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Posts Tagged ‘Football’

Former Serbian FA chief to face judges

The trial of former Serbian Football Association (FSS) President Zvezdan Terzić will start in Belgrade today. Terzić is the first football official to face charges of stealing money from player transfers.

Moscow: Football fans clash with police

Police detained 65 football fans in Moscow and 60 in St. Petersburg on Saturday during protests against the death of a Moscow Spartak football club supporter.

Some 5,000 young people, mainly football fans and members of nationalist organizations, protesting the death gathered on central Moscow’s Manezh Square.

Brand was ‘abnormally happy’ when his football team won, says Perry

Katy Perry3Singer Katy Perry has revealed that her hubby Russell Brand was abnormally happy when West Ham United Football Club won. Brand, 35, could not contain his excitement after West Ham stuck four unanswered goals past Manchester United in the League Cup last week. “For some reason Russell has been abnormally happy this week,” the Sun [...]

Chip Shot: Who Dat? Autographed Drew Brees Football Winners Announced!

Our thanks to the hundreds of football fans who participated in Intel’s Twitter contest, and tweeted opinions and ideas about the Supercomputing 2010 Conference with the chance of winning a signed football by New Orleans Saints quarterback, Drew Brees. Intel is proud to award footballs to Todd Davis (@rtodddavis) from Corinth, MS and Stephen Colomb (@scolomb6) from New Orleans, LA.  The winners will be contacted individually to claim their prize. Please read, “What Does a Supercomputer & Drew Brees Have in Common?” for more information.

Reviews of Watching The Latest Football Scores And Highlights On Your PC Posted By : Paddy Chang

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Intel, Riddell Use Supercomputers to Analyze Football Concussion Effects

Chip giant Intel, along with football helmet maker Riddell, is using supercomputers to simulate and eventually reduce the effect of on-field collisions on the brain. – At the SC10
supercomputing conference in New Orleans, Intel announced that its
supercomputers have been able to simulate the way a football player’s
brain responds to collisions.
Intel is collaborating with Riddell, which for many years has been the official manufacturer of helmets for the NFL…


Watch NCAA Football Online Unlimited Access For Life Posted By : Paddy Chang

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Chip Shot: Tweet For A Drew Brees Signed Football

Did you ever think Intel could give you the free hookup to NFL gear? Well, believe it! Today and tomorrow, tweet an opinion or idea about the Supercomputing 2010 Conference with the hashtag  #BreesandIntelSC10 to receive a football signed by New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees. A total of two autographed footballs will be given away at random. Intel will contact the users via Twitter’s Direct message service for shipping and contact information.  Tweet away, football fans!

Intel Teams Up with Leading Researchers to Make Football Helmets Safer

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Intel collaborated with several industry experts to improve football helmet safety by using Intel technology-based supercomputers and workstations to simulate a human brain’s reaction to collisions.
  • Intel worked with Mayo Clinic on faster diagnostics of medical scans using upcoming supercomputing chip design called “Intel MIC” (“Mike”) so players spend less time on the bench and more time on the field.
  • Future technologies could include helmets with built-in Intel® Atom™ chips that measure and feed real-time data to medical personnel

 

KirkSkaugen_SC10b.jpg

Kirk Skaugen, Intel vice-president and general manager of the Data Center Group poses with a New Orleans Saints football helmet.

NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 15, 2010 – Intel Corporation today announced that it is collaborating with industry experts and several universities to tackle the issue of football-related head injuries.

 

Using supercomputers and workstations based on present and future Intel processor technology, researchers are simulating collisions to study the impact on the brain, and use that information to design new football helmets that reduce the risk of short- and long-term injuries.

 

Intel, working with Riddell, the premier designer and developer of helmets and protective equipment, and researchers from the Thayer School of Engineering (Dartmouth), Wayne State University, University of Northern Colorado and Texas State University-San Marcos, demonstrated simulations during an event at the SC10 conference in New Orleans.

 

In this demonstration, simulated impacts are processed on Intel® Xeon® Processor-based Workstations and Clusters, or a group of linked computers, to rapidly compute, visualize and assess the risk of injury in an impact event. The simulations are based on computer models from partner universities, some of which include actual data from on-field impacts using the Riddell HITS (Head Impact Telemetry System), a proprietary in-helmet technology that provides real-time data regarding head impacts. These models show visualization of the stresses on the brain and can allow for comparisons between impacts that are found to result in a concussion and similar impacts that cause no injury.

