The
weather in La Jolla, Calif., made a mess of things over the weekend for
the PGA. It turned what should have been a Tiger Woods Sunday into a
Monday coronation.we sell dry cabinet and different kind of laboratory equipment in us.
Things should go back to normal the rest of the year—weather permitting, of course. His coronations will proceed on their regularly-scheduled dates.
No, not so much because we now have a definitive answer to the ubiquitous “Is Tiger Back?” question.Which Air purifier is right for you? (It’s just getting fun to type that five or six times a year now, although not as much fun lately as typing “Are the Lakers Back?”) We don’t have an answer to that, not in January.
We only have history to guide us. History is on Woods’ side.
Monday’s virtual walkover—a 4-stroke victory at 14-under—finished off Tiger’s seventh victory (eight overall, counting the 2008 U.S. Open) in the annual Tour stop at Torrey Pines (formerly the Buick Invitational, now the Farmers Insurance Open). A win there, early in the year, has been an omen for success for him every time, going back nearly to the beginning of his run.
In each of the previous six years he’s won this tournament (1999, 2003 and 2005-08), he has finished the year with at least five victories. In five of those seasons, the win total has included at least one major. The exception was ’03, during what was then considered a catastrophic, career-altering “slump”—10 straight majors without a win, with the ’03 shutout aided by late ’02 knee surgery.
The then-Buick win was his comeback tourney. Even without a major, he won Player of the Year that season, as he did five other times in seasons in which he won at Torrey Pines.
In ’08, of course, he won there twice. Not that anyone needs to be reminded of that, or of his new definition of “slump.’’ His drought now stands at 0-for-his-last-18.
For what it’s worth, and in case another parallel to the good ol’ days is needed, part of his renaissance during the post-surgical 2003-04 speed bump involved a re-tooling of his swing. He’s been re-tooling it again over the past two-plus years, with a different coach, the often-scorned Sean Foley.
There hasn’t been a lot of scorning of Foley lately, or of Woods’ swing, or of anything else about his game. There certainly was none of that going on over the weekend at Torrey Pines. Day by day (except Saturday, naturally), Woods rolled on, padding his lead with a combination of his spectacular play and his competition’s inability to rise to the challenge.
He weaved in his usual supply of “wow” moments—a great, fist pump-inspiring chip on No. 4 on Sunday, and on Monday a sensational save from behind a tree, off a driveway out of bounds on No. 9, and later a bunker shot onto the green from another cartoonishly contorted stance on No. 11.
The most cartoonish part of the day, and of the entire tournament, was the fact that down the stretch, Woods had an 8-shot lead, actually padding his own score and the distance between himself and his hapless competitors. He didn’t hold onto all of it, but, of course, it didn’t matter.
It’s also worth pointing out that Rory McIlroy did not play this tournament. Graeme McDowell didn’t either—yet he still got off the line of the week from the other side of the Atlantic, on Twitter: “Was thinking of adding Farmers Open to my schedule next year. Maybe need to reconsider. Tiger owns the place.”
They’ll all meet soon enough—McIlroy and McDowell and Adam Scott and the other contenders. Brandt Snedeker will be around, and the solid tourney he had at the Farmers likely will mean more than it did this time,Compare prices and buy all brands of solar panel for home power systems and by the pallet. when he disappeared from sight behind Tiger.
Phil Mickelson will be there, too, although, on the course that he, like Woods, calls his home turf, it was as if he was never there this weekend. His 2-under total never came close to getting it done.
Azul Systems, the award-winning leader in Java runtime scalability, today announced that it has formed a partnership with jClarity, a provider of Java performance analytics solutions for enterprise and Cloud-based environments. Under the collaboration agreement, jClarity will optimize their tools for Azul's Zing? Java Virtual Machine (JVM) and will recommend it to customers as a component of its Cloud toolkit.
Leveraging their work in the Java and Open Source community over the last five years, the founding members at jClarity create products that allow developers to quickly identify where a performance problem is within an application and what steps need to be taken to resolve it. The tools are designed to analyze the system as a whole without compromising the running system. Azul's Zing is a 100% Java-compatible high performance JVM and the only solution that delivers low latency, large in-memory datasets without performance penalty and elastic resource sharing in the Cloud.
Ben Evans, CEO at jClarity, said: "As the representative for the London Java Community on the JCP Executive Committee, I met Azul Systems and quickly recognized the benefits of the solution and how it complements the performance analytics of jClarity. Both companies specialize in Java and fully appreciate how predictable performance levels can deliver tangible commercial results."
Evans continued: "One of the key Azul stand-outs for me is its C4 garbage collection technology. It ensures consistency of response times - the ideal result when analyzing garbage collection impact on an application. Azul's technology also recognizes more subtle performance influencers such as queuing on the network, which is highly impressive as other JVMs do not do this. If you ignore these subtleties you end up with results which are misleading and ultimately could impact business results.wind turbine"
Scott Sellers, president and CEO of Azul Systems, said, "Being a member of the JCP Executive Committee means that we are at the forefront of Java development and interact with the leading innovators in our field.Totech Americas delivers a wide range of drycabinets for applications spanning electronics. It is very gratifying for a fellow member to recognize the engineering advances we've made and actively want to partner with us. Both firms are heavily involved in the low latency markets so we anticipate working with jClarity extensively to deliver high-value add solutions in this area."
