Shared items from my GoogleReader

Friday, February 23, 2007

One prediction: No. 1 Wisconsin (26-3) at No. 2 Ohio State (25-3)

We'll see...
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The good news for the Buckeyes is they don't have to play Penn State again. After almost losing to the Nittany Lions in Happy Valley two weeks ago, Ohio State trailed at home Wednesday night with eight minutes to play before pulling away for a 68-60 win. Penn State has had success against OSU by slowing the tempo and playing a lot of zone, and I expect the Badgers will apply much the same formula. Then again, Ohio State has improved more than Wisconsin since the Badgers beat the Buckeyes in Madison on Jan. 9. Remember, that was Greg Oden's eighth college game, and he wore a thick wrap on his right hand that day as opposed to the less cumbersome splint he sports now. Still, Ohio State's youth continues to nag at me, and you never know when their shooting hands will go cold. Unlike a lot of teams, Wisconsin has several big bodies it can throw at Oden. In a bona fide tossup, I'll take toughness and experience by a hair.
Wisconsin 74, Ohio State 73

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Fab Four: Analog to Digital

The Fab Four's catalog long ago went the way of the 1 and the 0, but nothing could be less digital than the way the Beatles' music was recorded.

Today, effects like delay are easily achieved with off-the-shelf equipment costing a few hundred dollars at most. At the legendary Abbey Road studio, where many of these effects were pioneered, armies of technicians used enormous rooms to literally bounce the sound off walls.

Such analog feats make for a fascinating and timely tale in the hands of Kevin Ryan and Brian Kehew, whose deeply researched and timely self-published book Recording the Beatles, shows with painstaking clarity how recording engineers not only captured the band on tape, but augmented its musical palette in ways still emulated around the world. The book, first published in September by Curvebender Publishing, was an instant hit among Beatles fans and music geeks and has just gone into its second printing after the initial imprint of 3,000 copies sold out.

Weighing in at 540 pages, this exhaustive and authoritative retrospective of The Beatles' recording methods couldn't be timelier. The band's label, Apple Corps., is reportedly on the verge of licensing the Beatles catalog to online music stores for the first time, which could mark the second remastering of the Beatles catalog for a digital format since it happened for the CD in 1987.

The authors of the book (both of whom have recorded music professionally) interviewed the engineers who were there and documented their equipment. They pored over studio logs to piece together what the engineers used, how they used it and in which songs equipment appears, so you can hear for yourself.

The result is a sometimes overwhelming look at everything that went into Recording The Beatles -- or at least as much as is possible to document in 10 years of research and writing.

The hardcover book, which is large enough to fit into the life-sized replica of an EMI tape case that comes with it, is bursting with photos and descriptions of the equipment, studios and people who helped evolve the Beatles' sound. Considering the weight of their legacy, it's hard to approach the Beatles as a book subject without falling prey to repetition or abstraction, but its concrete, well-researched approach brings you close to its subject matter in a way that other Beatles accounts haven't.

And although the book's focus is technical in nature, the authors never neglect the human element for long, including lots of anecdotes and photos of the engineers, producers and the Beatles.

Gazing at all these pictures of beautiful, ancient, analog gear, I felt like a character out of Blade Runner looking at a pictures of real animals after they had gone extinct (nearly) and been replaced by robots. The equipment at Abbey Road and the other studios chronicled in the book has a magical feel to it that's impossible to replicate in a software interface.

It belongs to an opulent, if ramshackle, analog recording age that will never return. With the music industry's shrinking budgets and growing reliance on digital technology, who can afford teams of amp room technicians in white lab coats, or studio attendants in brown ones? For that matter, where do you even buy 2-inch tape anymore?

Despite the switch from analog to digital recording, there's a clear link between the recording techniques pioneered by the Beatles' engineers and those in use today in digital recording software. The book contains a great account of the Beatles' discovery of automatic double tracking, or A.D.T., which is a perfect example of the sort of inventiveness regularly in effect at Abbey Road Studios.

John Lennon complained about having to record his vocal tracks twice in order to achieve the "double-tracked" effect, which makes a person sounds like he's singing with himself. While thinking about the problem, Abbey Road engineer Ken Townsend took a nap after an all-day recording session, and woke up with a solution.

The engineers played Lennon's vocal track at 15 inches per second, routing the signal to a second tape deck which recorded it at 30 ips. The other part of the trick is that the second deck had twice the space between the Record head and the Play head as the first, so Lennon's voice arrived at the Play heads of both machines at approximately -- but not exactly -- the same time.

