipedia
Oh No Saskatchewan! 
Pardon my Camera - eruption?
By Terrance Gavan
   Edmonton – The rather angry looking woman at the Grey Cup bag check station asked me what was in my Samsonite knapsack.
   I said what I thought she wanted to hear.
   “Absolutely no booze ma’am,” I replied, smiling my frosted butt off.
   “What the hell is that?” she said, scowling at my camera.
   “That’s a Canon camera, ma’am,” I said, still grinning, but now acutely aware that booze or no booze, she was not a happy camper.
   “How big is that thing on the front of it,” she queried, face rigid as granite.
   “What thing is that ma’am?” I asked.
   “Take it out and I’ll show you what damn thing,” she said.
   I took out my camera with the long zoom lens.
   “There, smart ass, the long white thing … what is it?”
   Now she was glaring and I suddenly felt a looming presence over my left shoulder.
   One of Edmonton’s finest, dressed in yellow, and riding a snazzy looking Cannondale mountain bike, saw the smoke sifting from the top of my bag checker’s noodle and decided to stop by for a closer look.
   “Answer the question son,” said the friendly cop.
   “That ma’am is my Canon 70-200, f4 zoom lens,” I said.
   “It’s too big,” she said.
   “The camera?” I ventured.
   “The camera, the camera, and that long white thing … it’s too damn big,” she said glancing up at the cop, who was now smiling.
   “What should I do?” I asked.
   “Well, you absolutely can’t take that thing out of your bag when you get to your seat,” she said.
   And I must have been smiling. Because she took a new tack, no doubt chagrined at my rather cavalier attitude.
   “You just try to take that thing out,” she said. “We’ve got security cameras all over this stadium and if they see you with that camera they’ll come and take it away.”
   “The camera?” I said. “You’ll take my camera away ma’am?”
   “No not me,” she said. “One of our security guys. They’re big. They’ll come to your seat, take your camera and you’ll never see it again. And quit calling me ma’am … it’s irritating.”
   “Is that true officer?” I said to the cop, who was chuckling and making a move to get back on his bike.
   “Oh, I could see it being a little irritating,” said the cop.