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Category: Ramblings

Immediately after renaming the program “Bushcare”, the media discovered that it was laden with pork, kickbacks, inefficiencies, loopholes, unfunded mandates, and corporate payback.

Moreover, they became suspicious of the tactics used to pass Bushcare, outraged at how the House was effectively cut out of the process by calling the bill “deemed passed”, furious at the creation of “death panels” to ration care, and rhetorical about the damage the bill would cause to the medical system and the already-weakened economy as a whole.

They even noted multiple ways in which Bushcare violated the Constitution, not least from a over-broad interpretation of the Commerce Clause.

That… was a pretty good week.

I’m still not 100% happy with the layout in the popup, but I can tweak that later if I get inspired. Meantime I think I’ve got the Florida contest schedule looking about how I’d like it to look:

  • The general style fits the rest of the site.
  • The number of clicks required to navigate has gone way down.
  • It’s easier to look at.
  • The ability to sort by column is at least as easy to use as running separate database queries.
  • The upcoming contests (now next three) are easier to find in the sidebar.
  • The contests that are already done are greyed out.
  • The page automatically scrolls so that the first upcoming contest is near the top.
  • The popups are attractive, fit in with the site style, and the maps work.

I’ve also made a minor update to the overall site style, which is working in current IE and Firefox, broken in Opera and untested in Chrome. One of these days I need to give the site a good checkup in Chrome…

Anyway. I learned a lot doing this little project, and the usual hat-tips to the creators and maintainers of code libraries everywhere– I could never have things running this quickly if I’d had to code and test it all piece by piece. Enjoy and let me know if you have comments or suggestions.

The Age of Aquarius is not only near, it is literal. I for one welcome our new dolphin overlords.

Shots from the 2013 Mid-Florida Muscle Classic, held June 15 in Orlando, are up on the site.

This was another big show and though it had a couple of minor hiccups with the lighting early on it ran very smoothly overall.

The early start unfortunately for me meant an even earlier day, and I was having some issues cutting through the fog. Mid-Florida 2013 Women's Physique Competitor

I had to do a lot more straightening and tweaking on the early shots than I normally do, which is one reason it took so long to put them up.

The competitors also seemed to have some issue hearing the judges’ instructions.

The more often this happened the more I began thinking about all the myriad of little things that can slow a prejudging down.

Sure, they are things that only cost two seconds here, four seconds there. There are also times where a delay is absolutely required, for example to give crossover or fitness competitors time to change their suits.

But in general, “dead spots”, times when no judging can occur, really could be minimized– add them all up and they can add significant time to the morning show.

Obviously a big one is the competitors’ ability to hear instructions. Four quarter-turns, seven mandatory poses, swapping competitor order, split-ups, call-outs all add up to a lot of instructions.

Losing 2-5 or more seconds per instruction because the competitors can’t hear them can easily add 5-10 minutes per class.

Easy fix: bring a bullhorn. Not kidding. If the venue PA doesn’t work well enough, use what does.

(In that same vein, could we lose the music during the prejudging?)

Having an experienced stage facilitator is critical. (This is not a knock on any individual.)

He should be in constant standby for judges’ instructions and not afraid to appear on stage to help herd competitors.

A great deal of time is lost in mandatories when competitors insist on performing un-judgeable contortions in preparation to taking the shot.

Well before the show the facilitator should work with the judges to find and mark the best-lit part of the stage and the center of that area.

For shows with large classes, the facilitator should also pre-define the overflow areas so the competitors do not interfere with the judges’ line of sight.

Correcting these issues during the show costs more valuable time.

For classes where individual competitors appear on the stage (e.g. figure), ideally each competitor should be almost on stage when the previous one begins to exit.

This can be accomplished with an assistant, in radio contact with the facilitator, in the audience with a visual signal such as a flashlight to cue the competitor to exit.

A great deal of time is lost in mandatories when competitors insist on performing un-judgeable contortions in preparation to taking the shot.

To resolve this, judges would need to communicate clearly the expectation that when a shot is called, the shot– and not the preliminaries to the shot– should be taken at once.

The absence of that communication over the years has allowed rumors to flourish, including the bizarre concept that “you should always be the last one in your class to take each pose”.

Again, with seven or more poses called in repeated sets per class, losing three, four, five or more seconds per pose can add up quickly.

In summary, I should not be given too much time to think about things like this before I’m fully awake. Enjoy the shots.

At this moment
somebody
somewhere
is listening to “Take On Me”
and enjoying it
as if it were
the first time.

2013 Tampa Bay Classic women's physique competitor
Tampa Bay Classic was a REALLY big show, which is why it’s just now coming online.

I got some pretty good shots, I’m happy with the color, I see some corrections to make for the next show.

That will be All-South, most likely, and I may drop one or two other shows from the lineup before the year’s over– especially if they start before 10 AM. Just TDE.

Enjoy.

Kryptonite, nothing.

With that kind of strength, Superman trying to fix a catastrophe would have resembled a neurosurgeon operating with a chainsaw while wearing boxing gloves.

His greatest nemesis would have been the Law of Unintended Consequences.