By mixing the signal from those machines onto a third, a new sort of double-track effect could be heard -- different than the previous kind, because the vocal nuances on the first track were reproduced identically on the second track. Lennon and the rest of the Beatles loved the A.D.T. effect, and began using it on instruments as well as vocals. A good example is Lennon's vocal on "Revolution 1," which, incidentally, he recorded lying down in the middle of the studio, as a picture in this book shows.

The book also revealed (to me, anyway) the origin of the word "plug-in," which is now used to refer to everything from Winamp add-ons to Photoshop effects. Equalization cartridges labeled "Classic" or "Pop" were literally plugged into the back of the mixing desk, which had little holes cut out of it so you could see which cartridge was plugged in.

These plug-ins were somewhat similar to the ones people use today, but engineers back then had a much different way of adding delay. They would route audio to a reverb plate or -- more impressively -- room-sized echo chambers with speakers and microphones in them, so that delay and reverb could be added by literally bouncing sound off of walls. Today's desktop producers might have it easier, but they'll never have it so good.

As tempting as it is to reminisce about the good old days of analog recording, most music people probably wouldn't back a return to the sort of situation where it took mountains of money to produce music. As edifying and entertaining as it is to read about how the Beatles were recorded, you'd never want to have to do it yourself (unless, perhaps, you could easily afford the cost). But the Beatles' engineers' attention to detail, methodical approach and problem-solving mindset is in more demand now than ever, since digital technology has made everything so easy.

As one would expect, this book is sure to fascinate any Beatles obsessive or recording engineer. But I think anyone with even slight technical or Beatles-derived curiosity can flip open the book and be engrossed by what they find. The authors deserve ample credit for explaining the hard science behind the Beatles' music in such an engaging way.

But, back to the Beatles going digital. Recording The Beatles shows The Beatles' engineers using the most cutting-edge technology available to record and mix these records. If Yoko Ono and the remaining Beatles stay true to the inventive spirit of Abbey Road when they go digital, they'll remaster the 13 core albums of the Beatles' catalog directly from tape into a 24-bit 96-kHz format that would sound even better than lossless files made from today's CDs. Like their move to 4-track, this would make a lot of sense in retrospect.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Early arriving Griffey plays coy at camp

Outfielder sheds little light on hand injury, awaits re-evaluation

SARASOTA, Fla. -- Reds center fielder Ken Griffey Jr. didn't offer clues to the mystery over how he broke his left hand over the winter.

Instead on Friday, he only added to the speculation.

"I was fishing, and I pulled in a big fish and it jumped in the boat, it was a shark," joked Griffey, an early arrival to Spring Training. "It started attacking my kid and I whupped [it]. That's my story and I'm sticking to it."

Fishing whoppers aside, Griffey declined to offer details about the injury he suffered in December. At that time, the Reds declared that it happened during an accident at home and that the 37-year-old's hand was placed in a hard cast.

That cast is now off the hand, which Griffey said felt good. But he held off saying more until team medical director Dr. Tim Kremchek had another look.

"We're waiting for Doc to re-evaluate the whole situation," said Griffey, who batted .252 with 27 home runs and 72 RBIs in 109 games last season. "He's not here, so I can't really answer all of your questions."

Griffey did squelch one of the many rumors he heard circulating about how he hurt his throwing hand. He said it did not happen while riding a motorcycle.

"I haven't been on a motorcycle in three years," he said. "My motorcycle is an '03 with 57 miles on it."

Reds pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training on Saturday. The full squad will hold its first workout on Feb. 23. At this point, Griffey is expected to participate.

"I haven't heard he's going to have any restrictions," Reds general manager Wayne Krivsky said. "Until I do, I'm assuming he's 100 percent."

The scrutiny on Griffey this spring will extend beyond his health and well-being. There have been discussions that he might shift from his customary center field to right field. During the winter, the club asked Griffey to be open-minded about switching positions.

Griffey spoke briefly to Reds manager Jerry Narron on Friday but would not offer insight into if he was willing to move this year.

"What we decide will be done behind closed doors," he said. "It won't be something in the media for you guys to sit here and talk about every day."

"That will resolve itself once the games get started," Krivsky said.

Nuxhall hospitalized in Florida

Legendary broadcaster continues battle with lymphoma

SARASOTA, Fla. -- Reds broadcasting legend and former pitcher Joe Nuxhall has been hospitalized again to battle an apparent return of lymphoma.

