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Archive for April, 2010

Place An End To Panic Attacks By Following This Simple, Yet Powerful Practice That Has Helped Hundreds Of Long Time Sufferers. Gain Control Of Your Life By Having A Different Approach That Targets The Disease At The Root.
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Golf | Golf Gps Apps For Android

OK, so you have a fancy touchscreen Smartphone with the Android operating system (perhaps a Verizon Droid or even a strain new Nexus One from Google), and you want to spice it up with a compatible golf GPS. Maybe you’re already familiar with GolfShot, GolfLogix, and some of the other well loved golf GPS apps available for the iPhone and BlackBerry Smartphones, and now you’re wondering what the choices are for Android. The number of apps in the Android market may be kind of puny compared to the huge number of apps available for the iPhone. But there are Android golf GPS apps available. The following list of five top-notch products is a start.

GolfCard was selected by both CNN and Time magazine as the best iPhone golf app for father’s day (2009). Now it’s available for Android phones; both Sprint and Verizon have recently featured GolfCard in their new buzz ads. It looks promising, and should probably be more well loved than it already is. This inexpensive rangefinder has a database of 28,000 courses, a scorecard for multiple players, statistical analysis, and no subscription fees.

GreenFinder, which is a well loved GPS app that also facility on Blackberry, iPhone, and Windows Mobile phones, can be downloaded and used five times for free. It gives you distances to the front, center, and back of the green, as well as distances to fairway hazards and the distance of your last shot. It costs less than a round of golf and there are no additional fees: you can download all the courses you need and you can even mark your own courses.

FreeCaddie also facility on Blackberry, iPhone, Windows Mobile, and Java enabled phones. The free version displays only the distances to the front, center, and back of greens. If you want the really excellent stuff like distances to bunkers and hazards, a shot distance function, the ability to map your own points, or statistics and scorekeeping, then you need to upgrade to FreeCaddie Pro.

Pocket Caddy from Satsports has 3D flyovers of the entire course and individual holes, distances to the front, center, and back of the green and other points of interest. It also has shot recording, statistical analysis and and a scorecard. With Pocket Caddy you can get a map of your home course included with buy, or you can easily map courses yourself using Google Earth.

SkyDroid (which is practically free) has distances to the front, center and back of every green on the course, as well as distances to water hazards, bunkers, and other course features. It also has a satellite map view of every hole. You can track the distance of your last shot, download all the courses you want for no extra cost, and you can even use SkyDroid’s Course Mapper to easily map your own courses.

Philip Hoskins is a golf enthusiast who has a keen interest in technological gadgets (like golf gps devices) that can improve his golf game. You can find out more about the innumerable golf gps devices on the market by visiting his website at http://www.gpsgolfware.com.

As Tiger Woods plays in the Quail Hollow this week, the first non-major in view of the fact that histroubles started, we’re finally reaching a natural closing top to thissaga. So let’s take a look at some of the major questions that stillsurround Tiger and the golf world. Today: What did we all learn?

So after five months of Tiger Woods scandal and insanity, do you feel any wiser? Dirtier, seedier, scrungier, perhaps, but wiser?

Maybe. But if you do, you’re one of the few.

The Woods tale in itself wasn’t anything we could learn from — well, apart from for, “don’t trust porn stars, strippers and Perkins waitresses to keep secrets,” but most of us didn’t need to be told that. No, where the Woods tale had right educational potential was in demonstrating a few uncomfortable truths, to wit:

The degree to which we worship our athletic idols
The way race worms its way into every public conversation
The obsession with “image” over substance in training
The role of the media: shaping perception or giving the people what they want?
The privacy of our public figures — how much should they have?

Now, all of those topics sound insanely dull, like panel discussions at some airport-hotel academic conference. But these are some of the major themes of the Tiger tale, stuff that has to be processed and percolate for awhile before we can really write about it. There will be books coming out about this, some excellent and some dreadful, and hopefully they’ll deal with at least some of these issues at greater length than we’ve been able to in a 24-hour news cycle.

So what did we all learn? Well, Tiger learned who he could and couldn’t trust. Tiger also hopefully learned to look beyond the moment, but with Tiger, who the heck knows what he learned? His sponsors learned that even the most pristine pitchman can make your strain look ridiculous. The PGA, as we discussed on Wednesday, learned nothing.

The media learned that readers absolutely obsess every morsel of Tiger news, no matter how much they claim to be outraged or tired of it. Take a look at this site — the Tiger posts have hundreds of How ready is a non-Augusta tournament to host Tiger Woods?
• Tuesday: How can Tiger Woods continue to repair his image?
• Wednesday: How will the Tiger Woods tale change the world of golf?
• Today: What did everybody learn from the Tiger Woods saga?
• Friday: What will be the long-term effects of Tiger’s tale?


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Golf For Free, Even Get Paid To Play.

Converts Like Mad And Pays 75%! Http://www.golfforpay.com/affiliates.php. Teaches People How To Golf For Free And Even Get Paid.
Golf For Free, Even Get Paid To Play.

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