The free agency free-for-all has begun, mostly with obscure names from the college ranks. It will get wilder. Contract negotiations for free agents and draft picks started Tuesday, with draftees able to sign right away. The big names among veterans — Nnamdi Asomugha, Santonio Holmes, Matt Hasselbeck — can’t sign until Thursday, but their agents are negotiating deals right now.

Throw in dozens of players who will be cut, such as Dallas receiver Roy Williams and Baltimore tight end Todd Heap, which officially can’t happen until Thursday, and it’s “organized chaos,” according to Colts general manager Chris Polian.

“It’s a lot of stress, work, preparation. But it’s what we all look forward to. It’s our playoffs and our Super Bowl,” agent Peter Schaffer said.

Indeed, several agents said they didn’t expect to sleep Tuesday as the NFL reopened for business after 4 1/2 months. In addition to their clients already in the league who are unrestricted or restricted free agents, they will have veterans released. And they are trying to set up youngsters, such as college starters safety Winston Venable of Boise State (Chicago) and quarterback Jerrod Johnson of Texas A&M (Philadelphia), with teams after they were passed over in April’s draft.

“I always have a lot of guys in that category, and it’s been absolutely nuts,” said agent Joe Linta, who placed Michigan State tight end Charlie Gantt with the Chiefs and Cal receiver Jeremy Ross with the Patriots on Tuesday. He also fielded calls from a dozen teams for Utah defensive tackle Sealver Siliga before he signed with San Francisco.

“There are times when you are fielding four or five calls at once,” added Linta. “Multiply, say, 10 guys you are trying to get signed by maybe three to 10 teams interested … you do the math.”

The math adds up to hundreds of transactions in a few days, as opposed to a few weeks had there not been a 4 1/2-month labor stoppage.

“I think the best way to say it is whatever you can imagine, it’s probably worse than that,” Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt said. “There is multitasking at its most furious.”

Normally, teams would bring in players to visit their facilities, have them work out and take physicals, perhaps even attend meetings and speak with potential future teammates. Some of that might happen in the next few days, particularly for a high-profile player such as Asomugha. Most of it won’t.

“I think all of the guys realize this is going to be a whole new world,” agent Jordan Woy said. “Most said, ‘Listen, the bottom line is the team I’m with I like. If somebody out there is really interested, if they come with a great offer up front, then we’ll look into that.’

“They realize they’re going to have to make quicker, probably less-informed decisions than they have in the past. They’re just going to have to do best they can.”

So are the teams. Sure, all 32 clubs have had more than enough extra time to watch video and dissect the games of every free agent on the market. Maybe that’s not such a great think; overanalysis has destroyed the chances of many an NFL team through the years.

And now there’s the added element of all those vets being released.

“In this climate, anything’s possible,” said Ravens coach John Harbaugh, whose team will release Heap, receiver Derrick Mason and running back Willis McGahee. “You may have an opportunity to bring some of those guys back. You may not. It just depends on how things shake out the next couple of days.”

What also might shake out: shorter contracts. Teams might not be comfortable with long-term deals (the five- and six-year varieties) in this post-lockout climate. The big bucks could be there, but not for as many seasons.

“Being a free agent in 2011 doesn’t necessarily mean that those players will all sign lucrative long-term deals,” said agent Ben Dogra, who represents soon-to-be former Cowboy Williams. “You will see more short-term deals than ever before. Agents will have to project into free agency of 2012 as much as this year.”

At least in 2012, things will return to normality.

___

AP Pro Football Writer Jaime Aron in Dallas and Sports Writers Bob Baum in Phoenix and David Ginsburg in Baltimore contributed to this story.

 

SALT LAKE CITY – Olympic silver medalist Jeret “Speedy” Peterson was found dead in a remote canyon in Utah in what police are calling a suicide. One of the world’s most risk-taking and innovative freestyle skiers, the creator of the one-of-a-kind “Hurricane” called 911 before shooting himself, police said. The 29-year-old had been cited for drunken driving Friday in Hailey, Idaho and had pleaded not guilty.