Nuxhall, who was in town for Reds Spring Training, was admitted earlier this week to Sarasota Memorial Hospital, complaining he had difficulty breathing. He is expected to undergo more tests in the coming days.

Marty Brennaman, the 78-year-old Nuxhall's longtime broadcast partner, spent 90 minutes visiting "The Ol' Lefthander" at the hospital on Friday.

"He has the same amazing outlook about this setback as he's had about every one of them," Brennaman said. "He doesn't leave open any possibility that he won't beat it, again."

Last summer, Nuxhall was hospitalized in Ohio with cancerous lymphoma on his tonsils and also battled through double pneumonia.

Nuxhall is beginning his 63rd year of association with the Reds organization as either a player or radio voice. He began calling games for Cincinnati and radio flagship WLW in 1967. In semi-retirement following the 2004 season, he was expected to call a handful of games on the radio this season.

Brennaman and Nuxhall were partnered on the air for 31 years and are a Cincinnati institution.

"He's as strong a guy as I've ever seen," Brennaman said. "His attitude is so good, it's ridiculous."

Thursday, February 15, 2007

Awwww... so sad! :-)

AMD faces cash crunch and LBO, says analyst

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) faces a potential cash crisis amid rumors about a private-equity buyout for the microprocesor maker, according to an analyst.

''We were surprised to see AMD shares rally yesterday given what we believe to be increasing concerns about cash flow at the company,'' analyst Doug Freedman of American Technology Research Inc., in a report on Thursday (Feb. 15). The analyst issued a ''Sell'' on AMD's share with a price target of $12.

''When we polled clients as to the reason behind the strength we were told that private equity rumors were circulating,'' he said in the report. ''While we do not doubt that private equity is sitting on cash it needs to put to work, we have a hard time seeing how it would get involved in AMD at the present valuation.''

Still, AMD (Sunnyvale, Calif.) needs cash amid a bitter price war with Intel Corp. (Santa Clara, Calif.). ''In the meantime we think management will be forced to come to the capital markets for operating cash before the end of the summer,'' he said.

There are other bad signs for AMD. ''We see Michael Dell's return as CEO at Dell as a negative development with strong ties to Intel,'' he said. ''OEM relationships are straining to stay engaged with AMD at this time given its stale product line-up. We continue to think AMD needs to get new products out to regain a competitive stance.''

It's not all doom and gloom for the company. AMD took its largest slice ever--25.3 percent--of the X86 market in the last quarter of 2006, according to a report released by PC market watcher Mercury Research.

But now, Intel in recent months has regained its groove and is gaining ground with a string of quad-core processor releases, a new relationship with Apple, and, most recently, new inroads with Sun Microsystems.

Recently, AMD reported fourth quarter 2006 revenue of $1.77 billion, an operating loss of $527 million, and a net loss of $574 million, or minus $1.08 per share. In the previous period, AMD posted a profit of $119 million on sales of $1.328 billion. The company reported a profit of $268 million on sales of $1.351 billion a year ago.

1st coin, with likeness of George Washington, promises to benefit consumers, collectors.

Today 11:05 AM|CNN/Money
Coin enthusiasts and casual collectors lined up Thursday morning at Grand Central Station in New York for the first opportunity to get the $1 presidential coin.

No surprise here...

Bill Cowher is returning to the NFL -- as an analyst on CBS' Sunday "The NFL Today" studio show.

Boss Toss: Next Best Thing to Killing, Maiming

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Of all the workplaces in the world, we certainly don't need the Boss Toss. But many of you, dear readers, must have a slavemaster patrolling the cubicles whose command you'd like to eliminate with extreme prejudice. Load up the appropriate mini-effigy of your boss or nemesis and flip it out into the ether where it belongs with the Boss Toss. Send it to the cornfields! Say buh-bye with this $4.99 spring-loaded catapult.

So you don't have anyone you'd like to flip off? Maybe someone from your past? Those little miniature executives, the official ammo of the boss toss, are available for $29.99 and can be modified to suit the occasion.

MLB considers making Coors Field cooler mandatory...

MLB believes it has found the 'wave of the future' for fixing odd ball behavior.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Intel, Motion prescribing Tablet PC-like devices for doctors

Intel's health care efforts are finally translating into products, as the company gears up for a technology demonstration next week.

