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Davis Jr. Scores First Lone Star Billiards Win

Davis Jr. Scores First Lone Star Billiards Win
Lone Star Billiards Tour / Houston, TX
by InsidePOOL Staff
James Davis Jr., formerly of Bastrop, TX, bested 57 other Texas sharpshooters who converged on Q Stix Billiards and Sports Bar in Houston, TX, to duel for the cash the last weekend in February. With not only a 9-ball but […]

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Billiard Education Foundation 2010 Scholarship Deadline Approaching

Billiard Education Foundation 2010 Scholarship Deadline Approaching
High School Seniors Apply Now
The Billiard Education Foundation (BEF) is currently accepting applications for the 2010 scholarship awards. The BEF Academic Scholarship Program is administered annually under the direction and guidance of the BEF Board of Trustees. Applications must be postmarked no later than April 1, 2010 and can […]

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Strickland Aces 8-Ball Champs

Strickland Aces 8-Ball Champs
U.S. Open Bar Table Championship / Reno, NV
by InsidePOOL Staff
Former world 9-ball champion Earl Strickland took home the 8-ball division title of the U.S. Open Bar Table Championship February 28, besting Darren Appleton in the finals. The 8-ball division was the final of a three-pronged event, hosted by the Sands Regency Hotel […]

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Basha Holds off Monday for Billiards Victory

Basha Holds off Monday for Billiards Victory
Great Southern Billiard Tour / Goldsboro, NC
by Lea Andrews
A big obstacle—Southern superstar Sam Monday—stood in Mike Basha’s way at the February 27-28 Great Southern Billiard Tour stop, but Basha stood his ground to earn his spot in the winner’s circle. Basha and Monday were among the field of 51 […]

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Tri-State Billiards Victory for Muller

Tri-State Billiards Victory for Muller
Tri-State Tour / Edison, NJ
by InsidePOOL Staff
Justin Muller and 23 others braved the Northeast’s storm February 27 to come out for the Tri-State Tour’s event, won by Muller. The $750-added 9-ball tournament was hosted by Edison Billiards in Edison, NJ.
Muller made it to the final four on the undefeated side but […]

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Barnes Closes Door on Ryno

Barnes Closes Door on Ryno
Tiger Bay Area Amateur Tour / Tampa, FL
by InsidePOOL Staff
After nearly 15 hours of competition, Jessica Barnes outplayed Bethann Ryno to capture the win at the second stop of the Tiger Bay Area Amateur Tour’s (BAAT) 2010 season. The $400-added event was held at Strokers of Tampa, FL, and hosted 20 […]

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Rocklin firm releases iPod, iPhone relay app

Rocklin-based Purple Communications Inc., a provider of text/video relay and on-site interpreting services, said Tuesday it has introduced the nation’s first relay application for the Apple iPhone and iPod Touch.

The company said this version of its “IP-Relay” application allows users make direct IP-Relay calls from their phones or dial anyone in their iPhone address book with just a few taps. The application particularly benefits deaf users.

IP-Relay for iPhone and iPod Touch is free to use and available as a free download in Apple’s App Store. For details, go to www.purple.us/localnumber.

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Sacramento hospitals let patients connect with Wi-Fi



Colin Autry, who is undergoing months of chemo for leukemia in isolation, uses the wireless Internet at Kaiser Permanente’s Roseville hospital as his mother, Pushpa Autry, waits nearby.

Colin Autry, a 17-year-old cancer patient from Elk Grove, likened it to a life of solitary confinement, cocooned in a hospital room and cut off from the usual life of a high school senior – his cell phone and television screen the only connections to friends and the outside world.

“When they told me I was going to be in an isolation room for six to eight months, that scared me pretty good,” said Autry, who began his long hospital stay in October at Kaiser Permanente Roseville Medical Center.

But earlier this month, Kaiser ushered in the digital age for patients at its Roseville campus, allowing Autry to regain one important part of a typical teenager’s life: wireless Internet.

While his disease has wrought havoc with his life, Autry can again experience the joys of scrolling through Facebook updates. His fingers clack away for online chats, his time is occupied by the latest gossip at school streamed into his hospital room.

Wireless Internet has become a part of everyday life – it’s in our homes, workplaces, airports and coffee shops. But hospitals are relative newcomers in providing the now-ubiquitous technology.

“What we’re seeing now is an explosion of this,” said Bache Perry, a consultant assigned to Kaiser’s network services.

“Being able to provide this to the patient eases the stress of staying in a hospital for a long period of time,” he said.

Kaiser isn’t the first in the area to beam Wi-Fi signals into patients’ rooms. Sutter hospitals and the UC Davis Medical Center said their wireless services went online a few years ago.

Last fall, Mercy began providing Wi-Fi at its Folsom hospital.

“It has become an expectation to be connected,” said Randy Castillo, the hospital’s vice president of ancillary and support services. “You have Wi–Fi when you go to Starbucks, McDonald’s, airports – but not too many hospitals.”

For years, doctors and nurses had access to wireless signals to access electronic medical records. But because of security issues, hospitals were cautious about opening up their airwaves in patient areas.

Indeed, most hospitals have two wireless networks – one for protected data and the other for public use – as a firewall against any potential security breaches.

Quality issues have also been a concern, said Perry, the Kaiser consultant, because two signals occupying the same airspace could interfere with each other.

Other area hospitals still without Wi-Fi access are hoping to roll out the service soon.

For Autry, who was diagnosed with leukemia in October, it couldn’t come soon enough.

“I went from a normal life to being locked up in a hospital room,” he said. “It isn’t something you acclimate to immediately. I’m missing my senior year of high school.

“I really count on my friends to keep me updated,” he said.

With his laptop, he’s been able to get virtual visits from his grandmother who lives in Raleigh, N.C., through a video camera and Skype. Soon, he hopes to spend time – via the Internet – with his sheepdog Klondike, who is being cared for by his sister in Washington state.

“I feel trapped sometimes,” he said.

“It was so hard coming in,” said his mother, Pushpa, a Kaiser therapist. “Oh my God, solitary confinement – how are we going to do this?”

She got her son a Kindle electronic reader for Christmas – on which he’s reading the latest book from Stephen Colbert.

“I wish he spent more time on that” – less time on the Internet, she said – “but he’s the one who’s going through chemo.”

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McDermott Gambler Pro Tour Announced

McDermott Gambler Pro Tour Announced
Popular American Pool Cue Maker and Billiards Tour Combine Forces
Gambler Pro Tour goes green! McDermott, a leader in cue manufacturing for decades, has announced it will team up with Gambler Pro Tour as the official cue sponsor of the new McDermott Gambler Pro Tour.
Dan Dennis, founder of the GPT, said, “This […]

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