Officers found Peterson late Monday night between Salt Lake City and Park City in Lambs Canyon. Police said a suicide note was found near Peterson’s car; they declined to reveal what it said.

“Regardless of the amazing stuff he did skiing, it was the stuff he did for other people that was incredible to me,” said Peterson’s longtime coach and friend, Matt Christensen. “A lot of people saw his story and said he must be a wild jackass and a cowboy. He was just the opposite.”

He was one of the most colorful of athletes, and he wore his heart on his sleeve — never more than on Feb. 25, 2010, when he walked off the mountain with tears streaming down his face after taking the Olympic silver medal.

“I know that a lot of people go through a lot of things in their life, and I just want them to realize they can overcome anything,” Peterson said that night. “There’s light at the end of the tunnel and mine was silver and I love it.”

It was a poignant chapter to a career that, until then, had been filled with success on the smaller stages of his fringe sport but defined in the mainstream by his moment at the Turin Olympics where, after finishing seventh, he was sent home early after a minor scuffle with a buddy in the street.

Over the next months and years, he began filling in the details of a life story replete with incredible highlights and crushing disappointments.

While in Italy, he was still reeling from the suicide of a friend, who shot himself in front of Peterson only months before.

Peterson also had problems with alcohol and depression and admitted he had his own thoughts of suicide, all stemming from a childhood in which he was sexually abused and lost his 5-year-old sister to a drunken driver.

He picked up his nickname as a young boy because the big helmet he wore reminded his coaches of Speed Racer of cartoon fame.

But as his career progressed, he became better known for his signature jump, the “Hurricane”_ five twists packed into three somersaults as he vaulted off the snowy ramp and flew 50 feet in the air.

It was high-risk, high-reward, and once Peterson started working on it in 2004, he insisted he’d have it no other way. It was a sight to behold when he landed it, and the judges rewarded him for taking the chance. Helped by the huge difficulty marks for the jump, he still holds the two-jump scoring record of 268.70, set at Deer Valley in January 2007.

“I’ve worked with amazing athletes who have taken a lot of calculated risks,” Christensen said. “One thing I admired about Speedy is he never gave up on me. From the time I first started talking to him about five twists, he never gave up on it. He just kept doing it.”

On many days, it set him up to finish first — or last — but nowhere in between.

He had seven wins on the World Cup circuit, was the 2005 World Cup champion and a three-time American champion.

But the stats and the medals were only a fraction of the story.

Born with the heart of a gambler, he took that passion to Las Vegas and won $550,000 playing blackjack one night in the pre-Turin days. But within years, he was virtually broke again after giving some of it away and losing even more in the tanking real estate market.

Trying to decide whether he wanted to stay in the sport after Turin, he took time off and started working in the construction business — a place, he said, where he could see the effort of a hard day’s work without having to walk into the video room the next day and break it down on the screen.

He also got sober and said last year that he had stopped drinking.

It was all a precursor to his return to his passion — skiing. He recommitted leading up to Vancouver. And what a payoff. He came in second that night, but hardly felt like a runner-up.

“I do it because I want to be the person I know I can be,” he said. “I’ve really changed things around in the last 3 1/2 years. This is my medal for everything I’ve overcome, and I’m ecstatic.”

US Ski Team CEO Bill Marolt called Tuesday “a sad day in our sport.”

“Jeret `Speedy’ Peterson was a great champion who will be missed and remembered as a positive, innovative force on not only his sport of freestyle aerials, but on the entire U.S. Freestyle Ski Team family and everyone he touched,” Marolt said.

This year, Peterson was enrolled at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, working on a degree while he took some time off and decided if he wanted to re-up for 2014. He had signed a deal as a spokesman for the onion industry and was featured in a fun little video on YouTube cooking up a so-called “Hurricane Burger.”