 

“Computer simulations have been instrumental in designing improved brain injury criteria,” said Dr. Igor Szczyrba with the University of Northern Colorado. “In the near future, they can also help doctors diagnose actual brain injuries.”

 

Separately, attending the event and discussing the importance of using safe equipment to prevent injuries, was Drew Brees, quarterback of the New Orleans Saints and Super Bowl XLIV MVP.

 

While no equipment can prevent 100 percent of injuries, Intel is also working with Mayo Clinic to accelerate the ability to process medical scans. In this application, cranial scans running on Intel® Many Integrated Core (MIC) architecture co-processors were accelerated by up to 18 times.

 

During the event, Intel also discussed future technologies, based on its Intel® Atom™ processors, which could be embedded in helmets and wirelessly feed data into servers and cloud networks that measure injury risk and impact in real-time. When combined with impact simulation, this could better safeguard players by identifying potential injuries quickly so that medical personnel can respond faster and have information as soon as they reach the player on the field.

 

Intel, with its top-ranked Intel® Xeon® chip-based supercomputers, has been a leader in using parallel processing to solve complex problems. Some of this urgent and groundbreaking research is made possible by Intel® MIC architecture, which could run up to trillions of calculations per second, and includes in its targets high-performance computing segments such as scientific research, exploration and climate modeling. The first Intel MIC product, codenamed “Knights Corner,” will be made on Intel’s 22-nanometer (nm) manufacturing process – transistor structures packed as small as 22 billionths of a meter — and will use Moore’s Law to scale tens of Intel processing cores on a single chip. While the vast majority of workloads will still run best on award-winning Intel Xeon processors, Intel MIC architecture will add more business opportunities for highly parallel applications.

 

Video

Video: Football Player Collision Simulation

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xf709iMptp8

 

Photography

Click on the images below to view larger versions.

BrainSim16.jpg

This image shows a simulation of the stresses on the brain based on game data captured using Riddell’s HITS* system of helmet sensors. This data shows an impact that resulted in a concussion for the player. The image and simulation model was provided by the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth, and was rendered using supercomputers based on Intel Xeon processors.

NFLnoninjury.jpg

This image show a simulation of the stresses on the brain during an actual impact in an NFL game. This impact did not result in a concussion for the player. The image and simulation model was provided courtesy of Wayne State University, and was rendered using supercomputers based on Intel Xeon processors.

NFLinjury.jpg

This image shows a simulation of stresses on the brain during an actual impact in an NFL game. This impact resulted in a concussion for the player. The area in red color shows an area of high strain from the impact on a specific region of the brain.  This image and simulation model was provided courtesy of Wayne State University, and was rendered using supercomputers based on Intel Xeon processors.

DSCN7213.jpg

This is an image of the Riddell HITS* sensor system outside of a helmet. These sensors are placed inside a helmet and they record the impacts that the player sustains during practice or during games. This image was provided courtesy of Riddell.

DSCN7208.jpg

This is an image of the Riddell HITS* sensor system installed in a Riddell Revo* helmet. These sensors are placed inside a helmet and they record the impacts that the player sustains during practice or during games. This image was provided courtesy of Riddell.

HitAnalyzer_2.0_HistoryMode_SideView.jpg

This is an image of the Sideline Response System* from Riddell, which takes the HITS* data from instrumented helmets and saves the data for later analysis, or alerts sideline staff if a dangerous impact was detected by a player’s helmet. The software can show the angle and force of each impact. This image was provided courtesy of Riddell.

 

 

About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.

 

Intel, Intel Atom, Intel Xeon, Intel MIC and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

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Tadić “doesn’t mind” offensive chants

President Boris Tadić says that faced with football “folklore and culture”, he does not wish to have “preferential treatment” compared to other presidents.
His comments came after a top Serbian football league match was interrupted by officials over the weekend when fans took to chanting, “Boris, kill yourself and save Serbia”.

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FA: Italians make “unacceptable” move

The Football Association of Serbia (FSS) was “unpleasantly surprised” to learn that a UEFA disciplinary report has been published in the Italian media. FSS considers the move of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) unacceptable, it said in a statement.

Green light for Belgrade football derby

The top Serbian football league’s big game, the Belgrade derby, will be played on Saturday.

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