Intel and Motion Computing plan to demonstrate the Mobile Clinical Assistant, first shown during last year's Intel Developer Forum, during an event at the University of California at San Francisco Medical Center on Tuesday. Intel CEO Paul Otellini will be on hand along with Motion CEO Scott Eckert and Mark Laret, head of the San Francisco hospital.

The Mobile Clinical Assistant is designed to help drag the health care industry into the 21st century. Doctors and nurses can take notes on the Tablet PC-like device and download patient information from the hospital's server. The product is designed for a hospital, with rugged features such as spill protection and a sturdy chassis to guard against falls.

Intel announced the formation of the Digital Health Group, headed by vice president Louis Burns, in January 2005 amid a broader reorganization. Burns has spent time at Intel conferences and medical-industry gatherings urging the health care industry to modernize its record-keeping practices with information technology.

Who Came Up With Valentine’s Day?

It’s known worldwide as a day of hearts, Cupids, and flowers—and big business. Each year, 875 million Valentine’s Day cards are bought in the United States, generating more than $925 million in sales. You could almost think the holiday was created to boost sales. But in fact its roots extend back at least to medieval times and perhaps earlier.

Early Christianity supplied the stories that led to the holiday as we now know it. There were a number of Christian martyrs named St. Valentine, but the day most likely gets its name from an obscure Roman priest named Valentinus, who was active in the second half of the third century. According to the legend that spread during the Middle Ages, Valentinus was imprisoned by the Roman emperor Claudius II for giving aid and comfort to persecuted Christians. After renouncing the Roman gods and even attempting to convert the emperor to Christianity, Valentinus was condemned to death—a gruesome death involving beating, stoning, and beheading.

While awaiting his execution—so the story goes—Valentinus struck up a close friendship with the blind daughter of the Emperor’s jailer. As befits a future saint, he miraculously restored the girl’s sight. And on the night before his execution he is said to have written the girl a farewell message “from your Valentine.” He was killed the next day, February 14 by our modern calendar.

As it happened, that was the day of the Roman feast of Lupercalia, a celebration involving the ancient god Faunus. During the feast’s fertility ritual, a priest would daub young men’s foreheads with goat’s blood and milk, after which the men would run off and choose mates in a nearby village. Over the centuries, after Christianity swept Europe, this pagan rite was apparently conflated with the St. Valentine legend, creating a celebration of romantic love.

By the Middle Ages the tradition of exchanging affectionate notes on February 14 had already become common. Geoffrey Chaucer even mentions the holiday in his mid-fourteenth-century poem “The Parlement of Fowles,” as the day when female birds choose their mates. Its popularity continued through the 1600s, despite its celebration being briefly banned by Puritans in England. It was brought to America by English settlers, with the first known observances in the late 1600s. By the middle of the 1700s, handmade cards were becoming more and more elaborate, with decorative heart, angel, and flower motifs and even puzzles and rebuses. By 1850 complex lace-edged valentines were the rage, with several printing companies competing in the ever-more-lucrative cardmaking business. One trailblazing entrepreneur, a Massachusetts woman named Esther Howland, created exquisite valentines that were so popular she was able to build up a business that brought in about $100,000 a year—a huge sum at the time.

The tradition grew again in the United States after World War I, when soldiers returned home to their sweethearts and, equally important, a wartime paper shortage ended. From then until now it has only become stronger. Today it’s one of the busiest times of year for greeting card companies (second only behind Christmas), florists, and chocolatiers. Love does conquer all—at least on February 14.

Reds believe they have depth in reserves

Bench strength is very important in the National League and fortunately for the Reds, they have several options off the bench in the late innings, which pleases general manager Wayne Krivsky and manager Jerry Narron.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Manure: You May Be Walking on It Soon

The Ag Department says it's no cow-pie in the sky dream -- a fiberboard flooring material made from sterilized cow manure could replace sawdust composite boards for building.

Cosby's dog charms judges, wins tough terrier group

Bill Cosby's terrier bounced into the show ring, wagging his tail a mile a minute. Harry walked onto the green carpet at Madison Square Garden as if he had no competition -- in fact, he didn't.

How has Woods impacted golf?

Fifteen years after Tiger Woods made his PGA Tour debut, Mark Kreidler examines whether Woods' ability to win has contributed in any meaningful way to the ascendance of golf in the world, across race lines, across class lines … across something other than the bottom line.

Monday, February 12, 2007

About time to finally take the "off" out of the offseason...