“He only has two speeds,” it says at the start of the video. “Stop and go.”

Peterson’s message to almost anyone he talked to was to take chances, to never settle for ordinary. And in a sport known for its risk-takers and daredevils, Peterson still stood out. Maybe the most fitting tribute is that seven years after he first started trying to push his sport forward with the “Hurricane,” there are only a small handful of skiers who will try anything that risky.

“Over the course of your career, you hope you get an athlete or maybe two athletes like him,” Christensen said, “and he was one of those guys.”

___

Associated Press reporter John Miller in Boise, Idaho contributed to this report.

 

LONDON (AFP) – Former German international Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has launched a scathing attack on football’s rulers and wants clubs to be given a bigger say in running the sport, it was reported Wednesday.

Rummenigge, the chairman of the European Club Association and chief executive of Bundesliga giants Bayern Munich, told The Guardian he had lost confidence in FIFA following a string of recent corruption scandals.

The 55-year-old said ECA clubs such as Bayern, Manchester United and Real Madrid should launch a “revolution” to transform football if necessary.

“I don’t accept any longer that we should be guided by people who are not serious and clean,” he told the Guardian.

“Now is the moment to intervene. Because knowing something is wrong is an obligation to change.”

Rummenigge said clubs around the world supported reform of football’s power structure.

“It’s not just the top clubs, it’s all the clubs,” he said.

“Sepp Blatter is saying that he is cleaning up but the fact that no one believes him tells you everything you need to know.

“I’m not optimistic because they believe the system is working perfectly as it is. It’s a money machine, World Cup after World Cup. And for them, that’s more important than serious and clean governance.”

Rummenigge said he doubted whether national associations would be able to change FIFA from within.

“The current system is tailor-made for the associations and voted for by the associations. They won’t go against (Fifa),” he said.

“All stakeholders — clubs, associations, players, referees, and women’s football — have a right to be involved in the decision-making process.”

“I will give them a chance but I’m ready for a revolution if that’s the only way to come to a solution,” he said.

Rummenigge is also scathing of the rapid expansion in size of tournaments like the World Cup and the European Championship.

“When I won the European Championship [in 1980], there were eight teams in the finals. That figure will treble by 2016,” he said.

“In the World Cup, it used to be 16 teams, now it’s 32. The clubs pay the players but are not part of the decision-making process. We are not treated respectfully.”

 

SHANGHAI – There was no stopping Michael Phelps this time. The same goes for Federica Pellegrini.

Having failed to win his opening two events at the world championships, Phelps finally got gold in the 200-meter butterfly on Wednesday. In the next event, Italy’s Pellegrini won the 200 freestyle to become the first woman to sweep the 200 and 400 at consecutive worlds.

This was Phelps’ fifth world title in the 200 fly — and nobody else has more than two. He’s also won the event at the last two Olympics.

“That’s sort of been my bread and butter event,” Phelps said. “I didn’t want to lose that race again. Having a number of defeats this year is extremely frustrating to me. It feels good to win a race.”

Australian great Ian Thorpe, who recorded the 200-400 double in 2001 and 2003, is the only other swimmer besides Pellegrini to achieve the sweep.

“You’ve just got to always believe in yourself. It’s great to be a part of history,” said Pellegrini, who is also the Olympic champion in the 200. “This was my race, and nobody was going to enter my house.”

The loudest cheers of the night at the Oriental Sports Center were reserved for local favorite Sun Yang of China, who won the grueling 800 meters — a non-Olympic event. Ryan Cochrane of Canada took silver and Gergo Kis of Hungary got bronze.

In another non-Olympic race, Brazil’s Felipe Silva beat Italy’s Fabio Scozzoli in the 50 breaststroke, with defending champion Cameron van der Burgh of South Africa third.