Things should go back to normal the rest of the year—weather permitting, of course. His coronations will proceed on their regularly-scheduled dates.
No, not so much because we now have a definitive answer to the ubiquitous “Is Tiger Back?” question.Which Air purifier is right for you? (It’s just getting fun to type that five or six times a year now, although not as much fun lately as typing “Are the Lakers Back?”) We don’t have an answer to that, not in January.
We only have history to guide us. History is on Woods’ side.
Monday’s virtual walkover—a 4-stroke victory at 14-under—finished off Tiger’s seventh victory (eight overall, counting the 2008 U.S. Open) in the annual Tour stop at Torrey Pines (formerly the Buick Invitational, now the Farmers Insurance Open). A win there, early in the year, has been an omen for success for him every time, going back nearly to the beginning of his run.
In each of the previous six years he’s won this tournament (1999, 2003 and 2005-08), he has finished the year with at least five victories. In five of those seasons, the win total has included at least one major. The exception was ’03, during what was then considered a catastrophic, career-altering “slump”—10 straight majors without a win, with the ’03 shutout aided by late ’02 knee surgery.
The then-Buick win was his comeback tourney. Even without a major, he won Player of the Year that season, as he did five other times in seasons in which he won at Torrey Pines.
In ’08, of course, he won there twice. Not that anyone needs to be reminded of that, or of his new definition of “slump.’’ His drought now stands at 0-for-his-last-18.
For what it’s worth, and in case another parallel to the good ol’ days is needed, part of his renaissance during the post-surgical 2003-04 speed bump involved a re-tooling of his swing. He’s been re-tooling it again over the past two-plus years, with a different coach, the often-scorned Sean Foley.
There hasn’t been a lot of scorning of Foley lately, or of Woods’ swing, or of anything else about his game. There certainly was none of that going on over the weekend at Torrey Pines. Day by day (except Saturday, naturally), Woods rolled on, padding his lead with a combination of his spectacular play and his competition’s inability to rise to the challenge.
He weaved in his usual supply of “wow” moments—a great, fist pump-inspiring chip on No. 4 on Sunday, and on Monday a sensational save from behind a tree, off a driveway out of bounds on No. 9, and later a bunker shot onto the green from another cartoonishly contorted stance on No. 11.
The most cartoonish part of the day, and of the entire tournament, was the fact that down the stretch, Woods had an 8-shot lead, actually padding his own score and the distance between himself and his hapless competitors. He didn’t hold onto all of it, but, of course, it didn’t matter.
It’s also worth pointing out that Rory McIlroy did not play this tournament. Graeme McDowell didn’t either—yet he still got off the line of the week from the other side of the Atlantic, on Twitter: “Was thinking of adding Farmers Open to my schedule next year. Maybe need to reconsider. Tiger owns the place.”
They’ll all meet soon enough—McIlroy and McDowell and Adam Scott and the other contenders. Brandt Snedeker will be around, and the solid tourney he had at the Farmers likely will mean more than it did this time,Compare prices and buy all brands of solar panel for home power systems and by the pallet. when he disappeared from sight behind Tiger.
Phil Mickelson will be there, too, although, on the course that he, like Woods, calls his home turf, it was as if he was never there this weekend. His 2-under total never came close to getting it done.
Azul Systems, the award-winning leader in Java runtime scalability, today announced that it has formed a partnership with jClarity, a provider of Java performance analytics solutions for enterprise and Cloud-based environments. Under the collaboration agreement, jClarity will optimize their tools for Azul's Zing? Java Virtual Machine (JVM) and will recommend it to customers as a component of its Cloud toolkit.
Leveraging their work in the Java and Open Source community over the last five years, the founding members at jClarity create products that allow developers to quickly identify where a performance problem is within an application and what steps need to be taken to resolve it. The tools are designed to analyze the system as a whole without compromising the running system. Azul's Zing is a 100% Java-compatible high performance JVM and the only solution that delivers low latency, large in-memory datasets without performance penalty and elastic resource sharing in the Cloud.
Ben Evans, CEO at jClarity, said: "As the representative for the London Java Community on the JCP Executive Committee, I met Azul Systems and quickly recognized the benefits of the solution and how it complements the performance analytics of jClarity. Both companies specialize in Java and fully appreciate how predictable performance levels can deliver tangible commercial results."
Evans continued: "One of the key Azul stand-outs for me is its C4 garbage collection technology. It ensures consistency of response times - the ideal result when analyzing garbage collection impact on an application. Azul's technology also recognizes more subtle performance influencers such as queuing on the network, which is highly impressive as other JVMs do not do this. If you ignore these subtleties you end up with results which are misleading and ultimately could impact business results.wind turbine"
Scott Sellers, president and CEO of Azul Systems, said, "Being a member of the JCP Executive Committee means that we are at the forefront of Java development and interact with the leading innovators in our field.Totech Americas delivers a wide range of drycabinets for applications spanning electronics. It is very gratifying for a fellow member to recognize the engineering advances we've made and actively want to partner with us. Both firms are heavily involved in the low latency markets so we anticipate working with jClarity extensively to deliver high-value add solutions in this area."
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