A winter's worth of speculation about signings and trades will be replaced by a spring's worth of speculation about the final 25-man roster as the Reds begin Spring Training. Pitchers and catchers report on Saturday; the full squad reports on Feb. 21.

Friday, February 9, 2007

Teams who may break Super Bowl drought next year

Indianapolis finally got its first taste of Super Bowl glory. SI.com's Don Banks analyzes five teams that could break their long championship slumps next season.

One of the most overlooked of the Founding Fathers...

(from March 2007 American Heritage...)

The Founding Father of the American Economy (1789)

Robert Morris, who had helped greatly in financing the Revolution, turned George Washington down when the President offered him the post of Secretary of the Treasury. Morris wanted to be free to speculate in land and other opportunities to make money. It was a poor decision on Morris’s part (he would end up in debtor’s prison), but it was very good for the country because Washington then turned to Alexander Hamilton. Still in his early thirties, Hamilton was both a genius and a prodigious hard worker. There was much work to do, because the national financial situation was desperate.

The old federal government under the Articles of Confederation had lacked the power to tax. Instead it was dependent on requisitions from the states, and they were sometimes forthcoming and sometimes not. The massive debt left over from the Revolutionary War was unpaid, as was the interest due on it. The money supply was chaotic; it was a hodgepodge of foreign coins and “continentals,” the paper money issued by the Continental Congress during the war that depreciated rapidly and traded at pennies on the dollar. In 1789 the United States was financially and economically, nothing more than a very large banana republic.

Hamilton had to accomplish four things to transform it: (1) develop a system of taxation to fund the government and establish a customs service to collect the tariff, destined to be the main federal tax; (2) organize a monetary and banking system; (3) refund and rationalize the national debt in ways that would gain the confidence of the marketplace; and (4) devise a mechanism to allow the government to borrow as necessary.

Hamilton accomplished all this in the first two years of his tenure. And though the Treasury was the biggest of the new government departments (it had 40 employees to the State Department’s mere 5), it was largely Hamilton’s work in both conception and political execution.

The results were astonishing. The American economy, which had been mired in depression for much of the 1780s, revived wonderfully (helped, to be sure, by the outbreak of war in Europe). Federal revenues were a meager $3.6 million in 1792, the first year for which statistics are available, but by 1800 they topped $10 million. Government bonds began selling at a premium in Europe. The banking system grew rapidly, centered on the Bank of the United States, established by Hamilton under a federal charter, and its notes traded at par throughout the Union. For the first time since colonization had begun 200 years earlier, the United States had a reliable and convenient money supply.

Hamilton was fought, tooth and nail, by the developing political opposition under Thomas Jefferson, and parts of his program, especially the Bank of the United States, would later be dismantled (Hamilton’s shade might take comfort in the fact that his 1784 creation, the Bank of New York, the very first corporate stock to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange, continues to flourish). Still, thanks to Hamilton, the economy of the new nation was off to the races and began the growth that has been the wonder of the world to this day.

Yea!

Giants extend broadcaster Miller's deal
02/09/2007 2:32 PM ET
SAN FRANCISCO -- The running joke about Giants broadcaster Jon Miller is he does great impressions of legendary baseball announcers Vin Scully and others, but he still needs work on imitating Jon Miller.

The man with storytelling gifts and big vocal cords has been given a six-year contract extension through the 2012 season as the Giants' voice on KNBR 680, the team's flagship radio station, and on television.

Executive vice president and chief operating officer Larry Baer made the announcement Friday.

"Jon is perhaps the leading baseball broadcaster in the country. We are extremely fortunate to have him calling Giants games for the foreseeable future," said Baer. "His knowledge of baseball and the game's history are unsurpassed, and his rich descriptions of Giants games paint a vivid picture for our fans. Jon combines a tremendous wit with a flair for the dramatic, which makes listening to his radio and television accounts such a joy for baseball fans."

Miller has come a long way since 1974, when he worked Oakland A's games under Charlie O. Finley's leadership. The broadcaster enters his 11th season with the Giants, handles play-by-play on ESPN's Sunday's telecasts, won the coveted "ACE" award for cable TV excellence in 1991, was nominated twice for a national Emmy Award in 1995 and broadcast the World Series on ESPN Radio for eight years.

Prior to joining the Giants, Miller was the voice of the Baltimore Orioles for 14 years. He has also broadcast basketball, soccer and hockey.