Midway through the eight-day meet, no world records have been set — a sharp contrast from the 43 marks that fell at the last worlds in Rome two years ago, before high-tech bodysuits were banned.

Phelps let his lead slip on the final turn but then overtook Japan’s Takeshi Matsuda early in the last lap to clock 1 minute, 53.34 seconds, hardly celebrating. Matsuda took the silver in 1:54.01 and Wu Peng of China got the bronze in 1:54.67.

Phelps led off the 4-x-100 relay when the United States took bronze on the opening night of the competition Sunday, then settled for silver behind teammate Ryan Lochte in the 200 free Tuesday.

A 14-time Olympic champion, Phelps has a record 23 golds at worlds.

“I felt like myself the last 100 of that race. I didn’t feel like I was dying,” Phelps said.

“I wanted to do what I usually do when I’m in better shape,” Phelps added. “I wanted to step on it from the get-go. I saw the other swimmers at the 150 and I put my hips into it. I know there’s a lot more I can do in that race.”

Phelps had a streak of 60 consecutive wins in this event covering nearly nine years until he lost consecutive races to Wu at two minor meets in the United States this year.

Pellegrini has also had a trying two years, following the death of her coach Alberto Castagnetti after the 2009 worlds in Rome.

Still, she dominated the 400 Sunday with a second-half burst of speed. This time, Pellegrini methodically reeled in her rivals, moving steadily up from seventh after 50 meters to fifth at the halfway mark and third heading into the final lap to touch in 1:55.58.

Kylie Palmer of Australia won the silver in 1:56.04, and Camille Muffat of France took the bronze in 1:56.10.

Pellegrini celebrated by propping herself up on a lane rope, then raised her arms and stuck her tongue out before revealing a wide smile.

“We saw yesterday that there were a few opponents capable of competing well, but we studied the race and Federica did everything we planned,” said the Italian’s new coach Frenchman Philippe Lucas.

Lucas previously coached Pellegrini’s rival Laure Manaudou, who managed to win the 400 in 2005 and 2007, but won the 200 only once at worlds. She is attempting a comeback from retirement.

James Magnussen, who led off Australia’s victorious 400 free relay four days ago, was fastest in the 100 free semifinals in 47.90. American sprinter Nathan Adrian qualified second and William Meynard of France was third.

Defending champion Cesar Cielo, freshly cleared of doping by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, qualified fifth in 48.34.

Competing in his first world meet, the 20-year-old Magnussen created a buzz with his sizzling opening split of 47.49 against Phelps in the relay.

“I haven’t gotten a lot of sleep over the last two days, my mind’s just been ticking over, so to get that one out of the way and get another sub-48 is a big confidence booster going into tomorrow night,” Magnussen said.

Phelps also had a semifinal heat, qualifying second behind Lochte in the 200 individual medley, setting up another duel between the Americans for Thursday.

“He’s not going to give up and neither am I,” Lochte said.

 

What’s the price of peace of mind, when it comes to the safety of your shiny new HTC EVO View 4G or Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1? How does $13 a month sound? That price will get you a membership in Sprint’s not-so-exclusive Assurant Advanced Protection Pack club. Included in the cost are a device locator, malware protection, remote log-in help, and a replacement or repair, should a qualified netbook, notebook, or tablet suffer from mechanical or electric problems. Sprint will also help out if you accidentally damage it (i.e., not what’s happening in the image above), or get it lost or stolen — the last three do involve a $100 deductible, however. No one ever said protection was going to be cheap.

Show full PR text
Sprint Introduces Protection Plan for Netbooks, Notebooks and Tablets

OVERLAND PARK, Kan.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Sprint (NYSE: S) has launched a custom protection plan available to customers with netbooks, notebooks and tablets. The Assurant Advanced Protection Pack provides repair or replacement in the event a device suffers mechanical or electrical breakdown or is accidentally damaged, lost or stolen.

