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- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!wupost!cs.uiuc.edu!sparc0b!wang
- From: wang@cs.uiuc.edu (Eric Wang)
- Subject: Re: Fiesta Bowl
- Message-ID: <C09I6n.2Cu@cs.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.uiuc.edu
- Reply-To: wang@cs.uiuc.edu
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- References: <4805@copper.Denver.Colorado.EDU>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 05:06:23 GMT
- Lines: 123
-
- Some comments about the IBM OS/2 Fiesta Bowl:
-
- --------------
- IBM Football/2
- --------------
- In response to IBM's generous donation to the Fiesta Bowl's treasury,
- numerous special rules were approved for inclusion in this one game. A
- partial list follows:
-
- 1. Multi-motion. If the location of the ball on the field allows the
- team on offense to legally line up its players within any of the
- three OS/2 logos on the field, then any number of such players may
- be in motion simultaneously before the snap, provided that they
- remain entirely within their respective logos; and in addition, one
- person may be in motion outside of the logos.
-
- 2. Sack protection. If an offensive linesman who lines up within an
- OS/2 logo loses his footing without being contacted by a defender,
- and is unable to carry out his blocking assignment as a direct
- result thereof, such failure shall not result in the immediate
- sacking of the quarterback; rather, all defenders who would have
- exploited the gap caused by the linesman's collapse must immediately
- hop on one leg to the fallen linesman's position and lightly touch
- him at least twice with their raised shoe before resuming their
- normal rush. If this delay allows the linesman to regain his feet
- and make his assigned block after all, the result of the play shall
- stand.
-
- 3. Field subregions. At any time, either coach may call for the
- playing field to be partitioned into any number of rectangular
- regions, called _subfields_, and/or thereafter to cancel an existing
- subfield. Each team must immediately field a full complement of 11
- players to compete within each subfield; this is the only limitation
- on the number of active subfields there may be at any given moment.
- Within each subfield, the players will play a normal game under
- normal rules, except that all field-related dimensions stated in the
- rules shall be linearly scaled so as to fit the size and aspect
- ratio of each subfield. All such subgames shall proceed
- simultaneously, inheriting the same original game status (including
- score, time remaining, down, etc) but thereafter maintaining
- separate values for each quantity. Players from one subfield may
- never interfere with players from another subfield. Subfields may
- overlap one another, in which case one subfield within each
- overlapping area on the actual playing surface shall be deemed the
- "foreground" subfield, and all players in all "background" subfields
- must yield right-of-way to any "foreground" player within the area
- of overlap. The team that wins the most subgames shall be deemed
- the winner of the Fiesta Bowl.
-
- 4. Background communications. Rather than requiring players to call
- time-out to discuss plays their coaches, all players will be
- equipped with helmet phones, and are permitted to conduct
- conversations with any member of their coaching staff during the
- normal course of play.
-
- Unfortunately, the bozo in charge of downloading these new rules from
- the NCAA rules committee was using Something Other Than OS/2, and the
- rules emerged hopelessly garbled. Consequently, they were not used
- after all. :-(
-
- ---------------
- The Game Itself
- ---------------
-
- Qadry Ismail receives a kick-off on his own goal-line, hands off to
- Kirby Dar Dar on the reverse, and the moment Dar Dar turns the corner
- (at his own 10 or so), I impartially say to myself, "He's gone! He's
- gone!" Sure enough, he out-runs the pursuit 90 yards for the TD. (I
- won't mention Syracuse's two clipping infractions if you won't :-) I was
- picturing the typical kick-off coverage in my head, and figured, once
- Dar Dar runs around the corner of the vanguard wedge, there's nobody
- else in front of him -- defenders just don't hang back on kick-off
- coverage, and this makes them vulnerable to exactly this kind of
- misdirection play.
-
- ----------------
- IBM's OS/2 TV Ad
- ----------------
-
- Pool table, pool balls, voice-over. IMHO, this was weak, weak, weak.
- If I didn't know OS/2 from an ant hill before I watched this game, I
- certainly would NOT have learned a single ant from watching this
- commercial. I bet there are tens of thousands of loyal Orangemen and
- Golden Buffalo fans who watched the entire game, saw the logos on the
- field and on the jerseys every time they blinked, sat thru umpteen
- repetitions of this commercial, and still have NO IDEA that (1) OS/2 is
- an operating system (2) for IBM-compatible PCs that (3) runs DOS,
- Windows, and OS/2 software and (4) is a competitor of, and alternative
- to, Windows. "What the hot place," they say, "is OS/2 some new-fangled
- chalk for pool cues?" I cringe when I think of the vast numbers of
- computer-barely-literate people who looked at that 3.5" disk at the end
- of the commercial and thought, 'Oh, a Macintosh disk.' And if I were
- some corporate MIS manager, my first reaction to this commercial would
- be, "Hey, any idiot can SAY anything he wants, you still haven't SHOWN
- anything for my own two myopic eyes to evaluate!", and my second
- reaction might well be, "Hmmm, why DIDN'T they GIVE A DEMO? They
- wouldn't HAVE SOMETHING TO HIDE ... would they?" Arrrgh ... IMHO, IBM
- still has a fair amount of name recognition to gather and a lot of
- public opinion to overcome, and this commercial just didn't do either.
- (OK, name recognition, perhaps, but they FORGOT TO ATTACH said
- recognition to their product!! Repeat after the pet parrot: "Just what
- exactly IS OS/2, anyways?")
-
- Sigh ... I was expecting IBM to blow our socks off with spectacular new
- commercials for OS/2 ... and it just didn't happen. "IBM drops back to
- pass, looking, looking ... and it's got OS/2 WIDE OPEN at the Microsoft
- 20 yard line!! There's NOBODY within TWENTY YARDS OF IT!! And IBM --
- FUMBLES?!! The ball just slipped right out of its hands! What a bad
- break -- that was the easiest six they had all season." It remains to
- be seen whether IBM can fall on this ball and salvage the first down ...
-
- On the other hand, it wasn't too bad when compared to the commercials
- for other software packages and products that I've seen over the years.
- But then, I think they were pretty lousy, too. :-|
-
- Just my opinions. BTW, I watched the Fiesta Bowl for the OS/2 ads, not
- the teams -- fortunately, it turned out to be a good game, so it wasn't
- a TOTAL waste of time. :-)
-
- Eric Wang
- wang@cs.uiuc.edu
-
-
-