Fellow San Francisco announcers Duane Kuiper and Mike Krukow are signed through 2010 -- their 20th seasons with the team. Hall of Famer broadcaster Lon Simmons was a 24-year veteran with the Giants, while Hank Greenwald was at the team's microphone for 15 years.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Reds gear up for Spring Training(!)...

Slugger gets perfect test score, 'thrilled' to be citizen

Geesh... this guy doesn't do anything half-way!

Pujols scores perfect 100 on U.S. citizenship test

Piano as Sculpture: Fazioli M. Luminal Looks as Good as It Sounds

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Piano design has changed little in the past two centuries, but now Philippe Gendre has a new take on the concert grand in his design called M. Liminal, made by Fazioli pianos. Its asymmetrical shape looks positively aerodynamic, and it's a blend of the old and the new with its wood on top and stainless steel base.

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This has got to be the most gorgeous piano in existence.

Reds lock up Arroyo through '10 with $25M deal

Reds lock up Arroyo through '10 with $25M deal


Right-hander Bronson Arroyo and the Cincinnati Reds agreed Thursday to a $25 million, two-year contract extension through 2010.

The Reds on Thursday completed a two-step commitment to their top starting pitchers by signing All-Star right-hander Bronson Arroyo to a two-year contract extension through 2010 with a club option for 2011.

From the best to the worst of the NFL television announcers...

Dr. Z's grades the NFL's announcing teams
From the best to the very worst, SI.com's Dr. Z has plenty to say about the NFL's talking heads. He charts 'em all in his ninth-annual TV Commentator Rankings.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Reds bullpen analysis...

Perhaps no team changed one part of its roster last season as much as the Reds changed their bullpen. Now, after an offseason of fine-tuning, the club enters Spring Training without a set Opening Day closer, but the pieces to succeed are there nonetheless.

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

The man behind the numbers

Meet the man who created the world's most addictive baseball stats Web site.

Hasbro recalls almost 1 million Easy-Bake Ovens


Many of us have fond childhood memories of scarfing down delicious, undercooked treats courtesy of the old Easy-Bake Oven, but it looks like today's chefs-in-training have a little more to worry about than runny brownies: Hasbro is recalling almost a million of the toys because of a risk of burns and trapped extremities. According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, about 985,000 Ovens sold between May 2006 and the beginning of this month contain a potentially dangerous defect, wherein children can receive a nasty burn on their chubby little fingers after getting them trapped in the oven's opening. So far there have been 29 reported incidents of stuck fingers and five reports of burns, prompting Hasbro to release a retrofit kit that apparently remedies the problem and sports a helpful warning label. Owners of the affected models should immediately pull their rugrat away from that soufflé he or she is baking and stick the Easy-Bake on a high shelf until the kit -- which is free by request -- arrives in the mail. In the meantime, this might be a good opportunity to review the whole "stop, drop, and roll" procedure and teach your tykes to apply burn cream, just in case another one of their toys (Flamosapien, perhaps?) gets a little hot under the collar.

Reds sign Harang...

Reds sign Harang to four-year deal
The Reds avoided arbitration with ace starting pitcher Aaron Harang on Tuesday when they signed him to a four-year, $36.5 million contract through the 2010 season with a club option for 2011.

Keep your options open

The big question in Chicago: What should the Bears do at QB? SI.com's Peter King has five suggestions, ranks his top 15 QBs and starts more offseason debate.

Feb. 6, 1971: Fore!

Astronaut Alan Shepard on the moon.

1971: Astronaut Alan Shepard uses a 6-iron to hit a golf ball into a lunar crater.

Shepard, who 10 years before became the first American in space, commanded the Apollo 14 mission, the third manned mission to perform a lunar landing. Coming on the heels of Apollo 13's spectacular failure, Shepard and his crew overcame a few early glitches to enjoy a badly needed success.

All the major objectives established for Apollo 14 were achieved, although Shepard and fellow astronaut Edgar Mitchell failed to reach the rim of a 1,000-foot-wide crater, owing to the difficulty of the terrain. Nevertheless, the Apollo 14 mission will be remembered for that iconic moment when Shepard dropped a golf ball onto the powdery lunar surface and, using an improvised golf club (a 6-iron club head attached to the handle of a collecting tool), hacked away like the worst duffer on ... well, the moon.

Not to be outdone, Mitchell fashioned a javelin out of an equipment pole and heaved it as far as the limitations of his spacesuit would let him. Like Shepard's par-100,000 shot, it was memorable for its symbolism rather than its grace.