The Assurant Advanced Protection Pack, costs $13 per month* and includes features to help customers safeguard their devices. These features include a tool to locate a lost device, dedicated technical support with remote login, virus defense, data back-up of contacts, photos and media, and three months of credit monitoring if the device is lost or stolen. Customers may enroll in the program when they activate a new device on a Sprint data plan, or within 30 days of the new activation or new equipment purchase.

The Assurant Advanced Protection Pack is a wise investment that can save a lot of money and provide a peace of mind. Customers save valuable time with convenient, easy and ongoing tech support either online or on the phone. Customers also have control over and protection of their personal data if their device is lost or stolen.

Some of Sprint’s popular devices that would qualify for the Advanced Protection Pack include:

HTC EVO View 4G™,
Samsung Galaxy Tab™,
Dell™ Inspiron™ 11Z

The Assurant Advanced Protection Pack is a comprehensive, bundled protection offering managed by Assurant Solutions. Certain protection products can be purchased separately. Customers may visit www.AssurantProtection.com for more information and to register their protected device.

*There is a $100 deductible for lost, stolen, or accidental damage claims.

 
Kudos to the IEEE for rushing this new ‘super WiFi‘ standard through so very speedily for the sake of rural communities with poor web access. Designated “IEEE 802.22,” it promises to bring speeds of up to 22Mbps to devices as far as 60 miles away from the nearest transmitter. How’s that possible? Well, the standard carefully exploits swathes of unused white space within transmission bands that were originally reserved (and jealously guarded) for analogue TV. These frequencies currently contain nothing but hiss and occasional communications from dead people, but one day they could and should be filled with the hopes, aspirations and Facebook updates of country folk who are very much alive. Read the signs in the PR after the break.

Show full PR text
IEEE 802.22TM-2011 Standard for Wireless Regional Area Networks in TV Whitespaces Completed

PISCATAWAY, N.J.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–IEEE, the world’s largest professional association advancing technology for humanity, today announced that it has published the IEEE 802.22TM standard. IEEE 802.22 systems will provide broadband access to wide regional areas around the world and bring reliable and secure high-speed communications to under-served and un-served communities.

This new standard for Wireless Regional Area Networks (WRANs) takes advantage of the favorable transmission characteristics of the VHF and UHF TV bands to provide broadband wireless access over a large area up to 100 km from the transmitter. Each WRAN will deliver up to 22 Mbps per channel without interfering with reception of existing TV broadcast stations, using the so-called white spaces between the occupied TV channels.

This technology is especially useful for serving less densely populated areas, such as rural areas, and developing countries where most vacant TV channels can be found.

IEEE 802.22 incorporates advanced cognitive radio capabilities including dynamic spectrum access, incumbent database access, accurate geolocation techniques, spectrum sensing, regulatory domain dependent policies, spectrum etiquette, and coexistence for optimal use of the available spectrum.

The IEEE 802.22 Working Group started its work following the Notice of Inquiry issued by the United States Federal Communications Commission on unlicensed operation in the TV broadcast bands.

Additional information on the standard can be found at the IEEE 802.22 WG page. To purchase the standard, visit the IEEE Standards Store.

To learn more about IEEE-SA, visit us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/ieeesa, follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ieeesa or connect with us on the Standards Insight Blog at http://www.standardsinsight.com.

About the IEEE Standards Association
The IEEE Standards Association, a globally recognized standards-setting body within IEEE, develops consensus standards through an open process that engages industry and brings together a broad stakeholder community. IEEE standards set specifications and best practices based on current scientific and technological knowledge. The IEEE-SA has a portfolio of over 900 active standards and more than 500 standards under development. For more information visit http://standards.ieee.org/.

About IEEE
IEEE, the world’s largest technical professional association, is dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity. Through its highly cited publications, conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities, IEEE is the trusted voice on a wide variety of areas ranging from aerospace systems, computers and telecommunications to biomedical engineering, electric power and consumer electronics. Learn more at http://www.ieee.org.

