Agreed.Nice guys finish last.
"On the fields of friendly strife, are sown the seeds"(USAFA knowledge)
IMHO, Ronnie is demonstrating his Number 1 Attitude. Letting Judd know, not to let up. He wanted so bad to shoot the next back at him. If Judd is to be his Successor he will need to bring it.
So to whine later is a Childish look.
Just the facts, Mam.![]()
As I had an Irish grandmother, I resemble that remark.Agreed.
I just thought the English still played snooker like Gentlemen. I know , I know,... Ronnie is Irish.
I don`t know. It seems like giving aid and comfort to the enemy.Well, God knows I love both these guys for different reasons.
Ronnie for Attitude toward a match
Trump for brilliant execution/placement
Ronnie could have acknowledged Trump's 147, BUT that is not his style.
Personally- Shooting PERFECT under the heat deserves kudos even from your opponent. I would do it for my opp and wouldn't really expect it if I shot perfect,(would be nice if they did).
Perhaps it is all perspective. I'll explain:I don`t know. It seems like giving aid and comfort to the enemy.
Today, you can say "We sent a man to the moon" Some say "so what?"
BUT consider this:
That was done BEFORE the era of the computer.
no computers, no calculators, no TECH.
They did it with slide-rules and Physics. Radios and TV's had vacuum tubes then!
PERSPECTIVE
Once again..... Perspective. Your response is a perfect example.NASA definitely used computers in their moon missions.
Once again..... Perspective. Your response is a perfect example.
YES, computers were used back in the 1960's BUT.........
They were used primarily for storing and collating,(correlation)
"Computers" didn't make any complicated "Computations" then. They ran on 2 types of markup language; primarily Fortran & Cobol.
"C" was not even available yet.
What changed all of that was the integrated circuit and availability of RAM.
The electronic calculator was not available commercially until early 1970's (and they were ex$pensive)
A $3 calculator in a dollar store today could make more calculations than a computer from the 1960's , and do it faster.
My apologies to the OP for going a bit off topic.Your information on computers is vastly different than mine. Computers definitely were not storage devices in the seventies. They printed everything out because storage basically didn't exist.
What NASA had wasn't analogous to the TI red led calculator.
The academics were using ALGOL in the 1960s and doing algorithms and complex calculations. I started an ALGOL course about 1966 but it was decided that I should enlist instead, so I never got as far as punching cards. But I agree that the vast majority of commercial computers were doing inventory and billing since that's where the money was, especially for IBM. It seems that ALGOL was the parent of C.... I am talking late 60's. Sixties computers did not "computate", they arranged information to make it more relevant. ...
See ENIAC, MANIAC, IBM 601, 602, 701. CDC 6600. They were doing calculations for thermonuclear weapon design among other major problems of the day.YES, computers were used back in the 1960's BUT.........
They were used primarily for storing and collating,(correlation)
"Computers" didn't make any complicated "Computations" then.
See ENIAC, MANIAC, IBM 601, 602, 701. CDC 6600. They were doing calculations for thermonuclear weapon design among other major problems of the day.
Who knows?The academics were using ALGOL in the 1960s and doing algorithms and complex calculations. I started an ALGOL course about 1966 but it was decided that I should enlist instead, so I never got as far as punching cards. But I agree that the vast majority of commercial computers were doing inventory and billing since that's where the money was, especially for IBM. It seems that ALGOL was the parent of C.
By 1972 academic computers were doing serious simulations and calculations. The CDC 6400 on campus allowed programs as large as 64k words of memory.FORTRAN 66 was the primary language.
As for Ronnie not congratulating Judd, maybe he didn't like the way Judd ran the balls.![]()