Shepard's antics, coming toward the end of his second moonwalk, were filmed and beamed back to Earth.

Barkley admits huge losses, big gains while gambling

A million here, a million there - pretty soon he'll be talking about real money.
Still definitely not a role model - and he can probably forget any vision of getting into politics with a gambling problem (although we've had worse in office, that's for sure!)
Guess he better start making more commercials with Duane Wade... heh!
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PHOENIX -- Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley admits he has a gambling problem, but said Monday that he's several thousand dollars richer after returning from Las Vegas.

In an interview with Phoenix television station KTVK, Barkley said he won "about $700,000" over the weekend.

"That was all profit [from] blackjack and I bet on the Super Bowl. I had the Colts," Barkley added. "I played a lot of blackjack."

Barkley did not say how much he bet on Sunday's game in which Indianapolis beat the Chicago Bears 29-17 in Miami.

In an ESPN interview in May 2006, Barkley estimated that he'd lost about $10 million gambling over the years.

He said Monday that he lost $2.5 million "in a six-hour period" one night last year.

"It's a stupid, bad habit. I have a problem," Barkley said of his gambling. "But the problem is when you can't afford it. I can afford to gamble. I didn't kill myself when I lost two and half million dollars … I like to gamble and I'm not going to quit."

Barkley, who lives in the Phoenix area, was elected to the Hall of Fame last year.

He averaged 22.1 points and nearly 12 rebounds in a 16-year career that included stops in Philadelphia, Phoenix and Houston. He was the league's MVP in 1993 with the Suns, and he won gold at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics as part of the original U.S. Dream Team.

Monday, February 5, 2007

Kidsleep Tells Your Little Bastards When It's Lights Out

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Don't bother teaching your children how to tell time. Oh no. Just get them one of these Kidsleep nightlight alarms and they can easily discern when "sleepy time" and "wakey time" is.

Simply look at the clock face, and the sleeping rabit or wide-awake rabbit will tell you exactly what you should be doing right now. The best part of this clock would be if your kids regularly wake up at 4:00 am, the sleeping bunny would tell them not to stay in bed and not come and wake you up. Yeah, that'll probably work until 4:30 am.

(Sorry, Dawn - so far it looks like it's only available in UK...)

Super Bowl Advertisers Play It For Laughs

Anheuser-Busch, Nationwide Seen as Hits With Humor; A Big Fumble by Flomax

(I thought the dog with the "Dalmatian" mud spots was the best commercial by far...)

Super Bowl analysis...

With the precision of a surgeon, Peyton Manning picked apart the Bears and erased any question about his ability to win the big game, writes John Clayton.


Peyton Manning's freakish preparation pays off; more post-Super Bowl news.

After getting drenched in the rain, soaked again in Gatorade, and enjoying a sleepless, festive night, the 51-year-old Tony Dungy sounded as if he's ready to do it all again next season.

Friday, February 2, 2007

Still rooting for the Phoenix Suns(?)...

Suns' window of opportunity may be closing
The Suns face the challege of graduating from regular-season carnival act to NBA champs. SI.com's Paul Forrester analyzes Phoenix's chances.

Reds updates...

NL Central close in '06? Prepare for '07
The defending-champion Cardinals are on top of the baseball world, but they don't have to look far to see the rest of the division. As close as the NL Central race was in 2006, it shapes up as an even tighter race in 2007.

Spring Training Fan Guide: Reds
As Reds fans leave the wintry chill of the Queen City and head south to check out club in person, here's some information that should help make it a great trip.

Reds Spring Training quick hits
After making a playoff run late into last season, it was the inability to execute and do the little things it takes to win games that hurt the Reds. This year, Cincinnati has bolstered its pitching and defense and plans to fine-tune the fundamentals.

Pitching, defense enhanced this spring
While the Reds know they need to score more runs, good pitching and glovework will keep them in games. With improvements there, the Reds will strengthen their small-ball approach.

Around the Horn: Starting rotation
Heading into the 2007 season, the Reds can breathe easy about their top two starters, Aaron Harang and Bronson Arroyo, who were a dominant right-handed pair in the NL in '06. However, it's the rest of the rotation that Cincinnati has questions about.

Closer questions as Caravan ends
Fans asked manager Jerry Narron about the Reds' closer situation as the 2007 Winter Caravan came to a close.