 

Automated, computer-targeting machine guns are okay in a pinch, but sometimes putting 180 25mm slugs down range every minute just isn’t enough. Sometimes you need a little more energy, and that’s when you strap a laser on the thing. Boeing and BAE are partnering up to take the existing Mk 38 Mod 2 Machine Gun System, which offers a 25mm M242 barrel, and pair it with Boeing’s directed energy system. The resulting beautiful machine is called the Mk 38 Mod 2 Tactical Laser System, offering the ability to fling both hot metal and even hotter photons against whatever targets would dare come in range. This integration is said to allow for these upgraded turrets to be easily installed and controlled on our naval vessels, vessels that are, for now, still stuck on the water. Apparently we’re still a few years away from the Wave Motion Engine and FTL battleship travel.

Show full PR text
Boeing, BAE Systems to Develop Integrated Directed Energy Weapon for US Navy

Team has initial contract to build a laser weapon demonstrator unit

Agreement formalizes effort to develop directed energy system for enhanced ship defense

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M., July 25, 2011 — Boeing [NYSE: BA] today announced that its Directed Energy Systems (DES) division has signed a teaming agreement with BAE Systems to develop the Mk 38 Mod 2 Tactical Laser System for defense of U.S. Navy ships.

The Navy awarded the BAE Systems team an initial contract in March to build a demonstrator unit of the system. Boeing is a subcontractor to BAE Systems under this contract.

“Boeing is committed to developing this directed energy system that will significantly enhance ship defense,” said Michael Rinn, Boeing DES vice president. “Combining BAE’s engineering expertise with the proven directed-energy proficiency of Boeing’s DES division creates a team uniquely qualified to integrate directed-energy technology into the Navy’s shipboard armaments.”

The Mk 38 Mod 2 Tactical Laser System couples a solid-state high-energy laser weapon module with the operational Mk 38 Machine Gun System. The addition of the laser weapon module brings high-precision accuracy against surface and air targets such as small boats and unmanned aerial vehicles. The system also provides the ability to deliver different levels of laser energy, depending on the target and mission objectives.

Boeing and BAE Systems have been working together for the past two years to develop this capability. In 2010, Boeing DES conducted two experiments in the field to demonstrate the system’s ability to track surface targets and maintain a laser aimpoint with high precision.

“The Mk 38 Mod 2 system is revolutionary because it combines kinetic and directed energy weapons capability,” said Rinn. “Our approach is an affordable solution for the customer, because this system can be integrated seamlessly into existing shipboard command interfaces.”

The Mk 38 Mod 2 Tactical Laser System project unites Albuquerque-based Boeing DES — the industry leader in directed energy and acquisition, pointing and tracking systems — with BAE Systems, a leading designer and supplier of major shipboard armaments to the U.S. Navy.

A unit of The Boeing Company, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is one of the world’s largest defense, space and security businesses specializing in innovative and capabilities-driven customer solutions, and the world’s largest and most versatile manufacturer of military aircraft. Headquartered in St. Louis, Boeing Defense, Space & Security is a $32 billion business with 65,000 employees worldwide. Follow us on Twitter: @BoeingDefense.

 
Xperia X10 gets Gingerbread update, gratuitous cookie pictures ensue

Since they’re free of preservatives, Android updates tend to get pretty stale pretty quickly. As such, the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 has definitely lost its best flavor, but here comes a refresh. The long-promised 2.3.3 Gingerbread update is now available, but only if you’re pocketing a carrier-free phone. To apply the update — which also includes WiFi and USB tethering, improved Facebook integration, and some fancy new widgets — you’ll need a USB cable and the company’s PC software, meaning this one is far from OTA. When will a cable-free update come along? SE regrets to inform that it “cannot give you an exact date for when the update will be available for you.” What’s another few weeks… or months?

© 2011 Red News Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha